My hair stood on end when he said " nothing like driving a slow car fast" because I own a 70 Karmann Ghia with a cheap but tight suspension setup and only got a 1671cc engine pushing 77hp and when flying down a twisty road keeping up with a Porsche with 300+ HP it was the greatest feeling in the world when we stopped at the gas station and the guy was blown away I kept up that long until the long straight. It saddened me when me and my wife got hit by a teenager playing on her phone at 55 mph while we wait at a traffic light destroying my dad's car I grew up in for 28 years until the day he handed me the keys and I drove that lime green beauty for 6 years until that day and now she sits under a tarp waiting for the day to be a donor car to my next Ghia we find. Love the channel and the stories thank you.
But he is wrong about one thing. You can run an Audi 4000 Quattro at 4,000 RPM all day long. Mine has over 350k on the original engine with the original head & pan gasket... I can also my 81 VW Westy all day long at 4000 RPM...
I was instantly happy when I saw John Ficarra was today's storyteller. Great story John. Such a cool car. The widow couldn't have picked a better custodian for it.
"Oh I know who You are!" - now that's a dedicated seller. Warms the heart of a petrolhead.Thanks for sharing, including the ex-wife-dent and all. The gentleman's widow found the perfect buyer for her late husband's Audi in Mr Musketball himself who also sports the middlename "2904" ..... Can't wait for _that_ whole other Musketball story!
What an amazing story! Johns expressive and lively story telling is so fantastic that one almost feels like they were there. For fans of 80's cars and cannonball lore, there couldn't be a more engaging story of automotive appreciation and stewardship. Thank you John Ficarra.
My buddy had a “91”-“92” Volkswagen FOX Wolfsburg edition. Which was not available in America and was thought not to exist. But this car was his first wife’s father’s car. They are a Brazilian family and the car was built in Brazil for Brazilian roads. That was the best handling vehicle I’ve ever driven or ridden in. It would take a 45deg turn at 45+ mph and never ever break loose. That little 2.2 five speed was soooo so so much fun! We were eating mustangs off the line and with two fearless 25 yr old nut bag roofers behind the wheel. We could just flat out drive most powerful cars on New England roads. I miss those days and my best friend! Rest In Peace Rick Racer!!
When you look at the world news and everything is just so awful, John's videos are a real antidote, his stories are always so entertaining, he should write his autobiography.
Parents had an 85 4000. I was a hooligan in that thing and cried when folks traded it on a 5000. My dad wouldn't sell it to me or my brother. It was a blast and not even a quattro
Mr Ficarra tells the best stories for me, always tells the complete facts and history about the car he's talking about, I love the original Quattro's and this car is incredible, to have loved and taken such good care of it is a testament to the previous owner. Thanks for your great stories John.😊👍
I have absolutely ZERO INTEREST in the Cannonball, but this guys passion is unbelievable. Im listening with a huge smile on my face. This guy is awesome! Great storyteller. Wow!
I had a 1984 4000s Quattro (black on black) and it drove exactly like John said...one of my favorite cars ever! I remember one miserable winter storms, icy roads, cars in the ditch, people sliding through intersections...horrible dangerous to drive in conditions. My Audi, just walked through all of that with no difference than driving in the dry. I'd buy one today if I found one in quality condition.
That was the easiest 19 minutes I've spent in a long time! Great story about my favorite car brand (I'm in my third Audi, a 2000 A8). Looking forward to more stories from John.
When you said it did not shift in reverse. I immediately knew the problem. For under $10 would restore the shifter to that new feeling(I am assuming it is manual stick shift on the floor). Audi is VW so much is the same designed stuff. Maybe would take you an hour with coffee in one hand, so a 1 handed job. Done. Good for another million miles. Unusual that reverse would go, normally it is 2nd or 3rd which you just bypass on the shift progression. No harm, no foul.
I used to have an Audi 1982 5+5 which was a 5 speed 5 cylinder front wheel drive and looked quite similar to the quattro and it was so much fun to drive. The 5 cylinder was so smooth after 3000 rpm and it had that unique sound that only a 5 cylinder had.
i love the concept of 100hp and under ralley,this means you need to get the optimal gear ratio thats not to tall that you have unusable rpms at higher rpm but not to low a ratio that your redlined the entire run and have lower top speed that would be fun to do
Me thinks Ed has mastered the Jedi mind trick? Ed: You should buy this car, John! John: I should buy this car, Ed! Ed: These are not the Droids you are looking for.
Seattle was *bad* for car theft back in that day. Most people parked on the street as garages weren't particularly common or large if one was available.
