Watch Goodwood Speed Week LIVE Right Here! Epic Historic Race Cars Hauling Ass At Goodwood


Watch Goodwood Speed Week LIVE Right Here! Epic Historic Race Cars Hauling Ass At Goodwood

If you don’t know Goodwood then you have been living under a rock. We remember when photos and video were all you would get from Goodwood, other than the highlight stuff that was run on TV. Thanks to modern live streaming, now everyone in the world with an internet connection can watch all the action and hear all the sounds from Goodwood Speed Week. The sights and sounds, from such a variety of machines, makes this one of those events that is like no other. The Goodwood Festival of Speed is one of the most varied events in the world and because of COVID-19 it was not able to be completed and instead Goodwood Speed Week was born. Think of this as the best of event. Not as big but certainly with some of the coolest things you’ll find at any other Goodwood event.

Below is all the info from Goodwood, and below that is the player to watch all the action LIVE right here.

Here is all the info from Goodwood. 

Welcome to Goodwood SpeedWeek presented by Mastercard, the one-off event that combines all the best bits of the Fesitval of Speed presented by Mastercard, Goodwood Revival and Members’ Meetings. The next three days will feature an amazing mixture of F1, rallying, sportscars, touring cars and more, from the very beginning of motorsport right to the present day. We’ll celebrate 50 years of Porsche’s first Le Mans win, 70 years of Formula 1, the increidble relationship between TWR and Jaguar and the wonderful life of Sir Stirling Moss. You can find the best races from Revival and Members’ Meeting including the RAC TT, renamed Stirling Moss Memorial Trophy, Gerry Marshall Trophy and S.F. Edge Trophy. Presented by Demot O’Leary, Rory Reid, Sian Welby and Mark Webber as well as a host of experts this stream will celebrate the past, present and future of motoring as well as some cutting edge technology. To find a full entry list and timetable visit Goodwood.com by CLICKING RIGHT HERE.

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Classic YouTube: This 1970 Mercury Cougar Is Providing Services To The Community!


Classic YouTube: This 1970 Mercury Cougar Is Providing Services To The Community!

You might not believe us, but the owner of this 1970 Mercury Cougar is providing many different public services with his actions in this video. Oh, sure, on the surface it appears that all that “Purgin’”Spurgeon Adkins is doing is raising a little bit of hell while reducing his rear tires’ life expectancy to nil. But the truth is that there is so much more going on. What, you may be asking, could he possibly be doing that would be considered a “public service?” Doing burnouts on a country lane doesn’t qualify, does it?

Yes, it does. First and foremost, he’s scaring off deer and other animals from the road surface. Now, that might sound bad, but the truth is that the noise that the Cougar makes is making wildlife avoid this section of roadway. He’s keeping little fluffy creatures from becoming roadkill, and in the process saving his neighbors the problems associated with animal/vehicle incidents. He’s fogging for mosquitoes…you know that everybody around these parts won’t be bothered by no skeeters for quite some time, they don’t like the smoke. And he’s even going to the trouble of repaving some of the country road he’s having a ball on.

And don’t forget the rubber that is being laid down as the 351 Cleveland overwhelms the rear tires…any attention that this road receives is good attention, and it looks like it hasn’t seen much in years. So spare your cries of “hoon!” and thank your neighborhood delinquent when they cut loose with the car…they are thinking about their community!

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Classic YouTube: Van Halen, Dolls And A Nissan 300ZX – Nightmare Fuel Or Cool TV Ad


Classic YouTube: Van Halen, Dolls And A Nissan 300ZX – Nightmare Fuel Or Cool TV Ad

The Nissan 300ZX was a far cry from it’s original Datsun 240Z predecessor, but in the early 1990s, a Twin Turbo Z was still a very impressive car…it might not have been a light and nimble little machine that earlier Z and ZX cars had been, but the Z32 variation that appeared in USDM markets in 1990 was stylish, comfortable and very, very capable. The 300ZX was produced through 2000 in Japan and other markets, but left the U.S. market in 1996 after the Yen/Dollar ratio went south for Nissan’s liking. To be fair, the 300ZX was a $50,000+ coupe that had been more affordable beforehand, but still…

