Home » A Cardboard Magnate Spent Decades Overpaying For Cars To Help People In Need, Now He’s Selling All 1,300 Of Them

A Cardboard Magnate Spent Decades Overpaying For Cars To Help People In Need, Now He’s Selling All 1,300 Of Them

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Most car enthusiasts consider themselves lucky if they get the chance to own their dream car just once. Some of us, like me, consider ourselves extraordinarily blessed to have 15 of our favorite cars. Rarer than that is when someone owns hundreds of cars or more. One businessman in rural Alabama might have the largest car collection in America. Cardboard magnate Greg Rusk is said to own up to 1,300 cars, and at least half of them were purchased for way too much money to help local families in need. Now, in a massive multi-part auction, Rusk is selling his collection off in a no-reserve auction so all sorts of enthusiasts can enjoy his decades of finds.

Mass collectors can be a bit controversial in the car enthusiast world. Many folks believe that cars are meant to be driven, and even someone with just a dozen cars can’t drive them all like they should. I’m guilty of this, as most of my cars rarely drive more than 500 miles in a year, if that. Then you have folks who have even more cars than I, like Derek Bieri from Vice Grip Garage or Greg Rusk here, whose cars can sit for years, getting flat tires, varnished fuel, and inches of dust. Mr. Rusk is giving enthusiasts the chance to put his cars back on the road.

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The first batch of Rusk’s cars, well more than 200 vehicles, will be sold in October in an auction that Hagerty Marketplace is calling the Generous Collection. Approximately 150 of these cars are for sale right this moment in auctions, with roughly another 50 posted by Tuesday. The variety in Rusk’s collection is impressive, and includes everything from old conversion vans to Mazda RX-8s, pickup trucks, and even plenty of German cars. Many of these cars have covered tons of miles, yet look fantastic. Some are projects, and some are garage queens. Rusk was not a typical rich guy car collector, which means that there’s something for everyone here.

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Hagerty

But this begs the question. How does one guy end up with over a thousand cars in the most random car collection in America? Rusk has a pretty fascinating explanation.

From Cadillacs To Everything Else

Greg Rusk is currently the owner of Rusken Packaging, Inc., a cardboard packaging juggernaut headquartered in Cullman, Alabama. The company was founded in 1974 by Bobby Rusk and operated in a 6,000 square-foot facility. Ownership of the business transferred to Bobby’s son, Greg, in 1992, after Bobby passed.

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Since Greg took control of the family business, he’s grown it into a titan that’s considered to be the pre-eminent independent supplier of corrugated packaging in the Southeast United States. Rusken Packaging has spread its wings across 19 facilities in 10 states and offers everything from standardized boxes to entirely custom printing, design, and packaging solutions. There’s a pretty good chance that if you live in the Southeast and purchased some sort of boxed product, that box came from Rusken.

Running the family empire has afforded Rusk a pretty heavy wallet, which has allowed him to follow his dreams.

A couple of days ago, Hagerty published its latest episode of Barn Find Hunter (embedded above), which opens with this line: “259 Chevys, 109 Fords, 105 Cadillacs, 96 Pontiacs, 55 Mopars, 48 Lincolns, 35 Buicks, 24 Oldsmobiles, and 12 Volkswagen Beetles.” The show’s host, Tom Cotter, joined Greg Rusk on a walkthrough of only a fraction of Rusk’s collection, and got the scoop as to how in the world one man even ends up with over a thousand cars.

Rusk says that his collecting journey started 26 or 28 years ago. At first, he just wanted to collect a Cadillac from every year of the company’s history. He had this idea of possibly opening a museum, and spent his weekends in the early Internet era by going out, looking at cars, and bringing them home.

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Rusk explains that, when he was younger, his friends were all into muscle cars. However, he just loved the elegance and ride of a Cadillac. So, old Cadillacs became his dream cars.

