The big question: could it be used in the 24 hrs of Lemons series? Inquiring minds want to know.
Photography Courtesy Jay Bird
“You built a time machine–out of a DeLorean!?”
Now replace “time machine” with “trike” and “DeLorean” with “1969 Camaro,” and you have this bonafide piece of awesomeness.
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No AI, no Photoshop here, folks. Best we can tell, this is real: A 1969 Camaro that made sweet loving with a Honda Valkyrie motorcycle.
Why? When discussing one of the world’s greatest artistic achievements, you do not question motives. You just bask in the glow–as one does when taking in a creation by Picasso, Michelangelo or that goth kid down the street. (We love the goths.)
Also, the ad says that it’s a 1968 Camaro–well, Camero–but that body crease tells us otherwise. Either way, you need this. Or someone does.
In reply to DavyZ :
Probably not. Most racing organizations seem to have a "4 wheels" rule, because I've wondered if it would be worthwhile to run something like a Polaris Slingshot before.
Somewhat off topic:
I just don't see three-wheel vehicles succeeding commercially in the US. Aptera keeps trying to give it a go - having yet to deliver a single car - but I just don't see it happening. Proper engineering isn't the issue, it's the perception of "weirdness." I think people care/worry about what their friends will say, and that carries more weight than companies think.
kb58 said:Off topic somewhat:
I just don't see three-wheel vehicles succeeding commercially in the US. Aptera keeps trying to give it a go - having yet to deliver a single car - but I just don't see it happening. Proper engineering isn't the issue, it's the perception of "weirdness." I think people care/worry about what their friends will say, and that carries more weight than companies think.
polaris slingshots work because they are motorcycles, none of the safety requirements when its a bike
I understand that. My opinion is that it's not the rules or engineering, but public acceptance that's the issue. To bring this back on-topic, who's willing to step up and buy the three-wheel Camaro? The reasons for not wanting it - I suspect - is the fact that it's a 3-wheeler.
BA5 said:In reply to DavyZ :
Probably not. Most racing organizations seem to have a "4 wheels" rule, because I've wondered if it would be worthwhile to run something like a Polaris Slingshot before.
Does a continental kit count as a 4th wheel?
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