Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The S1 Hoonitron is a bespoke electric drift car designed and built by Audi specifically for Block's new Electrikhana video. The Las Vegas Strip was shut down for the making of this video, ...
This sense of drift is not to be confused with the four wheel drift, a classic cornering technique established in Grand Prix and sports car racing. [citation needed] As a motoring discipline, drifting competitions were first popularized in Japan in the 1970s and further popularized by the 1995 manga series Initial D. Drifting competitions are ...
The drift shocked the opponent, Keisuke Takahashi and even felt ashamed that he was beaten by a Toyota Sprinter Trueno AE86. The scene also became an internet meme. In the 2006 animated movie Cars, protagonist Lightning McQueen is taught the Scandinavian flick [8] by his soon to be mentor Doc Hudson.
Aaron Day Racing Nissan S14: 124 Aaron Day: 1, 3–4 Meeks Drift Nissan S14: 316 Austin Meeks: All Stratton Racing Chevrolet Corvette: 33 Dirk Stratton: All Red Baron Racing BMW E30: 418 Donovan Brockway: All D’VANZ Motorsports Ford Mustang: 19 Doug Van Den Brink: 1–2, 4 Ethan Hunter Drift Nissan S14: 37 Ethan Hunter: 1, 3–4 Drift Chick ...
Nicholas Mevoli, a diver from New York died on 17 November 2013 after losing consciousness on surfacing from a 3-minute 38 second dive to a depth of 72 metres (236 ft) during an official record attempt in the "constant weight without fins" event. He had previously reached greater depths and longer times in other disciplines.
The second one to win 3 was James Deane, and the third was Fredric Aasbø (2015, 2021, and 2022). Although he was the second driver to win 3 championships, Deane was the first and so far only Formula DRIFT driver who managed to win 3 championships in a row (2017, 2018 and 2019).
Tafheet (Template:Lang-ar), or popularly hajwalah (هجولة), [a] (colloquially known as Arab drifting or Saudi drifting), is a type of street racing-like subculture believed to have started in the late 1970s in Saudi Arabia, that involves driving cars that are generally non-modified or factory-setup (sometimes stolen or rented cars) at very high speeds, around 160–260 km/h (100–160 mph ...
He used his arms only in the last 40 m (131 ft) of this ascent, with a total dive time of 3:58. Later that same year in December at the Dean's Blue Hole in the Bahamas, Nitsch broke three world records: Variable Weight at 142 m (466 ft); Free Immersion at 112 m (367 ft); and Constant Weight at 123 m (404 ft).