Cars
Kelvin built this car from scratch using scrap metal he found in junkyards. It also has a working speedometer, RPM gauge, and functioning gull-wing doors.
The Rolls-Royce was hoisted more than 170 meters up the side of a skyscraper into the owner’s penthouse apartment.
It only took four years and several delays but the first production Tesla Cybertruck is finally on its way to its patient owner.
The Korean brand’s walking car, also known as Elevate, has a combination of wheels and legs, meaning it will be able to go where no other truck or car can.
From Aston Martin to Ferrari and McLaren, these are the top 5 cars to look out for at this year’s Goodwood Festival of Speed.
“It happened to me, and now I always back in when parking,” one viewer revealed.
Wildly expensive, extremely powerful and full of tech gizmos – The Rezvani Vengeance is a supercar, a luxury SUV and a tank at the same time.
The Bentley Flying Spur costs about $220,000. But as with any luxury car, the cost price is just the beginning.
‘We still don’t quite understand why or how they even got that far in there,’ the rescue company said.
From its rocket headlights and T-shaped hood panel to the wraparound lines at the rear, the Lancia Pu+Ra HPE is a nod to the automaker’s iconic past models.
And this was more than a glorified publicity stunt – Brad Pitt will play an Formula One driver in an upcoming Apple TV movie.
Halo.Car, a rental company in Las Vegas, has started delivering driverless cars to customers’ doors using remote operators.
Brad Pitt will be driving a real Formula One car this weekend for his upcoming F1 movie. His fictional team even has its own pit lane.
From apex and corners to less technical stuff, these are the five things you need to learn to become a professional race car driver.
A bunch of YouTubers in Italy have created what’s been dubbed the world’s lowest car by literally chopping a Fiat Panda in half.
With massive wings and propellers that protrude out the side, this flying car looks like something out of a sci-fi movie.



