Category: Car Banter
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Motorsports Renaissance: Why Racing Culture Is Hot Again (and Here to Stay)
A decade ago, trying to explain your love for motorsports often came with an eye roll or questioning one’s sanity. People still thought racing was just cars going in circles or that Formula 1 was a niche European quirk, if they even knew what it was. But somewhere in the high-stakes world of million-dollar decisions
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Hikari Rennwerke’s K24-Swapped 911 is Redefining What it Means to Build Dreams
There’s a special kind of madness that strikes car builders when they stare at their project long enough. It starts innocently: maybe a simple engine refresh, perhaps some suspension work, definitely “just a few bolt-ons.” But somewhere between researching parts and scrolling through build threads at 2 AM, the voices in your head start whispering
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Rise and Shine: Race Service’s Friday Morning Gathering
There’s something magical about a Friday morning. Not the alarm clock going off before the sun is up part, but that moment when you pull up to a warehouse in Los Angeles, the smell of espresso hits you before you even open the car door, and you realize you’re surrounded by people who value good
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AlterMann Wheels: The Unapologetic Art of 3-Piece Wheels
The wheel industry has a problem. It’s drowning in marketing buzzwords, corporate acquisitions that strip away soul, and products designed by committee rather than enthusiasts. Enter AlterMann, a company that’s doing something radical: cutting through the nonsense and building custom forged wheels the way they should be built. Based in Westminster, California, AlterMann isn’t trying
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Willow Springs Reimagined: A Desert Icon Gets a Second Life
There’s a familiar knot in the gut that enthusiasts get when they hear a beloved racetrack is changing hands. The words “redevelopment” and “investment” get thrown around and suddenly visions of bulldozers replacing berms with condos dance in our heads. So when the news broke that Willow Springs Raceway had been sold to CrossHarbor Capital
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SoCal Drivers Club Is Building the Track Community We’ve All Been Waiting For
Picture this: it’s 6 AM on a Saturday, you’re loading your helmet into the car, and you’re about to drive two hours to spend maybe 60 minutes actually on track. By the time you factor in multiple drivers’ meetings, tech inspection, and waiting around between sessions, you’ve burned an entire weekend for what amounts to
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The Story of The Late Brake: The 100th Article Special
There’s a moment that happens when you’re deep into a passion project. It’s not when you hit your first milestone or when the numbers start climbing. It’s quieter than that. It’s when you’re sitting at your computer at 11 PM, writing about some obscure racing series or a barn find BMW, and you realize this
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The Definitive Guide to Monterey Car Week
Last August, I found myself driving down Highway 1 toward the Monterey Peninsula for what car enthusiasts simply call “Car Week.” What started as a single concours event in 1950 has evolved into the most significant automotive gathering in North America, where million-dollar auction hammers fall, racing legends still turn laps at Laguna Seca, and
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From Hospital Bed to Racetrack: How One Driver’s Battle with Ulcerative Colitis Sparked a Movement
Picture this: you’re lying in a hospital bed, having spent over a month battling a disease that’s been misdiagnosed for years. Your friend texts asking if you want to hit up a local car meet. Instead of the usual “yeah mate, see you there,” you’re typing back “can’t make it, I’m in hospital.” That moment
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The People’s Champ: Seeing Ken Block’s Legacy
The first thing that hits you when you walk into the “People’s Champ” exhibit isn’t the cars—it’s the silence. Not literal silence, but that moment when your brain stops processing the museum chatter around you because you’re staring at the actual Hoonicorn. There it sits, black with those unmistakable Hoonigan graphics, and suddenly you’re 15
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Finding My Tribe: How Camp Overcrest and Sportscar Vacationland Reminded Me Why I Love Cars
There’s a moment that happens at every great car event. It’s not when the supercars roll up or when the cameras start flashing. It’s quieter than that. It’s when you’re standing next to your car, coffee in hand, watching the morning light reflect off your paint, and a stranger walks up to ask about your
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The Journey to RADwood NorCal 2025
There’s something magical about pointing your car down an unfamiliar highway with nothing but a full tank of gas and the promise of automotive nirvana waiting at the end. This past weekend, that journey led me from the high mountain passes of the Sierra Nevada to the San Jose Earthquakes stadium for RADwood NorCal 2025,
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The Peugeot 106 Rallye: The French Hatch I Didn’t Know I Needed
Some cars come with stories built in. Others start writing the story the moment they land in your garage. My new project car, a 1995 Peugeot 106 Rallye, somehow manages to do both. It’s a featherweight ball of French energy that has already captured my heart, despite being nearly as old as I am. This
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From Rust Holes to Recaro Seats: My Journey Learning to Weld
There’s nothing quite like the sinking feeling you get when you jack up your project car and discover that your floor has more holes than a block of Swiss cheese. That’s exactly what happened to me with my 1981 BMW 3-series, a car I’d been nursing back to health one weekend at a time. What
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The Subaru WRX: Lost it’s Way or Found A New One
In the pantheon of automotive icons, few cars command the devoted following of the Subaru WRX. Born from rally racing and forged in the mud and gravel of the World Rally Championship, the WRX has long been the accessible performance car of choice for enthusiasts who demand all-weather capability without sacrificing that raw, turbocharged thrill.
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A Decade Later: How Does The F80 BMW M3 Hold Up Today?
The F80 BMW M3 has officially hit its ten-year mark, a milestone that solidifies its place in BMW’s M lineage. When it debuted in 2014, it was met with both excitement and controversy. The switch from a high-revving naturally aspirated V8 to a turbocharged inline-six felt like a seismic shift for purists, and its sharper,
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Small Town, Big Scene: How a Reno Car Show Sparked Something Bigger
A few days ago, I found myself back in a familiar place, walking rows of cars, a camera in one pocket and a Red Bull in the other. But this time was different. I wasn’t just attending another car show. I had been invited as part of the media team at Flagship Autoshow 25 in
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Project E21 Part 4: The Road Home and a New Chapter
If you’ve been following along with Project E21, you probably know by now that things rarely go according to plan. Part 1 was about falling down the rabbit hole. Part 2 was a war against grime and regret. Part 3 brought an engine swap that almost, but not quite, worked. And here we are at
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Bringing Europe Home: How D1 Euro Imports is Shaping the Next Era of Car Culture
For decades, car enthusiasts in the United States have longed for the forbidden fruit—the sleek silhouettes and roaring powertrains of European cars that never made it stateside. Maybe it was the compact aggression of the Renault Clio V6, the rally-bred pedigree of a Lancia Delta HF Integrale, or the understated performance of a BMW E30
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Portland Cars and Coffee: Where Oregon’s Car Culture Comes Alive
Every Saturday morning, in the sleepy industrial edges of suburban Portland, the most eclectic gathering of gearheads in the Pacific Northwest descends on a parking lot of Langer’s Entertainment Center in Sherwood, Oregon. Welcome to Portland Cars and Coffee, where Ferraris meet lifted Tacomas, and vintage BMWs park next to hypercars. It’s an event that
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Gran Turismo in a Box: Building a Portable PS2
There are car projects, and then there are car projects. This one? It doesn’t require a jack or torque wrench, but it all starts with an idea, spirals into obsession, and tests your patience with a dozen trips back to the drawing board. I’m talking about my latest side quest project: building a fully portable
