Aug 4, 2009 10:34:39 AM
Aug 4, 2009 12:54:20 PM
there is more
Mercedes E-Class given a hideous makeover
There’s ugly and then there’s hideous. It takes a complete eyesore for us to label something ugly but this one went further than anyone of us ever expected. This car is a previous generation Mercedes Benz E-Class W124 but from the looks of things, it hardly resembles anything the guys from Daimler would ever build. It’s been completely modified – if you can even call something like as ‘modified’ – to look like, well, this. Yeah, very often are we at a loss for words but this one managed to accomplish that.
Try as we may to justify this creation, we just can’t. The car’s front has been completely altered with grills that make it look like a medieval helmet. The designers - which apparently goes by the name ’Arturos’ - also included a number of slit-looking air vents on both sides of the car, which, quite frankly, reminds us of those water-faring creatures known as fishes. The designer even managed to outdo itself by replacing the E-Class W124’s head and tail lights with CLK-style headlights and SLK tail lamps.
We’d describe the car even further but we’re afraid that it still wouldn’t do it enough justice so we’ve decided to just let you see it for yourself
Aug 4, 2009 8:16:56 PM
Ok, I'm not going to pretend I understand this -- because I don't. But I REALLY need to understand
(1) The purpose behind mounting the turbo intercooler OUTSIDE the fender and running the plumbing with exposed hoses back through the front facia.
(2) The purpose of 8 ft tall chopper exhaust pipes
Oh, and this car I'm delivers Formula 1 levels of downforce. LOL!
...the only thing stopping you in all likelihood, is you!
Aug 5, 2009 12:16:46 AM
Heist:
Oh, and this car I'm delivers Formula 1 levels of downforce. LOL!
Not exactly part of the 'pedestrian friendly' design trend!
http://www.abc.net.au/science/articles/2002/05/15/554442.htm
Heist:
Ok, I'm not going to pretend I understand this -- because I don't. But I REALLY need to understand
(1) The purpose behind mounting the turbo intercooler OUTSIDE the fender and running the plumbing with exposed hoses back through the front facia.
(2) The purpose of 8 ft tall chopper exhaust pipes
Oh, and this car I'm delivers Formula 1 levels of downforce. LOL!
Those aren't intercoolers. Those are oil coolers. I also don't understand the point of mounting the oil cooler on the exterior. It can't be that hot in Japan that the engine needs additional cooling
Heist:
Ok, I'm not going to pretend I understand this -- because I don't. But I REALLY need to understand
(1) The purpose behind mounting the turbo intercooler OUTSIDE the fender and running the plumbing with exposed hoses back through the front facia.
(2) The purpose of 8 ft tall chopper exhaust pipes
Oh, and this car I'm delivers Formula 1 levels of downforce. LOL!
There is no logic to understant . It is pure deco or art or personality. It must be just for fun and for doing things differently.
Give originality and creativity some credit , guys !
cumbe:
The car on the right hand side must have been overseen, never seen an exhaust/wing modification like that!
Mounting the oil cooler at the front fascia is not that uncommon on vintage cars, but exposing the pipes certainly is.
All in all, I find this rather interesting but keep wondering why they solely use cars of a very distinct era.
Hahahahaha! Priceless!
"Go Go Sexy Buta"
987 Boxster S, Arctic Silver, H&R Monotube Coil-Overs and Anti Roll Bars, Strut Brace, FVD Stage 1, Sachs Racing Clutch and Single-Mass Flywheel, Recaro Racing Shells, PSE.
997 Carrera 4S, Guards Red, H&R Sport Springs, IPD Plenum, Dension Gateway 500, PSE.
Gnil:
Heist:
Ok, I'm not going to pretend I understand this -- because I don't. But I REALLY need to understand
(1) The purpose behind mounting the turbo intercooler OUTSIDE the fender and running the plumbing with exposed hoses back through the front facia.
(2) The purpose of 8 ft tall chopper exhaust pipes
Oh, and this car I'm delivers Formula 1 levels of downforce. LOL!
There is no logic to understant . It is pure deco or art or personality. It must be just for fun and for doing things differently.
Give originality and creativity some credit , guys !
I want to Gnil, but my eyes...
They hurt. It's like they all said - let's take the cars from Mad Max and Death Race 2000 and make them street legal.
...the only thing stopping you in all likelihood, is you!
Aug 5, 2009 8:52:27 PM
JoeRockhead:
This leaves me speechless!
Fabspeed tips??