That being said, for the final year’s advertising, Nissan went ahead and went bonkers with the ad campaign. The car itself made an impression, but this is one of the very few 1990s-era auto advertisements that was worth remembering simply because Nissan was having way too much fun with the campaign. Van Halen’s “You Really Got Me” might have resonated with kids who grew up listening to VH years earlier (or, in my case, my parents, who had been going to the concerts since high school, when Diamond Dave was still at full action and insanity, but it was the cocky presentation of the not-a-G.I. Joe and his runaway lover in a remote-controlled T-top Nissan 300ZX that had me on the floor laughing. Hey, I was thirteen, give me a break! The one thing I didn’t know growing up was who the old Japanese man was at the end of it. That, friends, is Mr. K. – the father of the Z-car,

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WILD RIDE: Top Sportsman Racer, Ronnie Proctor, Goes For One Hell Of A Ride


WILD RIDE: Top Sportsman Racer, Ronnie Proctor, Goes For One Hell Of A Ride

Sometimes stuff just doesn’t go the way you think it’s going to go, and sometimes when that happens it will get your attention in a hurry. Such is the case with poor Ronnie Proctor, who went for one hell of a wild ride at Indy yesterday. You have to give him some credit for keeping his head on straight. Sure he’s along for the ride for most of it, but thank god he kept his foot off the skinny pedal on the right, because otherwise this sucker could have been running into the tree from the wrong way. You have to wonder what his heart rate was as he got it straight and rolled past the blocks after getting unbelievably close to crossing the center line. Of course none of that matters at that point, but most racers can’t say they’ve been facing both directions in their own lane before even going 330 feet down the track, nor would they want to.

At least if you are going to do something exciting you might as well make sure it counts, and since it is the US Nationals, you know that it will all be caught on camera. Since he’s okay, and so is the car, we’ll give him a hearty congrats on being the talk of the town for today and hope the rest of his weekend goes smoother than this one run.

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Monster Mack: Watch This Twin-Engine Aussie Mack Cruiseliner Cut Loose At Bindoon!


Monster Mack: Watch This Twin-Engine Aussie Mack Cruiseliner Cut Loose At Bindoon!

Diesel freaks bug me. Not those who extract maximum power out of engines designed to produce a ton of power, just those who insist that billowing black smoke out of a trash can from underneath a lifted Dodge is the cool thing to do. Far as I’m concerned, it’s a mating ritual between like-minded individuals and nothing more. Any diesel that’s wicked up some will blow a little smoke. Read that again…a LITTLE smoke. It does not look like the end result of  Captain Smith telling the engine room of the Titanic to freaking send it. That’s just showing off.

This Aussie Mack Cruiseliner truck is sporting two engines, enough turbocharging that the pressure production should equate to thrust at the exhaust, and enough torque to punish those super-singles in a manner befitting a burnout pit. Notice: you will see the heavy black smoke initially when the engines start to get rowdy and a very thin bit of smoke while the twin mills are going for broke. But most of what is trailing the back of the flat-faced Bulldog is tire smoke that seemingly will never end.

This is what diesel power is supposed to look like.

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Classic YouTube: Ronnie Sox’s 1995 Crash At The IHRA Summernationals At U.S. 41 Dragway


Classic YouTube: Ronnie Sox’s 1995 Crash At The IHRA Summernationals At U.S. 41 Dragway

Ronnie Sox needs no introduction here. The Sox and Martin cars instantly bring in images of red, white and blue Plymouths fitted with a four-speed manual and the man from North Carolina who could run that gearbox like P.T. Barnum’s lion trainer. Between 1968-1971, Sox was beating all comers with his stick-shifted Mopars. In 1972 the NHRA gave weight breaks to Fords and Chevrolets, which hurt his win streak, and when the Lenco transmission appeared, Sox was the only racer to actually slow down. By 1975 the Sox and Martin deal had folded and Ronnie went out on his own. In 1995 Sox paired off again with Buddy Martin and was fielding a Ford Probe in IHRA competition, right up until the Summernationals at U.S. 41 Dragway in Indiana.