Sir John Ficarra is just the ultimate story teller with such a propensity to accurately throw in obscure, little known facts about anything automotive related. Truly the most entertaining Automotive Historian on the planet. Another treasure of a story! Thank you, John!
Hands down the best car story you guys have ever told. I feel like we’d all enjoy having a pint with Art if he were still around. The man sounds like a legend 👍
I am glad you kept it standard because it is rarety makes it valuable putting a five speed gearbox in it doesn't detract from its originally you can always put the original gearbox back in the Audi
My friend had one of these old Quattros in high school. His grandpa gave it to him. It was such a slow car that we deemed it broken and I think he ended up taking it to a wrecking yard.
Seattle can be rough on theft. I was riding a tour bus through the city when I saw a bicycle FRAME (no wheels, no handlebars, no chain, no pedals) locked securely to a bike rack. Everything else had been stolen off the bike.
at 16:56, there is a Citröen XM, with hydropneumatic suspension. I thougt those never made it to the US! There were several versions, a 2L 4cyl, the Diesel, and the 3L V6, same engine as the DeLorean. Those are super comfortable, but not the fastest thing out there. " To drive a slow car fast, he said..."
I had an XM V6. It really is super comfortable and had all the features back then. It would be the perfect car for cannonballing since you can load it up with infinite amounts of fuel and the hydraulic suspension would compensate.
That car is truly a treasure I don't care what anybody else brought to that race it could have been a Bugatti I would still pick that Audi over it there's just so much history with it and it's such an iconic car and you have all of the parts that nobody is ever going to find it is truly one of a kind and it is a beautiful car thank you for sharing this is the type of car everyone wants in a collection but they will never find
I remember that 84 or 85 was the first year of production of the Audi 4000 & 5000. My parents knew we would be leaving Germany in 87 and they wanted a nice euro car since the government would pay since he was in tje army for the change of belts, emissions, bumpers and anything else the US needed for you to import the car. They got an 85 Audi 5000S Quattro Turbo. So they got the largest sedan with Sport suspension, 4 wheel drive, and a Turbo for the 5 cyl motor. It was silver with dark brown leather interior. Apparently a very rare model for the options they chose. The Audi 1985 to 1988 curse was power windows that would stop working. A climate control that start putting out 95 degree heat in July, an auto trans that starts to go into reverse on its own while idling. Power locks that stop working eventually forcing you to crawl in from the trunk.
About 12 years ago, I had an Audi 4000cs Quattro. Everyone thought it was ridiculous! I loved it. This was in the pacific NW also. It never snows, but guess what.? When it did, I was mobin around.
Another outstanding contribution by Ed and John. I see a Musketball story coming soon! That Audi is sweet, great provenance, maintained by one of the best!!
Back in 1991 I was 19 year's old and bought my first "expensive" car - at least it was just a bit more expensive than I really could afford on what I was payed at the time - and it was a 1985 Audi 80 quattro. (the European version of the 4000 in the US) It was slow as f*ck, geared really low, as John mentioned, but a blast to drive, especially in the winter - as long as you remembered that it was a whole lot harder to stop then it was to accelerate on slippery roads, abs wasn't a comment feature in mid 80's car's... Even since then I've been stuck with at least one but often two Audi's with the quattro system, so I would say that I'm a living proof that product image is valuable to car's, even if I believe that Audi's of today don't really live up to the older ones, the newer ones got way too much electrical issues! 🙄😅 But...I got to admit that I still love my current A7 despite it's quite expensive to maintain. 🙂
Using inflation calculator $2,800 in 1986 is equivalent in purchasing power to about $7,566 today, an increase of $4,766 over 36 years. The dollar had an average inflation rate of 2.80% per year between 1986 and 2022.
the whole "honey?" thing... yea that's my house too. played that portion for my wife and she tried hard not to smirk and laugh inside but she did. that's me, that's us, I just need an Ed in my life to help.
What funny is that I've done "One Lap of America" for a road trip. Granted, it took three months and involved a slight detour to Europe, but it was still a full lap around all the perimeter (and some non-perimeter) states, going clockwise from CA. Highly recommended if you have the time and the driving inclination.