Those shots are Sooooo weird. What the heck w/ all of them putting the oil coolers out like that. It would be weird to see it on one car but so many? What the heck happened that it would start a trend?? And the tail pipes?? Never seen such a a collection of similarly weird cars.
--
08 PORSCHE Turbo Cabriolet, 06 Ferrari F430, 04 Durango HEMI, 04 Harley Davidson Screamin Eagle, 93 Harley Davidson Nostalgia
Heist:
Gnil:
Heist:
Ok, I'm not going to pretend I understand this -- because I don't. But I REALLY need to understand
(1) The purpose behind mounting the turbo intercooler OUTSIDE the fender and running the plumbing with exposed hoses back through the front facia.
(2) The purpose of 8 ft tall chopper exhaust pipes
There is no logic to understant . It is pure deco or art or personality. It must be just for fun and for doing things differently.
Give originality and creativity some credit , guys !
I want to Gnil, but my eyes...
They hurt. It's like they all said - let's take the cars from Mad Max and Death Race 2000 and make them street legal.
It's all about psychology.
Japan is a group of very crowded islands where adults are expected to conform to standard behavior patterns both in their working lives and their private lives. People tend to be pretty intense and take everything seriously. This tendency is even forced onto school kids.
So what happens when Japanes kids get beyond puberty and feel the rebellious urges that teenagers everywhere are inclined to? They use the brief period of freedom they enjoy before they get into the rut of becoming "salarymen" and "office ladies" (those good old standard Japanese expressions ) and rebel with the same intensity as their parents apply to conforming to their society's norms.
I doubt that it is still fashionable now, but I remember walking around Tokyo on a Sunday afternoon in the mid-1990s and seeing a couple of hundred kids gathered in the street on imported 1960s style Italian Lambretta and Vespa scooters, all dressed up in British-style (horse) riding clothes (tweed jackets, baggy riders' pants, peaked riders' hard-hats). Many of them had their hair dyed blonde or auburn or worse. I guess they must have read about or seen a movie about the British "Mods" of the 1960s, and wanted to emulate them.
The cars you see above are all part of the same thing. In order to conform to the tendency to rebel to society's norms with the intensity expected of you, you really do have to overdo things.
fritz
fritz:
Heist:
Gnil:
Heist:
Ok, I'm not going to pretend I understand this -- because I don't. But I REALLY need to understand
(1) The purpose behind mounting the turbo intercooler OUTSIDE the fender and running the plumbing with exposed hoses back through the front facia.
(2) The purpose of 8 ft tall chopper exhaust pipes
There is no logic to understant . It is pure deco or art or personality. It must be just for fun and for doing things differently.
Give originality and creativity some credit , guys !
I want to Gnil, but my eyes...
They hurt. It's like they all said - let's take the cars from Mad Max and Death Race 2000 and make them street legal.
It's all about psychology.
Japan is a group of very crowded islands where adults are expected to conform to standard behavior patterns both in their working lives and their private lives. People tend to be pretty intense and take everything seriously. This tendency is even forced onto school kids.
So what happens when Japanes kids get beyond puberty and feel the rebellious urges that teenagers everywhere are inclined to? They use the brief period of freedom they enjoy before they get into the rut of becoming "salarymen" and "office ladies" (those good old standard Japanese expressions ) and rebel with the same intensity as their parents apply to conforming to their society's norms.
I doubt that it is still fashionable now, but I remember walking around Tokyo on a Sunday afternoon in the mid-1990s and seeing a couple of hundred kids gathered in the street on imported 1960s style Italian Lambretta and Vespa scooters, all dressed up in British-style (horse) riding clothes (tweed jackets, baggy riders' pants, peaked riders' hard-hats). Many of them had their hair dyed blonde or auburn or worse. I guess they must have read about or seen a movie about the British "Mods" of the 1960s, and wanted to emulate them.
The cars you see above are all part of the same thing. In order to conform to the tendency to rebel to society's norms with the intensity expected of you, you really do have to overdo things.
Exactly !!! And I support their action completly !! These cars have actually an mazing sense of creativity and '' caricature''. They are very well thaught in their own artistic line and do make sence . But.... yes, looking at them is and that's also the purpose of it !
Japan is where the trends in youth subculture are made nowadays. Think Pokemon, Visual Kei, Coz-Playing, ... It has been a long time since a new youth subculture has been invented somewhere else.
And if it's playing with cars? How can we possibly disagree with that (as long as they don't kill themselves)?