The definitive collection of colossal screw-ups that the car industry would rather forget
Designing and making cars is an expensive thing to do. So is racing them. All told, the car business spends billions every year and with such vast sums at stake you’d think the people involved wouldn’t give desk space to Captain Cockup. Sadly, you would be wrong. Every department in every car firm and motorsport operation is capable of complete and abject failure, and on a surprisingly regular basis. Which is what this book is about. You see, Top Gear knows a thing or two about embarrassing mistakes, as anyone who watched our India special will know. The truth is, for many years Top Gear has also regarded failure as funny. Where other television programs edit out the moment where the presenter falls over or slams their hand in a door, Top Gear gleefully leaves it in. So who better to take you on a gentle canter through 50 of the car world’s biggest and most glorious failures? That’s right, it’s Top Gear. Who else did you think?
A good book in its own right Content was superficial and tabloid, but that’s precisely what was expected: no meaty tome was this.No, the reason I gave it the low score was that the conversion to ebook is essentially broken. The book is designed around the 2 page spread, and the ebook version makes no account of this: only 1/2 of each spread is shown at a time, sometimes less than that. Naturally such a book as this doesn’t work at all on a native kindle, but it is equally broken on both tablet and phone. It is only…
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