@@richardfurlott4243 Oh yes you can. Nothing sounds as good a an Italian V-12. NOTHING....ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-nFqslG0Axbk.html
Camaro, Torana, Commodore, Challenger, Firebird, Mustang, Falcon, Roadrunner, Impala, Bel Air and Monaro are among my favourites. Can't resist Australian and American classic muscle.
It’s hard not to smile when you see a classic muscle car. These powerful monsters were created to not only take you from one point to another! Big, heavy, loud and rough - there are all the wonderful
1960's and 70's cars were badass off the showroom floor. When ever one of these beauties pulls up at a stop light, and I feel the rumble and smell the long ago familiar fumes of raw gas and exhaust it throws me back to when that was everyday at the stop light. I miss my 67 Camaro
I'm 25 and had a few 79 F bodies and a 68 Le Mans (GTO clone). Rumble all the way, dude. Toyota trucks at the moment, but I'd like a '68 GTO or Road Runner for sure. Classic muscle all the way. Rode in a hellcat, very fast. Didn't feel much. Didn't hear much. Had more fun going sideways in a Trans Am. No safety. All driver. Raw gas smell. What a fun car
I can't wait until I get a muscle car to experience that same feeling I want a mid 70s elcamino with a 350 and a manual (dosent have to be factory stick I couldn't care less about originality)
Great cars from golden years , Camaro ss is timeless, nothing modern in equivalent. The people who put the effort in on these masterpieces must have the biggest smile when driving them,the caretakers of time.
My ‘71 Plymouth Road Runner had dual 850 double pumpers (dual stacks sticking out of the air-grabber hood, hole) , hooker headers with a bad assed Isky Cam and balanced and blue-printed 440 and a Doug Nash competition series transmission...sounded just like the mid-70’s, wild paint job Orange camaro...was an earth shaker, motor mount breaker and a panty dropper! 🤘🤘🤘
Takes me back 60 years on Rt 17, Paramus, NJ. The spot was southbound side at a Stewart's Root Beer. All the "healthy" cars would prowl through before ordering food. But one time a 1950 bullet nose Studebaker rolled through. The bullet was removed from the nose, for air intake for the blower. It idled around once, literally shaking the ground. Ugly as hell but had everyone's attention. Ahhh the good old days.
I'd love where I live. Here in Maryland when I was a teenager in the '80s there was always places where cars would gather. It usually would be Friday and Saturday. Saturday being that more people would be out. When you cruised up and down the highway you can smell cam 2. Even though I don't spend much time hanging out on the weekends I still can walk out my front door and smell Cam 2. Hearing loud motor the smell of burnt rubber always brings back great memories.
I'm in Japan watching this. Damn I miss that big ass American power. I have an Astin Martin. It's fast as hell but just cant make that nice thump of good old fashion US muscle.
Когда смотриш на такие машины-завидуешь америке! Ну вы машины придумали! Спасибо, за них! За двигатели, которые так рычат, и издают такие не описуемые звуки! За автомобильные кузова,с теми очертаниями, которые больше ни где не увидишь! Сумашедшие автомобили, и безумно красивые! Конструктора таких машин не зря свою жизнь прожили,
I GREW UP IN ERIE PA IN THE SIXTIES. HAD 5 BEST FRIENDS WE ALL HAD 442s . ALWAYS GOT BEAT BY THE GREATEST MOTOR EVER MADE IN A 1969 HEMI CUDA.. WHAT AN IDIOT NOT TO BUY ONE AND WE HAD PLENTY OF MONEY. THAT WAS THE GREATEST ERA TO GROW UP IN. IM 75 AND STILL ROAD RACE BUT NOW I HAVE A BUILT GTR 1400 HP AND ( NOTHING ,) CAN EVEN COME CLOSE TO ME..IT JUST KEEPS GETTING BETTER.. MY PERSONAL BEST TO ALL THE GUYS IN THIS VIDEO. DONT GIVE IT UP, "EVER"...
All my Teen-Years spent on the "INFAMOUS"; 8-Mile Road, Gratiot Ave. and Woodward Ave. Born and bred; "Detroit Muscle Cara"!!! Copo, Yenko, Rouch, and Mopar!!! Revered across the U.S.A. Graduated from a 1966 Ford Mustang, 289-Hipo to a 1970 Plymouth Cuda. 340 Six-Pack, 727 Trans with a stall Torque Convertor and a Dana 60 Series Rear-end!!! Living the DREAM!!! Mark
one of the reasons I'm proud to be a American such amazing car's! my mom is a certified retired mechanic! when I was younger she was rebuilding and engine on a convertible GTO I played with tool's not doll's always loved the fact she raised me that way! GM since day one is my comfort zone! epic video! 🔥🔥
I miss street racing Front street in Philly. 80s. I had a 64 Dodge Polara 360 wedge, blue print 30 over, full roller. It would stand up & walk. Had 79 Camaro, 74 Grand Torino, 73 Nova sleeper, my wife rolled 75 Monza 2+2 250 stock posi.( her "turtle" google body style) She roached Mustangs. My baby could drive.
50+ years since I first heard muscle car engines roars, this video brings back many fond 😮childhood memories. Proud to be American and enjoy all the privileges this country affords all of us🇺🇸
2:14...holy shit...beautiful. And thanks for not adding a bunch of new vets and lambo's that some wealthy guy bought. These ppl that you highlighted live and breath their cars.
Hot wheels cars never really translate to real life drivers. They look absolutely wonderful but being practical, at least somewhat, has to come into consideration. For multi purpose driving you have to stop at 17”. I don’t know how many people I have saved on a highway with an air compressor that had a 2” sidewall and 22” or bigger rims. You have a slow leak and it’s instantly flat. Almost like pumping up a bicycle tire. Just stupidity in the name of looking like a toy.......kinda like a kardashian
I'm still surprised that we don't see more Hot rodded Vegas and Pintos. Both platforms were available with V8s from the factory. In both cases I'm referring to the Monza and the Mustang II respectively.
Some badass muscle cars and one of my favorite Japanese sports cars ever good choices I'm still trying to grab a early 80s Oldsmobile Delta 88 and jam a 455 under the hood from a big block cutlass (the engine alone is 1200$)