Wild Video: Watch Brave British WWII Soldiers Recover A Busted Tank With A Behemoth Of A Scammell Truck While Shells Explode Around Them


Wild Video: Watch Brave British WWII Soldiers Recover A Busted Tank With A Behemoth Of A Scammell Truck While Shells Explode Around Them

For starters, holy cow did these fellows have guts! Tasked with recovering a disabled tank that was sitting by itself well off the road and away from the protection of a convoy, a small group of men ventured over to the broken Crusader Mk II tank with a lumbering monster of a truck and set to work loading it. Soon after they start Picture 4working to winch the tank onto the truck, explosions in VERY close proximity to where they are begin. The men dive to the ground and wait them out before going back to work again. They are met by more explosions, even closer this time. We then see the truck with the tank on its back creeping back toward the road with shells hitting mere yards from it. The final shot we see is so close that the whole truck is obscured by the dirt and dust. The camera guy must have been shaking in his boots as well!

Outside of the sheer bravery shown by these British soldiers, the truck caught our eye. Looking like something straight out of the Mad Max movie (but moving at a pace slightly slower than a tortoise, especially when loaded) is a British built Scammell Pioneer rig. This was the Semi-trailer version of the truck which was a bigger, beefier version of the standard issue Pioneer which was used to tow heavy guns, had a wrecker type setup that was used on it, and found use in virtually every theater of the war that the British fought in. The Pioneer Semi-trailer truck weighed about 22,000lbs with the trailer and was just under 40 feet long. The trailer could not be simply unhooked from the truck so they were essentially a one piece unit. Power was derived from a 501ci inline six diesel engine that made a whopping 102hp. As was always the case, torque was the name of the game and while the engine made some, the 18mph top speed meant that it needed lots of gearing help as well. The good news? It could go 430-miles on 54 gallons of fuel (unladen). Hopefully there were team drivers because at 18mph, 430 miles would take 24 hours, give or take pee breaks. Picture 6

All kidding aside, these guys were literally yards from catching one of those shells and they didn’t run, didn’t take off screaming, and got the job done. Even while they lumbered away they were not completely out of harm’s way as evidenced by the final closing seconds of the scene where a shell lands and explodes just to the back of the truck. We hope all the guys in this video lived long and happy lives after leaving the war effort and heading home. They certainly earned it.

PRESS PLAY BELOW TO SEE THIS AMAZING FOOTAGE STARRING THE BRAVE SOLIDERS AND THEIR HUGE LUMBERING TRUCK –

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Consumer Guide Car Stuff Podcast, Episode 31: Becoming a Mechanic, 2020 Jeep Compass Trailhawk

Becoming a mechanic

Consumer Guide Car Stuff Podcast

Whether you drive a car, need a car, or just occasionally bum a ride with friends, you’ve come to the right place. Join the editors of Consumer Guide Automotive as they break down everything that’s going on in the auto world. New-car reviews, shopping tips, driving green, electric cars, classic cars, and plenty of great guests. This is the Consumer Guide Car Stuff Podcast.

Episode: 31

Broadcast date: June 1, 2020

Guest: Ian Hardie

Becoming a Mechanic, 2020 Jeep Compass Trailhawk

Host Tom Appel and co-hosts Jill Ciminillo and Damon Bell start the show by discussing the 2020 Nissan Frontier compact pickup–in particular, Nissan’s strategy of putting an all-new V6 engine the current-generation Frontier in advance of introducing the all-new Frontier in the near future. Next, we talk about our test-drive experiences with the 2020 Jeep Compass Trailhawk compact SUV. Ian Hardie, Senior Campus Employment Services Director for Universal Technical Institute in Lisle, IL, calls in to talk about the state of the automotive/diesel service and repair industry, and how UTI trains the technicians of tomorrow. Damon turns the tables with a “reused model names” quiz for Tom and Jill to wrap up the show.

The Consumer Guide Car Stuff Podcast is broadcast every Sunday on Chicago’s WCPT AM 820 at 1:00 PM CST. It is available as a podcast shortly thereafter.

Consumer Guide Publisher Tom Appel on the Nick Digilio Show

Tom on Green Sense Radio

Discussed this week:

Consumer Guide Best Buys

Test Drive: 2020 Jeep Compass Trailhawk

Universal Technical Institute

More Consumer Guide quizzes

More Consumer Guide Test Drives

Follow the crew:

The CG Daily Drive Blog

Car Stuff Facebook Page

Consumer Guide on Twitter

Tom on Twitter

Damon on Twitter

Jill on Twitter

Drive, She Said

Becoming a Mechanic

How It’s Made Video: Follow A Cam From Core Selection To Finish Product At The COMP Cams Factory!