Shortly after the launch, an oil line blew out and coated the track the car was on. Ronnie attempted to drive through as the car slid into the left lane, but when the back end came around on him and the tires dug in, there was no saving it. The Probe rolled fourteen times violently, throwing body panels before slamming down onto all four wheels with the engine on fire. Sox suffered a broken sternum, broken ribs, a bruised eye, and “a whole lot of other injuries. It was a bad scene,” he later told CompetitionPlus. Though he ran exhibitions up until 2005 and even ran Pro Stock Truck in 1998, the 1995 crash took a huge toll on Mr. Four-Speed.

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Porsche 911 Owners’ Stories: 996 GT3

Nothing easy comes without effort. We see that play out time and again by our dealers and fans. Once a determined enthusiast finds their dream car, nothing will stop them in attaining it. Such was the case with Loren, the latest star in Porsche’s 911 Owners’ Stories. In a quest to afford a new Porsche, he began to work on older ones, buying fixing, and flipping them for a tidy profit. That has evolved into his own Porsche workshop and a collection of 10 cars.

Porsche 993 Price, Specs, Photos & Review

His pride & joy is a 996 GT3. While retaining the same block as the 993 Series, the GT cars along with the Turbo had separate water jackets on each cylinder bank. Using the same chassis as the Turbo, the GT3 utilized the reinforced front suspension (without AWD) to achieve 1.03G on the skidpad. It was the highest lateral grip of any production car to-date. The 3.6-liter offers 375 horsepower and 284 lb-ft of torque to the rear wheels via a six-speed manual. Along with the other 996 series, they are the most affordable 911 models on the market. They will definitely become collectible in a few years, so find one as a daily driver and stay with us for all your Porsche 911 news.

History Lesson: The 1980s Front-Drive Offerings In The Name Of Performance

Look into the past and you will see a lot of ghosts of cars past, cars that were meant to make an impact. Some did, some didn’t. They were everywhere, then suddenly they were nowhere to be found except in the most forgotten corners of the lots in BFE, U.S.A. Some of these cars could’ve been the first evolution for markets that existed later in life, if it wasn’t for manufacturers that didn’t take them seriously. Actually, scratch that…even if they did, the market didn’t. But let’s look at the subject matter…

Remember the Dodge Daytona? No, not the Charger…the front-drive K-car that tried like hell to give the Fox Mustang and the third-gen F-bodies something to think about. Considering that Chrysler had narrowly escaped Death’s scythe just a few years ago, it was impressive that the company had cranked out a competent hatchback coupe front-driver that had style, power, and sex appeal. If it wasn’t for the torque steer, Mopar was on par for yet another early take on hot FWD performance, along with the Shelby GLHS Charger and Omni, the Shelby CSX, and other hot takes. Mopar got Shelby to tweak their cars and you would think that with the hot turbocharged 2.2L four, that they would’ve stuck around a little longer than they did.

The Ford EXP is harder to quantify, but you have to understand: these things were EVERYWHERE for years, before they all suddenly turned to dust and ceased to exist. The EXP never really tried to be a true performance machine…you either bought one with a touch of luxury flair, or one with a touch of sporty flair. And unlike the Daytona, the EXP was a two-seater, which was a problem unto itself when it came to insuring it. Yeah…two-seater equals sports car, regardless of how mundane the roots are. It’s an Escort through and through, bug-eye or AeroEXP, and the benefits and problems of that base bled through. The EXP did have one thing going for it: for the size, it was properly useable for an all-around daily use. You had a huge cargo compartment, you had an engine that would move it…kind of…and if you didn’t try to kick it around, you had a competent, economical car that didn’t look bad.

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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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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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