Comments
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The distinctive shape of the roof and the rear point to a 1941-1948 Dodge Luxury Liner Business Coupe. | ||
Yes, clearly the Marzal rather than the Faena. | ||
The proportions, particularly around the cabin, are of an Iso Grifo A3C. They've just modified it with the nose of a Ferrari 365 Daytona and the taillights of an early 3rd generation Pontiac Firebird. | ||
The ads on the side and the back are the same as on the bus from "Speed," as well as it being the same model. A nice little '90s reference... | ||
The front resembles a 1987-1990 Chevrolet Caprice with a split added to the grille, but the rest of the (barely visible) body more closely resembles a late-'60s or early-'70s 2 door of some type...maybe GM A-body? | ||
A mutt. The front is from a 1976-1977 Chevrolet Malibu Classic, the taillights are from a 1978-1980 Chevrolet Monte Carlo, and the mid section looks like a Volvo 242. | ||
The mid-section is very clearly 1967-1969 Plymouth Barracuda hardtop. Front and rear clip are apparently inspired by the 1977-1978 Pontiac Firebird. | ||
This is a Chevrolet Task Force (1955-1957), not an Advance Design. | ||
Because the uploader is listing the visually modified "Max Coolness" versions of the cars as separate entries. There are still a few to go. | ||
1947-1953 Chevrolet Advance Design. | ||
The front of it looks more like one of the "Big Bear" series Yamahas, to me. | ||
Most of the body seems to be E38, but it does seem to have Mercedes W126 front light clusters, and the grille looks like a GAZ-3110. | ||
Looks like a third generation European Ford Escort. | ||
Vauxhall Chevette. | ||
1988-1989 with those non-composite headlights. | ||
Dodge A100, agreed, although the year range is 1964-1970. | ||
From the front and rear, this is a 1970 Dodge Polara. This one, in fact, is the police version of the same car: www.igcd.net/vehicle.php?id=183101 -- Last edit: 2019-10-05 05:26:12 | ||
The overall appearance of this vehicle is much more a second generation (1968-1974) Ford Econoline van, with the square headlights being the only real difference. Even the taillights are identical. | ||
Looks more like a 1979 Dodge Ramcharger. | ||
1979-1987. I think it's a 3D model also used in Wreckfest. | ||
This is a 1974 Dodge Monaco. | ||
The "75" in Fleetwood 75 is part of the model name, not the year. Also, it's not a Fleetwood 75, since they were factory built extended sedans with most of their stretched element behind the rear doors. This is based on a more conventional Fleetwood Brougham-based stretched limousine, with coachwork by some third party. The year is 1980 at the oldest, judging by the size of the front light gaps, stretching up to about 1992. | ||
There was no Monterey in 1949...that model wasn't introduced until 1952. This is a Mercury Eight Club Coupe. | ||
Looks like a 1959 Cadillac, but I don't see anything to suggest it's an Eldorado, and certainly not a Biarritz, which was only offered as a convertible. | ||
Has the 1986-specific external third brake light. | ||
Name is presumably a reference to "Wayne's World." Annoying, since they drove a Pacer instead of a Gremlin. | ||
The RSR Group 4 in Assetto Corsa is practically the same car. | ||
1956 Ford Customline | ||
Even though it's wrong for the game's setting, it looks more like a Bedford CF to me. | ||
Whatever it is, it appears to be modeled with a Wayne Lifeguard body. | ||
1998 Harley Davidson FXSTB Night Train, a model introduced that year. They actually licensed it for the game. | ||
This is a 1957 GMC 100, not a Ford. | ||
Clearly a reference to "Stubby Bob," the wheelstanding rear-engined 1950 Ford F-6 from the internet series "Roadkill." | ||
This appears to me to be a Dodge Mirada. | ||
Free model that shows up in games periodically, including the terrible "P-Walker's Simulation." www.igcd.net/vehicle.php?id=129783 | ||
A year too new for a Model A....this is a 1932 Ford V8. | ||
1969-1970 Mustang sportsroof with different taillights haphazardly photoshopped in. | ||
With that front, I'd say this is more a GM CV200. The coachwork is clearly modeled as Blue Bird. | ||
This is a 1957 Dodge Kingsway, an export model (which was, in fact, sold in Cuba) that is actually a Plymouth with Dodge front sheetmetal. The front is 1957 Dodge (not 1958, since it has single headlights with smaller inboard indicators, rather than quad headlights), and the rear is 1957 Plymouth, thus it's a 1957 Kingsway. GIS for comparison pictures: www.google.com/search?q=1957+dodge+kingsway&client=firefox-b-1&source=lnms&tbm=isch&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwiAjeSUjaLaAhUM94MKHUt-CcsQ_AUICigB&biw=1920&bih=962#imgrc=_ | ||
Most likely. I duplicated that paint scheme in Midnight Club: Los Angeles back in the day, and it would be a piece of cake to duplicate it in Forza, as well. Gran Turismo's editor, even if it's very rudimentary, should be able to also. -- Last edit: 2018-03-01 20:20:55 | ||
Sold as Ford Capri in Australia: oldcarbrochures.org/index.php/Australia-2/Ford/Ford/1970-Ford-Capri-Brochure | ||
425 horsepower is the original gross rating for the 426 Hemi, however all Plymouth Hemi 'Cudas had Shaker scoops, which this car doesn't. Safe to keep it just labeled as "'Cuda." | ||
Series 62, not an Eldorado. It lacks the unique, tapered rear half of the '58 Eldo. | ||
Why Eldorado? With the chrome spear down the center of the sides, it's more a Series 62 or a Coupe Deville. | ||
The "Go Wing" should not be body colored, and the wheels are incorrect for a Hemi-equipped 'Cuda (which came with either 15 inch Rallye wheels or 15 inch steel wheels with dog dish hubcaps). Otherwise, this is very nicely modeled, and super cool to see it in this game. | ||
How is the picture in an offroad environment? Could they possibly be adding offroad elements to the game? | ||
I swear I recognize that generic taillight panel from another game. | ||
They're still inexplicably not putting "SS" emblem on Chevrolet SS cars. | ||
This is rather a 1960 Plymouth with those taillights. With the imitation spare tire on the trunk lid, it's most likely a Fury. | ||
Suzuki PV 50. |