This is an awesome video that shows us some amazing stuff about one of the aftermarket industry’s truly important names. Yes, we are going inside the COMP Cams factory in Tennessee to see how a camshaft is made from the selection of the core to the machining and even to the micro finishing processes that COMP offers on their products as well. Things have come a long way since guys like Ed Iskendarian started grinding their own camshafts far more than a half century ago.

From the materials to the processes, accuracy, and quality, this is as good as it gets in the industry. COMP has been making camshafts for street guys, NASCAR teams, NHRA drag racing teams, sports car teams, open wheel racing competitors, monster truck racers, and anything else you can think of for longer than many of you reading this have been alive. Along the way they have taken every piece of acquired knowledge and plowed it back into their company to make products better. They continue to do that today.

The fascinating thing about this process to us is that it’s still very human. It is not just some massive automative factory with no people in it. There’s human talent at every step of this trip and we think you’ll appreciate that as well. The mix of cutting edge equipment and practices with the skilled hands of true machinists is a really fun intersection to watch.

Enjoy this amazing look behind the scenes at COMP Cams and the truly cool birth of a camshaft!

Press play to see this awesome video that shows the process of making a cam at COMP –

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For GREAT deals on a new or used INFINITI check out INFINITI of Tucson TODAY!

Will Adding a Spoiler Even Effect Your Project Cars Performance?

A car needs to be well balanced to perform properly on a track. Spoilers were introduced to provide downforce in a car to improve their handling and to avoid them from taking off at very high speeds.

So to decide whether you will be needing a spoiler, depends mainly on your use case and your cars limits.

Generally spoilers are also added onto exotic sedans just to add up to the looks of it. It doesn’t do any good in managing the aerodynamics of the car or for providing any downforce. Adding a beefier spoiler to your family sedan can just result in increased drag that can result in even worse fuel economy. But manufacturers also consider adding them in some of their sedans at sports trim, just to make it look racing oriented, and to improve the aesthetics.

A Spoilers role comes into play at high speeds at about 150 to 300+ kmph. A car generates an amount of lift too at high speed, so to restrain it from taking off at high speed, Spoilers provide sufficient downforce to keep the car pushed on to the road. Spoilers are deployed to provide the car, an added normal force, which increases the frictional force between all for tires, that can help it steer into sharp corners at even higher speeds.

Spoilers are considered unnecessary in front wheel drive vehicles, but it also plays a major role in them. A car without any spoilers, generates greater downforce at the front end, just due to the geometry of bonnet, fenders and windscreen. It helps bring the car’s Centre of Pressure i.e. the effective point of action of downforce, to the middle of the car’s body. This prevents car from oversteering in corners at high speeds.

Spoilers also help in providing improved braking at high speeds just due to the additional downforce at the rear end. Generally when brakes are applied, a cars momentum is shifted towards the front end, but a spoiler can allow increased braking at the rear end, to ensure stability and shorter breaking distances.

If your project car has the potential to reach high speeds such as around 250kmph and other components such as its suspension, braking and tires can keep up with the car at such high speeds. You can add a well-engineered spoiler to it, to get extra stability at higher speeds specially on tracks.

But if your car’s components aren’t meant to withstand highspeed maneuvering then it will be needing a lot of other upgrades before thinking of attaching a working spoiler at it. Also you can add a considerable spoiler that matches your sedans look just to give it a sporty look if you’re into that kind of thing.

For GREAT deals on a new or used INFINITI check out INFINITI of Ontario TODAY!

Old Man Cruiser: This 1972 Impala Is The Perfect Example Of What Old People Bought When Nixon Was President


Old Man Cruiser: This 1972 Impala Is The Perfect Example Of What Old People Bought When Nixon Was President

Old people in massive, slow cars. That was a trope used in all forms and facets of advertising and comedy from the 1950s right up until not that long ago. As the size of cars continues to shrink, this once common sight is less and less or a normal thing to see. That being said, it WAS a thing and this car is proof. This 1972 Impala is the perfect example of what old people bought when Richard Nixon was the president. The car is incredibly well preserved and as the leasing says, it was operated by elderly people.