Man what a Find and sure its a dealer special but still..... On the subject of Gotti wheels, They still make the stickers and rebuild kits. I have a 3 piece set on my 83 Range Rover in 16 inch, real 80's exotica :-)
A couple years ago Omaha paid a bunch of money out to people for rims and tires because of how crap our roads were. But that's also why I just buy rims and tires that give me plenty of side wall and fit my driving conditions. Though I do understand keeping stock tire size when even when they have no sidewall. Just don't get going from a 14" rim to a 17" and loosing all your sidewalk. Though I also run 30" mud tires on 15" rims on a Chevy prizm (rebranded Toyota Corolla) that I cut into a Ute as my daily driver along with my work truck. So probably don't listen to me too much.
Funny story about the dent in the roof. My dad had the Coupe GT model (2wd sadly) with a dent also in the roof. Story from the previous owner was that he came out of a restaurant in Oxford (England) one evening and there was a bicycle on the roof.
When you own old and obscure cars you tend to hoard parts whenever you come across them, purely because of the possibility it may one day break, even if that day is 10 years down the line. Ask any muscle car collector how many spare windows they have, probably 1-2 dozen 😂
I don't know what is with old 4Ks/90s and coupes, they are just too fun to drive. Have had 2 90s (2wd and quattro, 1 coupe and one 80), just couple years ago, deceided to get a 90 quattro (-85) again. And god damn i'm happy now. Just need to upgrade the suspension.. that it will be more fun to drive at track days
"Ex wife" is the most used words on this channel
Can’t have fun with a wife around
Second most used "seemed like a good idea"
Coincidence?
When it's a Christopher or Rabbit story it's, "My wife at the time".
Wife at the time...
@@the_frankc and Randy Pobst ❗#WifeAtTheTime
11:00 - $2,800 is equivalent to around $7,500 for anyone else who’s curious.
thank you, kind sir
Around $6600 to 2019. This excludes the covid years.
Probably $9k tommorow😂
Them wheels on eBay wouldn’t bring more than 200 sheets without mentioning cannonball ya da ya da
@@jarlnieminen4307 AND we’re into 5 figures just a few months later 🤦♂️
The passion in Johns face when hes explaining the Audis previous owners passion for the car is infectious
The 4kQ is the best Quattro Audi will ever make....
My hair stood on end when he said " nothing like driving a slow car fast" because I own a 70 Karmann Ghia with a cheap but tight suspension setup and only got a 1671cc engine pushing 77hp and when flying down a twisty road keeping up with a Porsche with 300+ HP it was the greatest feeling in the world when we stopped at the gas station and the guy was blown away I kept up that long until the long straight. It saddened me when me and my wife got hit by a teenager playing on her phone at 55 mph while we wait at a traffic light destroying my dad's car I grew up in for 28 years until the day he handed me the keys and I drove that lime green beauty for 6 years until that day and now she sits under a tarp waiting for the day to be a donor car to my next Ghia we find. Love the channel and the stories thank you.
Always a great story when John shows up! Even better when it's a Cannonball episode!!!!
... saw the title... then saw your comment before even watching...
PSYCHED!!
my favorite story teller!!!!!
IKR!
But he is wrong about one thing. You can run an Audi 4000 Quattro at 4,000 RPM all day long.
Mine has over 350k on the original engine with the original head & pan gasket...
I can also my 81 VW Westy all day long at 4000 RPM...
Ficarra is truly one of the best. He could read a McDonald's menu and make it seem interesting
*Trails off*"...Which is all another story... "John just found his signoff/tagline. I love it!
I was instantly happy when I saw John Ficarra was today's storyteller. Great story John. Such a cool car. The widow couldn't have picked a better custodian for it.
Indeed 👍
No clue who Art was but as usual Jonh did an amazing job of telling a great story of the love this hobby brings out. Thanks as always
Art was the original owner of the car and an avid Cannonball fan.
"Oh I know who You are!" - now that's a dedicated seller. Warms the heart of a petrolhead.Thanks for sharing, including the ex-wife-dent and all. The gentleman's widow found the perfect buyer for her late husband's Audi in Mr Musketball himself who also sports the middlename "2904" .....
Can't wait for _that_ whole other Musketball story!
What an amazing story! Johns expressive and lively story telling is so fantastic that one almost feels like they were there. For fans of 80's cars and cannonball lore, there couldn't be a more engaging story of automotive appreciation and stewardship. Thank you John Ficarra.
“There’s nothing like driving a slow car fast”
John Ficarra is top of the mark in story telling! Always a welcome treat to hear his narrations.