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Hagerty

It wasn’t long before Rusk’s interests in cars branched out from Cadillacs. Soon enough, he began collecting Chevrolet Chevelles, Pontiac Firebird Trans Ams, Chevrolet Corvettes, and basically everything else. Rusk even has at least one Nash Metropolitan and a Mazda RX-7 with an LS swap.

In talking to Cotter, Rusk says that what would happen was that he’d get into collecting spells and just amass tons of cars. Apparently, Rusk would drive these cars for a weekend or two and then just stash them away in one of his many buildings or outside on his properties. So, a lot of the cars in this auction were last driven a decade or longer ago for just a single weekend.

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Hagerty

The Hagerty crew estimates that there are between 800 to 1,300 cars here, but the true number is unknown. Rusk apparently has a paper-based inventory of the cars that’s more than an inch thick, but he doesn’t even know how many cars he has or how many buildings they’re all stored in. Rusk also doesn’t remember what the first car he collected was, but he says that his favorite is a 1959 Cadillac convertible.

As for how he chooses these cars? He just likes it when a car is cool or unique. He doesn’t care if the car is numbers-matching or even if it’s in good condition. If it were a neat car, he wanted it.

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Doing Some Good

I think the really cool part of Rusk’s story is just how he collected these cars. Apparently, word started getting around that Rusk likes cars, and soon enough, members of the community and employees of Rusken Packaging started reaching out. These people often say that they want to sell their car to buy a house, or need to sell their car to pay for a medical bill.

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Hagerty

Instead of bartering these people down, like people on Facebook would, Rusk would do the exact opposite. He’d ask the person how much money they actually wanted, and that’s the price he paid for the car. Rusk estimates that about half of his collection came from surrounding communities in Alabama. Hagerty says that Rusk “would regularly pay overly generous fees to acquire an interesting vehicle.” That suggests he’s almost certainly paid way more for these cars than they were even worth.

This is why Hagerty calls this auction the Generous Collection. Basically, Rusk used his love for cars to do some good in Alabama.

The Generous Collection

Alright, so you know Rusk’s story and why the man somehow ended up with a thousand-plus cars. What goodies are in this auction?

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Hagerty

Before I continue, I will reiterate a point I said earlier. Rusk’s only standard for collecting a car was that it was unique and cool, or that someone in need was selling it. He didn’t really care about its history, its condition, or modifications. Lots of his cars are not minty, and many of them have tons of miles. Many of them really are like the kinds of cars that you’ll find on Facebook.

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I dig that, because that should mean that regular people should be able to afford the cars in this auction. But it also means that you should look past the pretty paint to make sure there aren’t any issues that would be a dealbreaker for you.

The first car that caught my eye was this 1992 Cadillac Sedan DeVille Custom Funeral Flower Car.

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Hagerty

I love flower cars. These cars tend to be luxury vehicles converted into a giant platform to carry flowers or a platform to carry a casket on a bed of flowers. They add style and dignity to a funeral procession, but as cars, they’re just plain cool. I mean, this thing is basically a Sedan DeVille pickup truck!

The other vehicle that immediately got my attention was this 1967 King Midget Model III. This car is being sold as a project because the auction team was not able to get it started.

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Hagerty

Now, I’m just going to rapid-fire off some of the awesome vehicles from the auction:

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1997 Chevrolet Camaro Z28 30th Anniversary Coupe

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Hagerty

1953 Jaguar XK120 Roadster

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Hagerty

1999 Chevrolet S-10 Xtreme 5-Speed

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Hagerty

LS1-Powered 1989 Mazda RX-7 Turbo II 6-Speed

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Hagerty

1981 AMC Spirit GT Liftback 4.2L

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Hagerty

1987 Alfa Romeo Spider Quadrifoglio

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Hagerty

2002 Chevrolet Monte Carlo SS Intimidator

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Hagerty

1995 Toyota Celica ST Coupe

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Hagerty

1949 Cadillac Series 62

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Hagerty

1973 Cadillac Eldorado Convertible

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Hagerty

1967 Oldsmobile Toronado

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Hagerty

1986 Chevrolet C10 Silverado

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Hagerty

I think what’s really awesome is that, sure, my highlights here are some interesting cars, but there are also lots of just regular, everyday cars in this auction. There’s a 2001 Audi TT in the auction with 239,000 miles and an underbody of three different colors. There’s also a 2007 Mitsubishi Eclipse, a 2011 GMC Yukon XL Denali, a 2002 Ford F-150 Lariat, and some other cars that some folks might consider to be “regular traffic.” That’s great!

