Wonderfully Cheesy: Tournament Of Thrills Is A 50 Year Old Video Featuring Awesome Traveling Stunt Drivers


Wonderfully Cheesy: Tournament Of Thrills Is A 50 Year Old Video Featuring Awesome Traveling Stunt Drivers

It’s pretty crazy how “entertainment” changes, right? Back about 50 years ago, ABC’s Wide World of Sports would show up at a dusty circle track on a fairgrounds somewhere and shoot, for national television, a stunt driving troupe doing their act. If you suggested even a small cable outfit come and shoot the same thing these days they would laugh you out of the joint. Now, add some flaming hoops, rotating knives, or seemingly death defying act by 2021 standards and you’d have something to argue about but back in the day, this was extreme and as you’ll see people at it up.

Not only did crowds eat it up, companies loved to sponsor these shows. Manufacturers like Ford would either give cars or cut buddy deals on them, companies like BFG would give tires to the shows in trade for promotional value, and the list of parts and pieces goes right on down the line. These guys were warriors back then, performing multiple times a day at fairs, multiple times a week in different locations, and living almost entirely out of the very cars that they were performing in.

Yes, this is all kind of cheesy by our “extreme” 2021 standards but we love every second of this footage. It is fun, the cars are awesome, and the history is just too cool.

Press play below to see this awesomely cheesy 1970s BFG tire promo –

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Awesome Build: Watch This Operational Scale Model Of A Rotary Engine Constructed With Lego Blocks!


Awesome Build: Watch This Operational Scale Model Of A Rotary Engine Constructed With Lego Blocks!

This is easily one of the most awesome Lego builds we have ever seen. We know we had some rotary stuff on the front page today already but this is in a different league. The whole engine is custom built from the imagination of the guy snapping the blocks together, to start. This is not a kit, this is not something already made a video about. From the creation of the rotor itself to the fact that this thing has “spark plugs” intake and exhaust ports, the right eccentric travel and the list goes on and on, your mind will be blown like ours.

There may be kids who watch this video and have a lightbulb come on in their minds about how one of these weird little engines work. In fact, they aren’t so weird when you see a happy little version of one, built of out of Lego blocks whirring away. This guy even went so far as to include the tip seals on the rotor in his build!

The addition of the “spark” light is a big one here because there are some animations that show the cycle of a rotary engine but when he dims the lights and then cranks the engine up with the little cam and rocker arm to trigger the light up block, things go from interesting to completely awesome.

We have no idea how many hours are in this build but what a teaching tool. I watched this with my kids and both of them were able to see what exactly happens inside the engine and they were both 100% more understanding of a rotary engine than they were after I explained it to them 100 times.

THIS is great!

Press play below to see this incredible scale model rotary engine built from Lego!

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The Skid Factory Take On An Early Toyota MR2 Restoration Project…Begrudgingly, It Seems!


The Skid Factory Take On An Early Toyota MR2 Restoration Project…Begrudgingly, It Seems!

Not too long ago, during a competition for a mid or rear-engined vehicle, Marty from the Mighty Car Mods started working on an SW20-era Toyota MR2 and by the end of it, his absolute disdain for the car was palpable. Especially when he was sitting in a foldable seat, sipping something cold and flipping the car off after fighting the thing for what had to be hours that the film couldn’t possibly have explained. Apparently Woody from The Skid Factory hasn’t seen anything or heard anything about this fun because he rolled an AW11-era MR2 into the shop that has a midget with a hammer in the engine and a rat in the rear engine compartment.

I actually loved one of these things as a kid…my aunt’s moronic boyfriend owned one and he would beat the thing like it owed him money. It looked sporty, it hustled around nicely, and I’m pretty sure it was dead within two years from the abuse. Which is a shame, because Toyota was actually building decent little screamers back then. But best of luck convincing Al that it’s worth it. The commentary is hilarious from the word “go” on this project and I’m sure it’ll only get better once they actually start tearing into the car. Just wait until you see what kind of crap is waiting underneath the valve cover. You couldn’t write that story if you tried. Check it out!

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