My buddy had a “91”-“92” Volkswagen FOX Wolfsburg edition. Which was not available in America and was thought not to exist. But this car was his first wife’s father’s car. They are a Brazilian family and the car was built in Brazil for Brazilian roads. That was the best handling vehicle I’ve ever driven or ridden in. It would take a 45deg turn at 45+ mph and never ever break loose. That little 2.2 five speed was soooo so so much fun! We were eating mustangs off the line and with two fearless 25 yr old nut bag roofers behind the wheel. We could just flat out drive most powerful cars on New England roads. I miss those days and my best friend! Rest In Peace Rick Racer!!
The previous owner is an absolute legend. The way he cared for this car is amazing
When you look at the world news and everything is just so awful, John's videos are a real antidote, his stories are always so entertaining, he should write his autobiography.
Parents had an 85 4000. I was a hooligan in that thing and cried when folks traded it on a 5000. My dad wouldn't sell it to me or my brother. It was a blast and not even a quattro
Mr Ficarra tells the best stories for me, always tells the complete facts and history about the car he's talking about, I love the original Quattro's and this car is incredible, to have loved and taken such good care of it is a testament to the previous owner. Thanks for your great stories John.😊👍
“He’s writing the president of Italy” 🤣
It just occurred to me that John and Christopher are the only commentators whose stories I listen to more than once. Great guys. Great story tellers.
"Nothing like driving a slow car fast..." - John Ficarra
*smiles in first-gen Focus getting hooned down backcountry roads*
Yeah...I feel that one.
* Grins in 1996 Hyundai accent 1.5L SOHC with the 5 speed *
I have absolutely ZERO INTEREST in the Cannonball, but this guys passion is unbelievable. Im listening with a huge smile on my face. This guy is awesome! Great storyteller. Wow!
'nothing like driving a slow car fast' - THIS! i absolutely agree with this.
I had a 1984 4000s Quattro (black on black) and it drove exactly like John said...one of my favorite cars ever!
I remember one miserable winter storms, icy roads, cars in the ditch, people sliding through intersections...horrible dangerous to drive in conditions. My Audi, just walked through all of that with no difference than driving in the dry.
I'd buy one today if I found one in quality condition.
I love getting to sit here and listen to Ficarra tell these stories. It's just great. And I'm so glad y'all had a chance to do this. I'm envious!
I needed a Ficarra story today. Thank you VINwiki!
That was the easiest 19 minutes I've spent in a long time! Great story about my favorite car brand (I'm in my third Audi, a 2000 A8). Looking forward to more stories from John.
I didn’t even realize it was 19min! I literally watched the whole thing and I seemed like a 5min video
When you said it did not shift in reverse. I immediately knew the problem. For under $10 would restore the shifter to that new feeling(I am assuming it is manual stick shift on the floor). Audi is VW so much is the same designed stuff. Maybe would take you an hour with coffee in one hand, so a 1 handed job. Done. Good for another million miles. Unusual that reverse would go, normally it is 2nd or 3rd which you just bypass on the shift progression. No harm, no foul.
Art Vandelay, Architect and Audi enthusiast
This video keeps popping up on my algorithm about once every two weeks for some reason..
and I watch it every damn time.
We love John Ficarra here. We are still waiting on the Union Boys story though John!
I used to have an Audi 1982 5+5 which was a 5 speed 5 cylinder front wheel drive and looked quite similar to the quattro and it was so much fun to drive. The 5 cylinder was so smooth after 3000 rpm and it had that unique sound that only a 5 cylinder had.
when you said "a box of records" my first thought was vinyl 😅
Glad I'm not the only one.
i love the concept of 100hp and under ralley,this means you need to get the optimal gear ratio thats not to tall that you have unusable rpms at higher rpm but not to low a ratio that your redlined the entire run and have lower top speed that would be fun to do
A great story about Art’s car. You put some passion into the tale.
Thanks.
Some passion? John Ficarra's stories ARE passion. Are ALWAYS passion.
Me thinks Ed has mastered the Jedi mind trick?
Ed: You should buy this car, John!
John: I should buy this car, Ed!
Ed: These are not the Droids you are looking for.
That's how he got everyone into Lambo... Tyler, John, Casey..
" Move along"....
@@mrmoss149 Padawan John Ficarra? #RedThisCanBe❗
@@ashp5406 even though, he just does that to artificially drive up the market value of his own collection of flood-lambos 🤣
John has always been an excellent storyteller, but I admire how much his hair and facial hair has improved since story 1.
She found the one perfect guy to own her husband's pride and joy.
Seattle was *bad* for car theft back in that day. Most people parked on the street as garages weren't particularly common or large if one was available.
WOW!
What a FANTASTIC story.
Can't wait for part two!