This 1972 Impala is pretty light on options but it does have AC and a six-way power bench seat. The car is powered by a 2bbl topped 350 engine and backed by a Powerglide. This is the lowest horsepower and lowest performing mechanical setup that you could get in this car circa 1972. It reeks of an old guy haggling on price and options. You can almost hear him saying, “Nahh, nahhh, I don’t need all that…” when it comes to stuff like, ohhh, A THREE SPEED TRANSMISSION.

The car is astonishingly persevered. It has 69,000 original miles on it, little if no rust, the interior looks like no one has ever sat in it before, and we just cannot believe how clean it is. The green paint with the green roof and the green interior is awful but it’s awfully cool because of the 1970s flavor of the whole program.

We’d not have the hear to jack with this car if we bought it. We’d be the people doing 10-under the speed limit with a line of traffic a mile behind us and loving every mile we traveled.

eBay: This 1972 Chevy Impala is the perfect example of what old people bought in ’72 


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For GREAT deals on a new or used Toyota check out South Coast Toyota TODAY!

All 4 Wheels Off The Ground And Yet Maybe The Smoothest Save Ever! Wild Nitrous Nova Ride


All 4 Wheels Off The Ground And Yet Maybe The Smoothest Save Ever! Wild Nitrous Nova Ride

When we were at the Throwdown in T-Town this past weekend there was tons of great drag racing, great performances, and plenty of wheelstand action. In fact there were a couple of pretty good saves as some cones gave up their lives in the name of good drag racing. But everyone on the property that saw this big block Nova on nitrous and drag radials pull the front end to the moon and drag the bumper, had their jaw on the ground. This thing came up quick, carried the front end out hard, and buried the rear bumper in the track surface. Before starting to come back down to the ground, both back tires were off the ground and this sucker was bouncing off the limiter. The driver then gave the most perfectly times blip and set this car down on the front end with NO bottoming out of any kind. No sparks, no drama, and kept the hammer down all the way down the race track. It was epic and super fun to watch.

Thanks to our friends at Urban Hillbilly Video, we’ve got the whole thing for you to watch. Check it out below.

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Richard Branson Selling $500m Worth of Virgin Galactic Shares

If you’re looking to own a piece of space travel, now may be your chance. According to The Guardian, Richard Branson’s Virgin Group sent a statement to the New York Stock Exchange saying they intend on selling 25m shares. These shares account for over a fifth of Branson’s stake in Virgin Galactic and the total value was worth around $500m when the pre-announcement price of one of the shares is taken into account– $20. The expected $400m that Virgin Group raises from the selling of these shares will help support the group while the remaining money will go to Aabor, an Abu Dhabi investment fund. Virgin Group has been hit hard during the ongoing pandemic, with Virgin Atlantic taking a brunt of the damage. Virgin Group will use some of the raised funds to help prop up Virgin Atlantic.


Source: TheGuardian.com

For GREAT deals on a new or used Toyota check out Findlay Toyota Henderson TODAY!

2001 Acura Integra RS – Diehards

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I don’t know why we work so well under pressure, we merely do. That’s an understatement coming from Jason Park, owner of Fluid Control Solutions of Porter Ranch, California. Jason with his fantastic driver, Chris Cook, are old hands at turning wrenches and had been running their original Integra, nicknamed Ghost Rider, until an untimely guide to a wall took it out of commission.

The passing of Ghost Rider (1.) left the FCS guys with a problem, a ton of sponsors for a car that was inoperable and eight weeks to acquire back about the track. After sourcing a stripped Integra from a good friend, the car was treated into a nice acid bath as well as a full stitch-welded chassis due to a pair of Harbor Freight engine stands plus some ingenious engineering. With the car cleaned and after aggressively stripping any signs of non-vital metal through the carcass, it weighed in at a svelte 600 pounds. The FCS guys were in a time crunch but wouldn’t cut corners. Jason adds, Nothing was ignored in this project. If time allowed, we went HAM on the fabrication side of things. That started having a customized 25.5 certified rollcage along with a modified lightweight Wilwood aluminum pedal assembly. The front end of the car was reengineered to incorporate a custom drag splitter along with a chromoly birdcage to add reinforcement; that matched the one-off bellypan and catch pan installed to reduce drag and increase the cutting negative effects of the aero.

01 2001 acura integra exospeed 3 piece front endwithin eight weeks is a tall order for anyone, so the FCS guys looked back. The drivetrain, suspension, and interior bits were all good, so we took what we could. The Integra was changing back into a genuine car, especially after being sprayed with a fresh coat of paint, although jason states, The back half of Ghost Rider 1. was shot. Furthermore, each of the chassis components were blasted with powder, but after laying across the color, it only left the FCS team with five days to build an entirely functioning race car. Jason recalls, We got it back from the painters and had to tap, align, fit, assemble, fix, redrill and upholster and start the auto when there wasn’t a bolt about this new canvas.

