Add The Drive (opens in a new tab) Adding us as a Preferred Source in Google by using this link indicates that you would like to see more of our content in Google News results Bosozoku roughly ...
We are fast approaching the end of the ICE-powered muscle car age, if you ask the Big Detroit Three. But has anyone asked us if we are all right with that or not? Soon, there will be only one – just ...
Particular niches of car culture exist in most places around the globe. The drivers of Havana have their Yank Tanks, while Lowriders sprang up from Latino culture in Southern California. Raggare in ...
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I installed a bosozoku exhaust!
In this video, I install Japanese Bosozoku blast pipes on my E36 drift car, which is gradually transforming into a true ...
Bosozoku is a trademark Japanese style of tuning involving huge aero elements that appear boxy and non-functional, combined with crazy paint and the so-called 'bamboo spear' exhausts. Needless to say, ...
If you combined a Gundam robot with a JDM Toyota, a Bosozoku car is probably what would come out the other end. Several yard long exhaust pipes and bodykits that would make a Group B rally car cry are ...
For those who have never actually been to Japan, the idea that Japan's generally regimented, polite, and clean society could have a completely out of control and dangerous youth subculture is hard to ...
You either love this car or hate it. Most Americans don’t know much if anything about Bosozoku car culture in Japan. When presented with the comically huge front splitters, towering exhaust pipes, and ...
Bosozoku is a tuning trend that won’t catch anywhere outside Japan The Bosozoku sub-culture originated in 1950s as a movement used by motorcycle gangs to express dissatisfaction with the Japanese ...
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