Can absolutely confirm that all of us want a Brock Yates Audi, such a cool car, and John is the perfect owner
Of all the hundreds of VW stories I’ve heard over the years, this one is one of the best old stories ever!
Ed, you need to invite that woman over to tell her stories!
Sir John Ficarra is just the ultimate story teller with such a propensity to accurately throw in obscure, little known facts about anything automotive related. Truly the most entertaining Automotive Historian on the planet. Another treasure of a story! Thank you, John!
Hands down the best car story you guys have ever told. I feel like we’d all enjoy having a pint with Art if he were still around. The man sounds like a legend 👍
Now I need to find my '71 Mazda 616 from high school and run the Musketball! lol... I loved that car.
Now that Rabbit stopped showing up, Ficarra is definitely my favorite frequent contributor on the channel (and there are many fantastic ones).
I am glad you kept it standard because it is rarety makes it valuable putting a five speed gearbox in it doesn't detract from its originally you can always put the original gearbox back in the Audi
There is a white Audi Quattro that fits the description here in my hometown. I will have to check it out if I see it again. Excellent story John!
My friend had one of these old Quattros in high school. His grandpa gave it to him. It was such a slow car that we deemed it broken and I think he ended up taking it to a wrecking yard.
Can't wait for the full Musketball story!
Im a simple man. I see John Ficarra, i get excited!
Find The Mid Night Racing 930 911 turbo! It’s a piece of Porsche history. It’s seems to have gone missing since 2015!
Seattle can be rough on theft. I was riding a tour bus through the city when I saw a bicycle FRAME (no wheels, no handlebars, no chain, no pedals) locked securely to a bike rack. Everything else had been stolen off the bike.
13:40 driving a slow car fast 💨 is the best and I love that you found this beauty and kept it “as-is” 🤜🏼
That picture of John at 4:00 flying by with the finger point just makes this story all that much better Ficarra is the man!
John Ficarra.... BY FAR the greatest VinWiki story teller.
The best part is no cop will believe your breaking any limits across any parts of the country. This is going to be epic to watch.
This story was the perfect start to my day, thanks!
John Ficarra + anything = engaging storytelling
at 16:56, there is a Citröen XM, with hydropneumatic suspension. I thougt those never made it to the US! There were several versions, a 2L 4cyl, the Diesel, and the 3L V6, same engine as the DeLorean. Those are super comfortable, but not the fastest thing out there. " To drive a slow car fast, he said..."
I had an XM V6. It really is super comfortable and had all the features back then. It would be the perfect car for cannonballing since you can load it up with infinite amounts of fuel and the hydraulic suspension would compensate.
That car is truly a treasure I don't care what anybody else brought to that race it could have been a Bugatti I would still pick that Audi over it there's just so much history with it and it's such an iconic car and you have all of the parts that nobody is ever going to find it is truly one of a kind and it is a beautiful car thank you for sharing this is the type of car everyone wants in a collection but they will never find
I remember that 84 or 85 was the first year of production of the Audi 4000 & 5000. My parents knew we would be leaving Germany in 87 and they wanted a nice euro car since the government would pay since he was in tje army for the change of belts, emissions, bumpers and anything else the US needed for you to import the car. They got an 85 Audi 5000S Quattro Turbo. So they got the largest sedan with Sport suspension, 4 wheel drive, and a Turbo for the 5 cyl motor. It was silver with dark brown leather interior. Apparently a very rare model for the options they chose. The Audi 1985 to 1988 curse was power windows that would stop working. A climate control that start putting out 95 degree heat in July, an auto trans that starts to go into reverse on its own while idling. Power locks that stop working eventually forcing you to crawl in from the trunk.
About 12 years ago, I had an Audi 4000cs Quattro. Everyone thought it was ridiculous! I loved it. This was in the pacific NW also. It never snows, but guess what.? When it did, I was mobin around.
What a great storyteller John is. Thanks for sharing. Loved it.
John is such a great story teller
Anyone who can successfully fights Seattle city hall is worth remembering.
The Celica All Trac would have been a great runner for the musketball
I really respect him hunting down and swapping the transmission for that special run.💪🏾
Even though the engine could run 4k rpm forever and be happy about it.
Damn, Ficarra is now including cliffhangers! Can’t wait to hear the musketball story.
Another outstanding contribution by Ed and John. I see a Musketball story coming soon! That Audi is sweet, great provenance, maintained by one of the best!!