This is why I’m saying that this auction has something for everyone. A little bit of everything is in here, from cheap project cars and high-mileage daily drivers to high-dollar Mustangs and Porsches. Also, stay tuned for future auctions, as this is only a fraction of Rusk’s collection.

If you’re interested in checking out the auction, head on over to Hagerty’s the Generous Collection. As I said before, most of these cars have between 11 and 13 days left in their auctions, so you have plenty of time to explain things to your significant other.

As for Greg Rusk, he tells Hagerty that this is the end of his obsession. He’s spent nearly 30 years amassing what could be America’s largest car collection, but now, he wants to see these cars go and have fun with other people. It looks like quite a lot of folks are about to get that chance.

What looks interesting to you? Let us know your favorite find in the comments.

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[Ed Note: Hagerty Marketplace reached out to see if we’d be interested in partnering on a couple of posts to support this collection. Of course, we said that we’d love to. Look at these great cars! FYI: If you click on the links above to view this collection and, especially, if you register to bid, they’ll know you came via The Autopian. – MH]

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DNF
DNF
7 days ago

Now this is a special collection!
And a special collector!

Space
Space
7 days ago

I don’t know if the bidding will go faster at the end but some of those more common vehicles are at really low prices, that GMC Yukon was at $2000.

Anoos
Member
Anoos
7 days ago

This guy was a hero. Bless his soul for backstopping people who made bad automotive decisions.

Seriously, the world needs more of this guy. Billionaires do not need bailouts (they deserve head ventilation). From the collection, it appears that his purchases benefited actual families who don’t deserve to suffer for decades because of dad’s terrible automotive decisions.

Cheap Bastard
Member
Cheap Bastard
7 days ago
Reply to  Anoos

“From the collection, it appears that his purchases benefited actual families who don’t deserve to suffer for decades because of dad’s terrible automotive decisions.”

Instead what he did by overpaying was JUSTIFY Dad’s terrible automotive decisions;

“See honey?! I WAS right! My investment DID pay off!”

*Dad, flush with money and with great conviction and flourish snaps open a hot-off-the-press copy of AutoTrader to find his next high stakes investment.*

Anoos
Member
Anoos
7 days ago
Reply to  Cheap Bastard

You’re right. This guy may just be a terrible enabler, leading dad into riskier and riskier car purchases until the family is forced to live in a Fisker.

PaysOutAllNight
PaysOutAllNight
7 days ago
Reply to  Anoos

I agree with everything you said except “they deserve head ventilation”.

They deserve some form of attitude adjustment, even if unpleasant, for such selfish and reckless accumulation, but capital punishment is not reasonable to even joke about.

Anoos
Member
Anoos
7 days ago

I meant they should have to wear silly trucker hats, although I do like your take on it too.

Shooting Brake
Member
Shooting Brake
7 days ago

This is probably how’d I’d be with big money. I’d imagine myself restoring cars along the way but would never actually get around to it very much, haha. But experiencing a little bit of everything and helping people? That’s the dream.

Knowonelse
Member
Knowonelse
7 days ago

Great to hear about a massive collection being sold off BY the collector, not by the heirs who don’t care about them. Bravo!

1978fiatspyderfan
Member
1978fiatspyderfan
7 days ago

Well using my look on the bright side I looked at a car I’d love to have. That Jaguar XK120 Roadster. Already at $40k. If nothing else it shows I have great taste and no money.