04 2001 acura integra RS exospeed forged star 8 wheel

05 2001 acura integra RS FCS fab battery box

06 2001 acura integra RS exhaust port

A week’s worth of sleepless nights and coffee runs later, the FCS guys piloted their miracle build to your 9-second pass in Vegas, which might have been a finale for some other shops. Like all hard-core drag enthusiast, Jason and Chris and all of those other team wanted more. Jason recalls, We contacted BorgWarner about attending races on the other side of the country for the first time. There was a catch, we had to convert our new outlaw-spec vehicle to a SFWD car to compete inside the Airwerks BorgWarner shootout at Englishtown, New Jersey, in 2 weeks! The guys were treading in unknown waters, so they hitched up and headed east to meet up with Chris Miller of New York-a big fish inside the competitive drag racing pool.

Jason said, We needed to change everything; the manifold, intercooler, the leading end-even put the interior way back in. After meeting up with Miller, and one a lot of energy drinks, the crew got the car prepped in record efforts and hit the asphalt at Englishtown where some mechanical problems resulted in a less-than-stellar performance. A quick jaunt returning to Cali got the FCS guys an entirely built GS-R cylinder head stuffed with Web cams and rockers and a Supertech valvetrain. The wiring harness and engineThe guys hit a rather large problem-a hurricane, although once back around the east coast, the FCS guys set their sights on the World Cup Finals in Maryland! Jason adds, Sandy hit. Battering the store like a tin can, blowing out the lights, tearing the compressor apart, and destroying everything in its path. Hurricane Sandy de-activate the northeast and left it with no power, no heat, without any gas. And where was the FCS crew? Sleeping in a dark shop using hand tools to finish prepping their race car. After three days for being elbow deep in the Integra, the crew emerged to utter disaster. New York, New Jersey, and most of the coast was in ruins, but that didn’t stop these diehards. After rummaging through debris looking for ramps, welders, and gasoline, they loaded the car and headed for Maryland, for one more race. Diehards? Yeah, you might say that.

Santa Paula Chevrolet

Can’t Miss Cars to Get If You’re A Musician

There are tons of stuff that go into becoming a professional musician. Let’s set aside the years of tedious practice, striving to be the best at an art form that so very few people appreciate. So many people who are inferior both musically and technically than you are at your very same instrument are making millions off it yet you might be struggling. It doesn’t seem fair. And it isn’t fair. But aside from all of that, what else goes into becoming a musician? You have the logistics side of things and when it comes to logistics, just about the most important things you can look at is how to get around town for your personal gigs, within town and out of town. You’ll need to have a car that is great for both. So, what’s the ideal cars to your musician way of life?

Honda Fit

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The Honda Fit is one of the more versatile cars which we can think about that a busy gigging musician should consider. First, of all, it’s a hatch back so you can get your upright bass, or your drum kit, or maybe you 1000 pound guitar amp in there no issue. That alone makes it an incredible car for everyone and anyone. Add into that the fact that it’s a Honda, so it’s got reliability going for it as well. If you roll-up to the venue, no one’s going to mock you for having a gramma car or some sort of vehicle that will repel the ladies away, also, the Fit is a nice looking car, so. The Honda Fit is a fantastic choice and we couldn’t recommend it more highly.

Honda Odyssey

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Then there’s the ladies favorite, the Honda Odyssey. What makes the Odyssey such a great car for the musician? It’s a cushy mini van for one therefore you know it’ll be able to hold all the gear you could ever want except if you have some sort of elaborate light show, but by then you’ll be on a fleet of buses anyway. If you’re gonna do some runs outside of town, the Odyssey can house all the gear and the band, and also not kill you at the fuel pumps, also. This is actually the best car for someone who is going to take this career seriously. , like the Fit, it’s a Honda, so you will know it’s gonna last and get you there without issue.again and in addition

Nissan Cube

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I know what you’re thinking: you wouldn’t be caught dead inside a cube. And you’re not wrong, this stuff are top tier ugly. Also how well it handles on the road, though but when we first saw the Cube at Nissan Fontana after our initial laughing in hysterics, we took it for a drive and were pretty impressed with not just its comfort. It’s amazing that they would design this vehicle being so horrendously unattractive, but because of that, its cost is below what might otherwise be and so you will get those savings. Take a test drive today at Downtown Nissan.