Back in 1991 I was 19 year's old and bought my first "expensive" car - at least it was just a bit more expensive than I really could afford on what I was payed at the time - and it was a 1985 Audi 80 quattro. (the European version of the 4000 in the US)
It was slow as f*ck, geared really low, as John mentioned, but a blast to drive, especially in the winter - as long as you remembered that it was a whole lot harder to stop then it was to accelerate on slippery roads, abs wasn't a comment feature in mid 80's car's...
Even since then I've been stuck with at least one but often two Audi's with the quattro system, so I would say that I'm a living proof that product image is valuable to car's, even if I believe that Audi's of today don't really live up to the older ones, the newer ones got way too much electrical issues! 🙄😅
But...I got to admit that I still love my current A7 despite it's quite expensive to maintain. 🙂
"Where am i going to find a 5000 quattro turbo transmission?"
Me: 🙋
Such a great story so interesting to hear the history on the car from the old owner & to see the excitement in the new owner now.
Using inflation calculator $2,800 in 1986 is equivalent in purchasing power to about $7,566 today, an increase of $4,766 over 36 years. The dollar had an average inflation rate of 2.80% per year between 1986 and 2022.
VERY Ed Bolian to bleep out the word “ass”
13:22 I feel that every time I hit 90+ in my Corolla S like yeah, you go lil' buddy, whip it...
You got a car that a lot of Love ❤️ and care was put into it.
I absolutely adore John Ficarra stories…..I could listen to him alllllllll day!
The 1978 Ford Fiesta would tear it up on a Musketball run. If you know you know.
Lancia Delta has the record for most races in a row in a rally campionship ever... Not just Subaru and Audi lol
Truest motorsports observation ever: Its more fun to drive a slow car/bike fast, than a fast car slow.
the whole "honey?" thing... yea that's my house too. played that portion for my wife and she tried hard not to smirk and laugh inside but she did. that's me, that's us, I just need an Ed in my life to help.
John always has the best stories because he loves unusual cars.
What funny is that I've done "One Lap of America" for a road trip. Granted, it took three months and involved a slight detour to Europe, but it was still a full lap around all the perimeter (and some non-perimeter) states, going clockwise from CA. Highly recommended if you have the time and the driving inclination.
There's not much better than John Ficarra's automotive tales
Thanks for the upload
I thought he was going to say "the dents in the floor pan were from the ex-wife." This story didn't go as dark as I was afraid it would.
Man what a Find and sure its a dealer special but still.....
On the subject of Gotti wheels, They still make the stickers and rebuild kits.
I have a 3 piece set on my 83 Range Rover in 16 inch, real 80's exotica :-)
A couple years ago Omaha paid a bunch of money out to people for rims and tires because of how crap our roads were. But that's also why I just buy rims and tires that give me plenty of side wall and fit my driving conditions. Though I do understand keeping stock tire size when even when they have no sidewall. Just don't get going from a 14" rim to a 17" and loosing all your sidewalk.
Though I also run 30" mud tires on 15" rims on a Chevy prizm (rebranded Toyota Corolla) that I cut into a Ute as my daily driver along with my work truck. So probably don't listen to me too much.
Funny story about the dent in the roof. My dad had the Coupe GT model (2wd sadly) with a dent also in the roof. Story from the previous owner was that he came out of a restaurant in Oxford (England) one evening and there was a bicycle on the roof.
I feel like I could be friends with Ed just based off of the great beers he provides his guests.
Im sure you would, as long as you have a story to tell and he can record it xD
When you own old and obscure cars you tend to hoard parts whenever you come across them, purely because of the possibility it may one day break, even if that day is 10 years down the line. Ask any muscle car collector how many spare windows they have, probably 1-2 dozen 😂
I can’t get enough of these “Car Stories”!
Whenever I see John pop up with an episode, I'm in! An awesome Audi, and Cannonball stories to boot! Thanks, dude! ✌️❤️🙂🇨🇦
"The dent was from Art's ex-wife".
Well, if there was any mystery as to why she was an "EX", there isn't one now.
My ABSOLUTE FAVORITE story of this channel
Amazing
Thank you
The seats were likely stolen to put into a Honda, that was common in king county at that time.
I don't know what is with old 4Ks/90s and coupes, they are just too fun to drive. Have had 2 90s (2wd and quattro, 1 coupe and one 80), just couple years ago, deceided to get a 90 quattro (-85) again. And god damn i'm happy now. Just need to upgrade the suspension.. that it will be more fun to drive at track days
Has John ever thought about an Audiobook ? Stories of car history I would buy it, but he has to be the one telling the tales!
I ❤ this man. He's better than Aesop and his fables.