RAUH-Welt debuts first American-built cars at the 2011 SEMA Show
#12
I'm being serious when I say that I didn't even see an LF-A...
#13
I love the way Rauh-Welts build cars and I love how if it has a function it stays and if it doesn't there's no place for it. Eric I take it you like our new plates. i havent found a car the it looks good on yet and i like the previous plate better
#15
I'm told this is a current plate now? I remarked at the same thing and my friend said that retro is current.
that plate brought me back to growing up!
that plate brought me back to growing up!
#16
They are back to the yellow plates, but that is an old one.
#18
New York State Department of Motor Vehicles has unveiled the newly redesigned license plate that most vehicles will be required to get over the next two years.
The "Empire Gold" license plate is a bit of a throwback to the yellow plates of the 1970s and 1980s. Gone is the blue-and-white color scheme and the New York City skyline and Niagara Falls banner. Instead, the new plates will have a deep-yellow-and-dark-blue color scheme -- the state's official colors -- with the words "New York" at the top and "Empire State" on the bottom.
"These new plates, in the official colors of the State of New York, will help maintain highway safety, reduce the number of unregistered and uninsured vehicles on our roads, and generate $129 million in General Fund revenue over two years, which will help address the State's financial crisis," said DMV Commissioner David J. Swarts.
The "Empire Gold" license plate is a bit of a throwback to the yellow plates of the 1970s and 1980s. Gone is the blue-and-white color scheme and the New York City skyline and Niagara Falls banner. Instead, the new plates will have a deep-yellow-and-dark-blue color scheme -- the state's official colors -- with the words "New York" at the top and "Empire State" on the bottom.
"These new plates, in the official colors of the State of New York, will help maintain highway safety, reduce the number of unregistered and uninsured vehicles on our roads, and generate $129 million in General Fund revenue over two years, which will help address the State's financial crisis," said DMV Commissioner David J. Swarts.