More than 3.7M cars on the road have 'park outside' recalls, Carfax says
More than 3.7 million cars that are currently on the road have a «park outside» recall, according to recent data from Carfax.
DriveNews.co.uk: Your Ultimate Hub for Comprehensive Automotive News and Insights! We bring you the latest reports, stories, and updates from the world of cars, covering everything from vehicle launches to driving tips. Stay with DriveNews.co.uk to stay revved up about the automotive world 24/7
More than 3.7 million cars that are currently on the road have a «park outside» recall, according to recent data from Carfax.
Normal people aren’t allowed to drive cars like this. The teams and owners of modern, top-level race cars, under most conditions, would never consider letting someone without years of training and proven skill drive their seven-figure cars flat-out. It just doesn’t happen.
Last weekend, NASCAR driver Joey Logano was hit with a $10,000 fine for using a webbed glove on his left hand during the Cup race in Atlanta. The webbed glove broke the rules about wearing non-S.F.I.-approved safety gear during a race but it also gave Logano a small aerodynamic advantage. Now, NASCAR is showing the glove to the world.
LAS VEGAS — Rajah Caruth was like any other 4-year-old boy the first time he watched the movies “Cars” and vowed to become his own version of Lightning McQueen.
You don't have to watch every NASCAR round to know that sometimes, races end under caution. That makes people upset. «Just let 'em race,» the hardnose fans lament, as was the case with the 2024 Daytona 500 where William Byron took the white flag just before a huge crash toward the back of the field, making him the winner. Well, if that left a bad taste in anyone's mouth, then Sunday night's three-wide finish at Atlanta was like a fresh rinse of Cool Mint Listerine.
Mercedes-Benz is delaying an EV sales target that would have seen the automaker go all-electric in at least some markets by 2030, Reuters reports.
It started around 3:30 in the morning on the East Coast, reports flooding in about an AT&T service outage. Customers complained across Reddit and X and logged their issues on Downdetector, a site that, well, detects when services go down.
Short layovers suck, and having to run through an airport full of people sucks even more. I think airlines should totally shuttle passengers from one plane to another in bright-red supercars. That would be way more efficient. Wait, Delta is doing what? Oh.