Love the straight-on shot. Money.
Euro Cabby - Back On The Road
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A stock m20b25 :)
The suspension is unchanged from the previous owner. I think it is H&R front and E30 M3 rear. It rides decent and fun to talk around. It will be done up more though.
Barely any editing was done actually. Little color adjustment, fill light and a small amount of sharpening.
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looks really good. I think the car would be perfect on some alpina/kopi's in 17" IMHO...
would love to roll hard in that thing on a nice weekend somewhere...Comment
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Pm'd lol.
O RLY?
DO IT!
Have some I can have? Come down to Atl or go to one of the mountain trips in TN we seasonly rofl. Will have fun, I guarantee it.
And thanks everyone on comments.
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Unless Alex changed something, it's an H&R Cup Kit. I know because I installed it myself :p
Damn... enter nostalgia. I miss that car. Cool to see the car is at least staying in the community!Erick Mahle | FullOpp Drift | YouTube
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Feedback Thread
Originally posted by Mr. Anderson...one of the most hardcore E30's around. :DComment
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Monday, July 08, 2002
Arrow in FedEx logo actually makes a point Ask a stupid question
By Mike Pulfer, mpulfer@enquirer.com
The Cincinnati Enquirer
Question: “There has been a debate (over) the FedEx logo. There is an arrow ... between the (second) letter "e' and the letter "x.' The challenge has been finding if Federal Express intended to include this arrow in their logo or, as some people believe, the arrow is just a result of the font and spacing of the letters. Furthermore, some people say arrows aren't used to represent speed or promptness.”
Answer: Little is left to chance in the world of marketing and advertising and, especially, corporate identity. The arrow, in this case, didn't just happen to be flying through some highly paid art director's studio.
“The arrow was indeed intentional as a secondary design element,” says Federal Express Corp. spokesman Jess Bunn. “If the viewer sees it, it's a neat, interesting visual bonus. If the viewer doesn't see it, that's OK. It's still a powerful logo.
“The arrow is intended to communicate movement, speed and thedynamic nature of our company,” he said.
The blocky purple and orange, upper- and lower-case letters were created as the new company logo in 1994, “when we decided to modernize our entire look,” Mr. Bunn explained. “It was what customers called us anyway,” and “we could enlarge the logo in the same amount of space and create a bigger impact.” (The old logo required nine additional letters to spell out Federal Express.) “The vibrant colors — including plenty of white as a background color ... communicate our basic attributes . . . personal, certain, inventive, and ... we know how to connect our customers in the new global economy.”

I've always been proud of being a Marine.
I won't hesitate to defend the Corps
"Supersquad"
"Prostitutes are a sub-category of Amusement Parks"-Comment
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