Saturday, flat hunting, going from real estate agent to crappy apartment to real estate agent to... You get the idea. In the city at one point, not far from where I work, actually. Sun's out, top dow
Mine was originally red, now it's an unique shade of yellow-green, close to the color on the top of the old Rallye catalog insert. The repaint seems to have no adverse effect on performance ;-) Robbi
It's obvious you haven't actually done timed 0-60mph and 1/4 mile runs with each paint job. It's a scientific fact that light travelling in the red spectrum travels further with less dissipation. Th
Because red is has long wave-length it would actually be the *slowest* of colors. Purple would be fastest! ;-) -Marc T. == == "Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from lunacy" -
Author: Chris Saulnier <CSaulnier@enerconmaine.com>
Date: Mon, 4 Jun 2001 09:42:29 -0400
Also we must not forget the exchange rate theorem, for instance, a purple car in Canada would make ~30% more HP than an equivalent car in the U.S.A. I'm not sure of the formula for Aussie vehicles...
You guys are confusing me. If I want a really fast roadster....what color do I paint it? I thought red was the fastest color and that's why there are so many red roadsters. Purple has some red in it
Green (any shade) is the slowest colour you can choose. That's why we blow off MGB's so easy! Black just FEELS fast 'cause it looks so MEAN! (I do really love Datsun Sports roadsters in black, I have
Author: "Patrick P. Castronovo" <slick1@mohaveaz.com>
Date: Mon, 4 Jun 2001 19:03:48 -0700
Lime Green, and Red? It would then Qualify as an "INSECT"! --Original Message-- From: Pamela Pepoy <gppepoy@cybertrails.com> To: snyler <marc@animalfirm.com> Cc: Stephen McCartney <sgam@hotmail.com>;
Or does black feel so fast 'cause it's so damn hot you feel like you're riding a re-entering Soyuz capsule? -Marc == Marc Tyler Designer, Animal Firm 830-324-6578 www.animalfirm.com