Cheap Bastard
Member
Cheap Bastard
7 days ago

My uncle had a XK140. Very similar body but upgraded components, notably rack and pinion steering. He hated it. He claimed it was uncomfortable and didn’t drive particularly well. I would imagine the XK120 wouldn’t have been any better. Maybe that’s one hero best not met.

Instead he greatly preferred his TR-3. I can confirm the TR-3 was a fun car to drive and very reliable with electronic ignition and modern gaskets so if you’re looking something like that the TR-3 is worth a spot on your short list. Those are also WAAAY cheaper.

Last edited 7 days ago by Cheap Bastard
PaysOutAllNight
PaysOutAllNight
7 days ago
Reply to  Cheap Bastard

I concur with the opinion that the TR-3 can be the better driving car, but I will point out that mine had significantly upgraded brakes from factory stock that made a huge difference in driving confidence.

Multi-piston calipers in the front, and changed from drums to disc in the rear.

Cheap Bastard
Member
Cheap Bastard
7 days ago

In the TR or the Jaaaaaaaaag?

My uncle’s cars were bone stock. Which in retrospect may have been part of the problem because as I mentioned he stopped driving the Jag in 1973 so it it never benefited from modern tires.

Although modern tires wouldn’t have helped the seating position so maybe not.

Last edited 7 days ago by Cheap Bastard
PaysOutAllNight
PaysOutAllNight
6 days ago
Reply to  Cheap Bastard

It was my TR-3 that had the upgraded brakes. IIRC, the front calipers were junkyard pulls from a Toyota truck of some sort.

I don’t remember the rest, other than how much better you could take corners when use of the brake pedal didn’t require simultaneous prayers and divine intervention.

Before the brake upgrade, the TR-3 felt like a parade car. Turns were all about keeping momentum, but being very careful not to keep too much momentum.

After, it was a vintage gem. Underpowered, but a load of fun on twisty roads because you could really throw it in and brake late, even with skinny old-school bias ply tires.

Cheap Bastard
Member
Cheap Bastard
6 days ago

OK. My TR3 came with front discs (IIRC the first mass produced car so equipped) and for me those worked fine. I do recall the Toyota swap being a thing.

I wouldn’t call it underpowered though. It had great low end torque. It was capable of 0-60 in under 10s and a top end of 100 mph (110 with overdrive) which for its time was excellent, not that you’d want to go there with all the aerodynamic lift happening above 80 or so.

PaysOutAllNight
PaysOutAllNight
5 days ago
Reply to  Cheap Bastard

I’d say it was underpowered compared to the some of the cars my friends would take to track days, but you’re right. It was good for its chassis. I’m probably mixing up my Spitfire memories a bit.

I do know my TR-3 had atrocious brakes when I got it, which was a surprise because I was told it had better brakes than other similar cars. The upgrades were done “because I had it apart anyway”.

Speaking of my Spitfire, those brakes were atrocious until I realized someone prior had installed the front calipers on the wrong side of the car, so they were both upside down. Or the calipers were rebuilt wrong, I don’t know. There was no easy way to get all the air out of the system that way with the bleed nipples on the bottom.

Cheap Bastard
Member
Cheap Bastard
5 days ago

Strange, my TR3 brakes seemed fine to me compared to my other unassisted cars at the time. Maybe yours were problematic? Of course I didn’t race mine so I never pushed them very hard.

PaysOutAllNight
PaysOutAllNight
3 days ago
Reply to  Cheap Bastard

It’s likely. I just remember that I couldn’t get the brakes off fast enough after I bought the car.

SlowCarFast
Member
SlowCarFast
4 days ago
Reply to  Cheap Bastard

I believe it was journalist Kristin Lee who drove an XK120 or XK140 and wrote about it. The brakes were described as more of a wish than a function. Plan ahead!

