Home Vehicles Meaningful details are easy to ignore on famous models

Meaningful details are easy to ignore on famous models

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A very small detail on the car can contain the meaningful message of the manufacturer.

Ford GT commemorative headlights

Ford announced the production version of the first-generation GT in 2003 to celebrate its 100th anniversary. Serial production began in 2004. The coupe is equipped with a nostalgic V8 engine that stands out with headlights with cleverly shaped interior details like the number 100.

The windshield of the Jaguar E-Pace

Look closely at the corner of the windshield in front of the E-Pace, and you’ll spot an image of a cheetah leading its cubs. Jaguar explained that the kitten image represents E-Pace, its smallest SUV, and the leading cheetah represents the larger F-Pace.

Jeep Gladiator area code

The inside of the Jeep Gladiator’s cargo compartment hides the number 419 beside the heart-shaped emblem. It was one of two area codes designated for the northwestern part of Ohio, where Jeep built the truck. Specifically, the automaker’s Toledo plant has an area code 419.

Math lecture by Ram 1500

Latest generation Ram 1500 pickup can help with the math learning of passengers. The armrest compartment in the car’s center console displays a number of math equations such as Pythagorean Theorem, fraction-to-decimal charts, and trigonometric formulas. While the ratio to use them is low, a graph that converts a wrench from standard to the metric provided on the dashboard can actually be helpful in real-world situations.

The rainbow path of the Tesla Model X

On the day Tesla issued a 2016 Model X safety recall, CEO Elon Musk instructed owners to activate Autopilot four times in a row to unlock the car’s eye-catching positioning simulator. . It’s in a digital instrument cluster, where the image of the car shows what’s going on in real time that reminds us of the levels in the Mario Kart game.

Meaning of Koenigsegg Ghosts

In the past, the Koenigsegg headquarters were home to the Swedish Air Force’s 1st Jet Squadron. This squadron’s badge is a flying ghost that inspired the automaker’s logo design. Setting up a production plant on an old military base gives Koenigsegg the space needed to craft supercars and have access to runways long enough to test them out.

Famous racetracks appear Dodge SRT Vipe

Dodge secretly created the lines of some of the famous tracks in the 2013 Viper GTS. In the photo above is the paved track in central California called Laguna Seca, appearing on a rubber mat at the dashboard. center, right next to the USB port. In addition, the Nürburgring track is printed in the coin compartment next to the passenger window switch.

Submarines of the Tesla Model X and Model S

Owners of Tesla Model S or Model X equipped with air suspension can replace their car’s image on the central touchscreen with James Bond’s Lotus Esprit submarine after pressing. enter the T-shaped symbol for five seconds and enter “007” in the access code field. The display will then also show a “depth” menu that allows the driver to adjust the height of the pneumatic suspension.

Name meaning Toyota GT 86

The name of the Toyota GT86 is a tribute to the Corolla Levin coupe, which was produced between 1983 and 1987 and was internally named AE86. In addition, the ratio of the cylinder’s inner diameter to the piston stroke is also 86mm in size. Measure up to the ends of the exhaust pipes and you’ll notice that both are 86mm in diameter.

Spider web on Volvo XC90

Volvo knows kids are more likely to sit in the third row of the XC90 than adults, so it created the entertainment space by designing an interesting spider web image under the lid of the storage bin. After an engineer noticed the boredom of the original design, the “Superhero Eight Legs” appeared on the Swedish brand’s largest SUV.

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