Friday, May 27, 2016
Monday, April 11, 2016
A peek at what we might expect as the next dominating Steelers' Defense
All credit goes to Behind The Steel Curtain (BTSC) member 58Steel for this article; I found it both well researched and well written.
Who knows what dark strategies are boiling away in Steelers' Defensive Coordinator Keith Butler's mind; he certainly was well tutored by his predecessor Dick LeBeau.
Give this a read; you won't regret it.
Who knows what dark strategies are boiling away in Steelers' Defensive Coordinator Keith Butler's mind; he certainly was well tutored by his predecessor Dick LeBeau.
Give this a read; you won't regret it.
Sunday, April 3, 2016
From Conception to Execution: The evolution and realization of a Retro Mod - Part II
Part I dealt with the genesis of the idea for a way to make the modern Challenger look more "retro".
Part II details the design and fabrication process.
PART II
With the realization that a faux body kit side pipe was not only economically unfeasible, but also not nearly authentic enough (meaning, it had to function as intended), I went to work designing real side pipes.
I chose to design my own as opposed to buying something "off the rack" for a couple of reasons. Foremost was the fact that of the choices out there, some were either way too small and expensive (designed for Corvettes or Shelby Cobras) or were cheap chrome knockoffs found on the back pages of parts magazines.
The other reason was, the Challenger is just plain big; from wheel well to wheel well, it measures 82 inches, of which the door itself is 51 inches. There is nothing on the market proportioned correctly.
Part II details the design and fabrication process.
PART II
With the realization that a faux body kit side pipe was not only economically unfeasible, but also not nearly authentic enough (meaning, it had to function as intended), I went to work designing real side pipes.
I chose to design my own as opposed to buying something "off the rack" for a couple of reasons. Foremost was the fact that of the choices out there, some were either way too small and expensive (designed for Corvettes or Shelby Cobras) or were cheap chrome knockoffs found on the back pages of parts magazines.
The other reason was, the Challenger is just plain big; from wheel well to wheel well, it measures 82 inches, of which the door itself is 51 inches. There is nothing on the market proportioned correctly.
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