Lotsofchops
Member
Lotsofchops
7 days ago

At a recent British car show, the owner let me sit in his ’54 XK120 Drophead Coupe. I’m 5’9″ and a bit overweight, and it was a contortionist act to get inside. My legs couldn’t fit under the steering wheel, so my right thigh was already against the shifter before I could get it to touch the gas pedal. Do not recommend for your average Murican build.
https://imgur.com/a/GI4Tsmb

1978fiatspyderfan
Member
1978fiatspyderfan
7 days ago
Reply to  Lotsofchops

This makes me feel much better knowing I would not be able to fit into it.
Thanks

Dodsworth
Member
Dodsworth
7 days ago

The red 1965(?) Chevy C-10 and Toronado are all I need. And this chair.

Joe The Drummer
Joe The Drummer
7 days ago
Reply to  Dodsworth

And this ashtray.

AND THAT’S ALL I NEED.

StillNotATony
Member
StillNotATony
7 days ago

And this Thermos!

AND THAT’S ALL I NEED!!

5VZ-F'Ever and Ever, Amen
Member
5VZ-F'Ever and Ever, Amen
7 days ago

Anyone know how shipping would work in this situation?

3WiperB
Member
3WiperB
7 days ago

I assume packed in cardboard…lots of cardboard.

5VZ-F'Ever and Ever, Amen
Member
5VZ-F'Ever and Ever, Amen
7 days ago
Reply to  3WiperB

HA! Good one

DNF
DNF
7 days ago
Reply to  3WiperB

I might be lying under my car on a sheet of his cardboard!

Colin Greening
Colin Greening
7 days ago

Not sure, but as a T100 SR5 owner I’m jealous I didn’t think of that username first.

Stacheface
Member
Stacheface
7 days ago

There’s a lot I’d be tempted with, and a crazy variety, though the antique horse carriage sure stood out scrolling through! And a big block C20 pickup starting at only $2,000

Is Travis
Is Travis
7 days ago

The planet needs more people like this.

SlowBrownWagon
Member
SlowBrownWagon
7 days ago

Love me any El Camino, Ranchero, or cool sedan conversions, Caddy Flower Car for me.

Pilotgrrl
Member
Pilotgrrl
7 days ago

I love the Supra. A friend had a similar one, but it was silver. Many good times were had riding around in that car with Terri.

Arrest-me Red
Member
Arrest-me Red
7 days ago

If it weren’t for the money thing, some of these would end up in my driveway

Fix It Again Tony
Fix It Again Tony
7 days ago

First time checking out Hagerty’s auction site – did I miss it, or they don’t even show the title status unless you look at the carfax?

M SV
M SV
7 days ago

I first heard of him and his collection maybe a decade ago. At that time they estimated around 1000 but who knows. By all accounts I’ve heard a good guy they used to use the term good ol’ boy in the south they still do but for people like him I’ve heard it changed to good ol’ guy. The story I got from someone that was able to see some of the cars back then was he wasn’t going to sell them and might auction some of them them off that didnt work for the museum he was planning at some point. I guess that day has come. It’s fitting his story and his good deads will be the main story line of the cars. I hope he is able to build his museum if he still want to.

Jason H.
Member
Jason H.
7 days ago

That 1970 Camaro Z28 is nice as is the gold 1998 Trans Am WS6.

The Econoline conversion van is weird. I was expecting a tricked out custom interior and instead it has an 13 seat shuttle bus interior.

Eggsalad
Eggsalad
7 days ago

I’d really like to own that King Midget III, but I’m sure there’s a rabid KM collector out there who will pay a ridiculous sum to own it.

As for it not starting… IIRC it’s powered by a single-cylinder Kohler or Wisconsin engine, so how hard could it be to get running? Or just go buy a 212cc Predator engine from Harbor Freight and get 50% more power than stock!

1978fiatspyderfan
Member
1978fiatspyderfan
7 days ago
Reply to  Eggsalad

Bid on it and force it up

Anoos
Member
Anoos
7 days ago
Reply to  Eggsalad

They may bid high, but their dollars are smaller.

