1977 Cavaliere Nobile Caligula
Fast. Ultra luxurious. Handling of a sports car. We better don´t speak about price and reliability…
1977 Cavaliere Nobile Caligula
Fast. Ultra luxurious. Handling of a sports car. We better don´t speak about price and reliability…
The Dragon’s range of models in 1966.
Dragon 57 whit basic interiors
Dragon 72 whit standard interiors
Dragon 88 whit premium interior
Is a 2 door, but Automation says it’s a sedan soo…
Is a cheap crap econobox from the 70s, but it has one feature that is unique for one of my cars…
CUSTOM MADE LIGHTS
…ahem. I was bored so, I made the lights using flat shapes, vents and one of the 3D cylinder shapes. I guess it could be considered a ‘proof of concept’, but I don’t know if I’d try to keep using it or if it’s too much effort for such little results.
Based on my FC1 submission, but retuned to run on 95 RON premium unleaded, to tie in with JOC4B.
The spec shown here is identical to that of Bruno’s personal car (except for plate size) - he bought it in 1990 after realizing that he needed something in which to carry his wife and two children.
With 300 horsepower from a 4.0L all-alloy V8 driving the rear wheels via a five-speed advanced automatic gearbox, plus all-independent suspension (dual wishbones up front and a multilink rear) tuned to provide a balanced blend of comfort and sportiness, this full-size sports sedan blends vivacity with usability.
The interior (shown above on the original FC1-friendly version) has all the mod-cons you’d expect from a car of this type - full leather interior with wood accents, climate-controlled air conditioning, high-quality stereo surround sound system with CD/cassette player, central locking, and dual front airbags. All in all, it’s a pleasant place to be wherever you sit.
2001-2004 Inertia Fantica, Pre-Fl
Inertia’s boring wagon made when cars were, well, boring. I guess everybody starts somewhere, and in this case its a 16 yr old looking for a car.
1989 and 1994 Cavaliere Nobile Freccia
Both cars shown are top trims in export spec, but the cheaper ones are fun as well.
1992 Yamaguchi Zen
The seekest car of it´s time, often called “catfish” by the press, intended to attack the competitor IP and therefore changing the whole concept of the Zen. A wide selection of engines was available, with everyone except the base being boxer engines for a better handling. Advanced chassis, class-leading aerodynamics and sporty handling at good economy made this a success, although the design was not liked by everyone.
1998 Yamaguchi Kuruma WRC STX
You can get the new Kuruma in all sort of variants, from the budget shitbox for your daily traffic jam commute to a pathetic job up to the rally-spec WRC STX which has 280 horsepower - according to the manufactor. In reality, it has 330…
nice, the lights look great
1979 and 1985 Yamaguchi Kuruma
The Kuruma is the successor of the 417/Mobula and a cheap family car. The car was developed in a joint venture with Planar (exterior design by @lotto77 ). The center gauges, a mean to reduce the work to convert between LHD and RHD versions, are the only real quirk of it - the rest is perfectly boring.
The facelifted version keeps this feature and adds even more refinement.
This is my vision of what could a car like the new 7-series look like, but less in-your-face. And yeah, I didn’t have good ideas for the sides, so they’re somewhat bare. You can learn more about it and download in my thread for random stuff.
I like this - does it have an interior?
Nah, I only (rarely) make interiors for cars of my “proper” brands (and this isn’t one of them), as I don’t care about those “lower tier” ones too much and for me the process is too tedious, cumbersome, and the parts are too limited. But then again, I barely even publish the “proper” ones outside of challenges, because I’m a damn perfectionist who’d like to make complete presentations for them with some lore background, tech specs and available variants.
Very nice front indeed, i also like how the wheels match the lights…well done.