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Thread: Top Ten Most Overrated Sports Cars of all Time

  1. #1
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    Top Ten Most Overrated Sports Cars of all Time

    I didn't write this, but a lot of it is pretty damn funny. It's from the latest issue of "mph" magazine.


    1. Lamborghini Countach

    What they left out: "The Countach might have done 200+ in some fevered Italian's dreams, but when actually tested it usually blew up around 180 mph. The wing blocks the 2 two inches of rear visibility this car ever had, leaving 190 degrees of blind spot, and the side mirrors just show fenders and airscoops. The doors barely lift up far enough for a lissome, 90-pound Chinese acrobat, and they fall down without warning to split open your skull. The controls are horribly heavy, the clutch can pack up every 3000 miles, and the shift linkage is cast out of old shoelaces and cake batter. Did we mention the front spoiler? It scrapes over pregnant amoebas."

    2. Shelby 427 Cobra

    What they left out: "The 427 Cobra was mysteriously hinky from day one. (This had something to do with putting a ridiculously huge engine in the nose.) The rear tires' grip on the pavement is about as solid as Jessica Simpson's grip on string theory, and it likes to swap ends as you pull out of your driveway. (It's also no fun when your $400,000 motorsports legend gets its ass kicked at the Shelby Club track day by some Elmer with a fiberglass kit car.)"

    3. Plymouth Hemi 'Cuda

    What they left out: "For Christ's sake, we're talking about a Plymouth-crappy plastics and rusty iron screwed together by some stoner with a UAW card. To 'sophistication of some smaller European designs' add 'circa 1916', and 'excellent handling (for a muscle car)' is analogous to 'fairly tolerant (for a Nazi).' It might also be worth noting that while Hemi 'Cudas are the flavor of the month at Barrett-Jackson today, no car made popular by a Don Johnson television series has ever kept its value for more than a year."

    4. Big-Block Corvette

    What they left out: "Zora hated these understeering porkers. They overheated faster than the wall of the girl's showers at Smallville High; what little balance the Corvette ever had was destroyed; and the added stress and vibration made pieces fall off the car even faster than they used to. It was just one more reason for Duntov to hate John DeLorean, who'd recently convinced GM to abandon its 50-year policy of making engine size bear some slight relationship to vehicle size, (DeLorean is now an angel in heaven, where every few minutes one of his wings suddenly droops down and slams itself shut.)"

    5. BMW 507

    What they left out: "Built on the chopped-up chassis of an overpriced, underpowered, overly complex sedan, the overpriced, underpowered, overly complex 507 cost more than a 300SL without any of the race wins or technology. Spare parts are still available, but mostly only on Pluto."

    6. Lotus Esprit

    What they left out: "The Esprit's most unlikely feat in The Spy Who Loved Me was starting every time Roger Moore turned the key. It's also amazing that Q found space for that extra junk, since Lotus couldn't figure out where to stuff in a working A/C. The Esprit's bodywork is made from a laminate of silicone glue and Shrinky Dinks, the anemic four-banger gives the acceleration of a K-Car, and the fuel system blurs the line between internal combustion and spontaneous combustion. Underpriced for an exotic; overpriced for a kit car."

    7. Jaguar E-Type

    What they left out: "Without a federal NSF grant, it's hard to imagine developing a chassis better designed for trapping water and promoting electrolysis. The early transmissions are unshiftable, the driving position was designed either for midgets or by sadists, and the clamshell hood only opens far enough to peel the flesh off the back of your head, not enough to actually get in there for twice-daily repairs. Rather than being drawn to the E's phallic styling, most women just say, 'Look at that Giant wiener.' Then they notice what you're driving."

    8. Ferrari 250 GT

    What they left out: "Ferrari's 3.0-liter V12 uses four times as many parts, a longer block, more mass, and 50 times as many dollars to make less power than a used Chevy small-block. Forty-year-old Ferraris stop and steer much like 30-year-old GMC pickups, and the constantly overdue valve job will run more than a new Kia. Owning a 250 also increases your likelihood of having to talk to Peter Sachs."

    9. Nissan Skyline GT-R

    What they left out: "The GT-R wouldn't need twin-turbos, all-wheel drive, four-wheel steering, and big intercoolers if it wasn't a heavy-ass piece of pork to begin with. And the feds ain't got nothing to do with it: Nissan never sent us the GT-R because out of the 12 people in America who'd actually spend 911 Turbo money on an outdated-looking Japanese coupe, six are in jail at any given time."