Lotsofchops
Member
Lotsofchops
7 days ago
Reply to  Anoos

That just means they can carry more of em!

TK-421
TK-421
7 days ago

Of the above, I dig the Celica. I wonder if he has any MR2’s…

NosrednaNod
NosrednaNod
7 days ago

Just to be clear… absolutely none of you should bid on the 1981 AMC Spirit GT Liftback 4.2L. You would not like that car at all so don’t bid on it.

1978fiatspyderfan
Member
1978fiatspyderfan
7 days ago
Reply to  NosrednaNod

So you are bidding on it. So am I. I expect to bid $1 million dollars. Jk

Ramblin' Gamblin' Man
Member
Ramblin' Gamblin' Man
6 days ago
Reply to  NosrednaNod

May the best man win…………………………………. 😉

Marques Dean
Marques Dean
6 days ago

AMC fans of the world unite!!lol

Ramblin' Gamblin' Man
Member
Ramblin' Gamblin' Man
6 days ago
Reply to  Marques Dean

Yes, all 12 of us! 😉

Marques Dean
Marques Dean
5 days ago

Let’s not get it twisted. There’s more out there,they’re just “in hiding”. And I don’t mean just the people that bought Gremlins and Pacers!lol
Once in a blue moon you’ll see a Rebel Machine,S/C Rambler(Scrambler) or an Eagle come out of the woodwork!
Especially if you lived within 2 hours of what used to be the Kenosha(Wisconsin) assembly plant!lol

JurassicComanche25
Member
JurassicComanche25
8 days ago

Theres a hole from a 69 chevelle in my garage, and it could be refilled….

Dogisbadob
Dogisbadob
8 days ago

I like that gold Trans Am

SlowCarFast
Member
SlowCarFast
4 days ago
Reply to  Dogisbadob

Back when cars were still available in colors!

KYFire
Member
KYFire
8 days ago

Oh, this is not good news for my wallet.

Yanky Mate
Yanky Mate
8 days ago

man, I aspire to be like Rusk one day. he sounds like an absolute legend and fun guy to hang out with.

Grey alien in a beige sedan
Member
Grey alien in a beige sedan
8 days ago

That 73 Cadillac Eldorado convertible sure is a looker, ain’t it?

Joe The Drummer
Joe The Drummer
7 days ago

I picked that one out for my dad. All it needs is Boss Hogg steer horns on the front.

A. Barth
A. Barth
8 days ago

It’s pleasing to know that the cardboard magnate stuck to something.

Also I think Hagerty came up with the right name for the collection.

Hoonicus
Hoonicus
8 days ago
Reply to  A. Barth

Most early beater buyers knew this for hidden Bondo detection.

SegaF355Fan
SegaF355Fan
7 days ago
Reply to  A. Barth

I don’t know that Mercedes is going to be familiar enough in this field to read between the lines and catch the pole-to-pole that was involved in making this comment.

CRX89
Member
CRX89
7 days ago
Reply to  A. Barth

Magnates, how do they work?

Dodsworth
Member
Dodsworth
7 days ago
Reply to  CRX89

I’ve heard they don’t work when they get wet. Everybody knows it. Everybody’s talking about it.

1978fiatspyderfan
Member
1978fiatspyderfan
7 days ago
Reply to  Dodsworth

I disagree, my poll works best when it gets wet from the magnetic attraction of the opposite sex

Harvey Davidson
Member
Harvey Davidson
7 days ago
Reply to  CRX89

Nobody knows!

Brian Mackey
Member
Brian Mackey
7 days ago
Reply to  CRX89

Miracles!

Anoos
Member
Anoos
7 days ago
Reply to  CRX89

Miracles, my ninja. Miracles.

DNF
DNF
7 days ago
Reply to  CRX89

You have to use special ones on a Lotus.

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