Там что-то про мифбастеров и путешествии во времени?
Like the rest of the internet, we know almost nothing about this vehicle. The photograph of it comes to us courtesy the Library of Congress‘s photo archive, which describes it simply as a “wheeled vehicle with mounted propeller” (brilliant!) and dates it to October 11, 1922. One Herbert A. French donated the photo to the library in 1947. The overhead-camshaft V-8 engine appears to be a World War I Hispano-Suiza aircraft engine, but we have no idea whether the chassis was originally some hay wagon or heavy truck, and we can’t even hazard a guess at the purpose of the wash bin on stilts behind the driver, who may very well be Jamie Hyneman from Mythbusters, caught time-traveling. - See more at: http://blog.hemmings.com/index.php/tag/propeller-driven-vehicles/#sthash.gccnPHFb.dpuf
Мне более всего по душе спереди фундаментальный аппарат на котором можно вертеть.
Он так грозно по краям обит металлом с заклепками.
И фронтальный интеркуллер занимательно вынесен вверх )
Для этого за спиной водителя установлен мангал.
Like the rest of the internet, we know almost nothing about this vehicle. The photograph of it comes to us courtesy the Library of Congress‘s photo archive, which describes it simply as a “wheeled vehicle with mounted propeller” (brilliant!) and dates it to October 11, 1922. One Herbert A. French donated the photo to the library in 1947. The overhead-camshaft V-8 engine appears to be a World War I Hispano-Suiza aircraft engine, but we have no idea whether the chassis was originally some hay wagon or heavy truck, and we can’t even hazard a guess at the purpose of the wash bin on stilts behind the driver, who may very well be Jamie Hyneman from Mythbusters, caught time-traveling. - See more at: http://blog.hemmings.com/index.php/tag/propeller-driven-vehicles/#sthash.gccnPHFb.dpuf
Он так грозно по краям обит металлом с заклепками.
И фронтальный интеркуллер занимательно вынесен вверх )