    10. Maserati Ghibli

    What they left out: "Heavy steering, squishy pedals, mushy gearchange, live rear axle on leaf springs...Daytona equivalent my ass. By washing the olive oil off all those old sardine cans before melting them down, the trained gibbons Maserati actually hired to build this thing accidentally removed its one source of rust protection. (Admittedly, the Ghibli's flat, unsupportive seats are ideal for the midlife crisis of the huskier gentleman.)"
    Last edited by Egg Nog; 05-28-2005 at 12:12 PM.

  2. #2
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    Quote Originally Posted by Egg Nog
    "Nissan never sent us the GT-R because out of the 12 people in America who'd actually spend 911 Turbo money on an outdated-looking Japanese coupe, six are in jail at any given time."
    HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA
    Last edited by Egg Nog; 05-28-2005 at 12:40 PM.
    He came dancing across the water
    With his galleons and guns
    Looking for the new world
    In that palace in the sun
    On the shore lay Montezuma
    With his cocoa leaves and pearls

  3. #3
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    Egg Nog you are right one about half of those, the Ferrari, Lamborghini, Jaguar, Shelby, and Maserati are great cars...

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    Quote Originally Posted by PininfarinaPIMP
    Egg Nog you are right one about half of those, the Ferrari, Lamborghini, Jaguar, Shelby, and Maserati are great cars...
    As I said...

    Quote Originally Posted by Egg Nog
    I didn't write this

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    Quote Originally Posted by my porsche
    HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA

    LMAO thats the best one by far.
    John says:
    so i had to dump acid into the block tank today
    i'm afraid to fap
    cause i got it on my hands

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    A Hemicuda is not a "sports car," it's a pony/muscle car.
    The reasons listed are flawed. If they had a rust problem, they wouldn't be selling for $800,000!
    '76 Cadillac Fleetwood Seventy-Five Limousine, '95 Lincoln Town Car.

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    Quote Originally Posted by PininfarinaPIMP
    Egg Nog you are right one about half of those, the Ferrari, Lamborghini, Jaguar, Shelby, and Maserati are great cars...
    Quote Originally Posted by Egg Nog
    As I said...
    Quote Originally Posted by Egg Nog
    I didn't write this
    HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA
    pondering things

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    Quote Originally Posted by Fleet 500
    A Hemicuda is not a "sports car," it's a pony/muscle car.
    The reasons listed are flawed. If they had a rust problem, they wouldn't be selling for $800,000!
    They are $800,000 because most of them have rusted to the ground, making the surviving cars rare(er).

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    Quote Originally Posted by h00t_h00t
    They are $800,000 because most of them have rusted to the ground, making the surviving cars rare(er).
    That's completely false, in every possible way. You totally just made that up in order to back up your argument.

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    Quote Originally Posted by Egg Nog
    That's completely false, in every possible way. You totally just made that up in order to back up your argument.
    I agree... the 383, 340 and 318 'Cudas have the same body as the Hemicuda, and there are plenty of those around. And quite a few which are even original (no bodywork done).
    '76 Cadillac Fleetwood Seventy-Five Limousine, '95 Lincoln Town Car.

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    The part about "some stoner" building '70 and '71 Hemicudas is wrong, too.
    Those who were into drugs in the '60s were not working in auto factories. The average ago of auto workers was probably 25 or 30.
    The "stoners" were the ones (probably) building late '70s and '80s cars.
    Also, there was a '70 Charger 383 at a car show last month with over 400,000 original miles and a '70 Plymouth Duster with the original alternator, spark plugs and s.p. wires. I guess those "stoners" built those cars to last!
    Last edited by Fleet 500; 05-28-2005 at 05:45 PM.
    '76 Cadillac Fleetwood Seventy-Five Limousine, '95 Lincoln Town Car.

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    Quote Originally Posted by Fleet 500
    The part about "some stoner" building '70 and '71 Hemicudas is wrong, too.
    Those who were into drugs in the '60s were not working in auto factories. The average ago of auto workers was probably 25 or 30.
    The "stoners" were the ones (probably) building late '70s and '80s cars.
    Also, there was a '70 Charger at a car show last month with over 400,000 original miles and a '70 Plymouth Duster with the original alternator, spark plugs and s.p. wires. I guess those "stoners" built those cars to last!
    Oh come on, you know that part was just journalistic sarcasm

  13. #13
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    Quote Originally Posted by Egg Nog
    Oh come on, you know that part was just journalistic sarcasm
    I know it, but people like "h00t_h00t" probably believes it!
    '76 Cadillac Fleetwood Seventy-Five Limousine, '95 Lincoln Town Car.

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    Quote Originally Posted by Fleet 500
    I know it, but people like "h00t_h00t" probably believes it!
    That's because he's taken far too many h00t_h00ts from his bong.

  15. #15
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    Could be.
    '76 Cadillac Fleetwood Seventy-Five Limousine, '95 Lincoln Town Car.

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