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Lemons released its 2022 schedule of races for $500 cars, with events running from Sonoma to Barber to Pittsburgh. The organizers also run a series of rallies and concours. The series was started ...
One team converted a BMW 3-series race car into the greatest fictional car of all time: The Homer from the SImpsons! See video and photos, and read the story at Car and Driver.
In a nutshell, LeMons is beater racing on road courses. Teams are allowed to spend $500 on a donor car, and encouraged to spend many times more than that on serious safety equipment, which ...
There are a few key differences between the 24 Hours of Le Mans, the most prestigious sports car race on the planet, and 24 Hours of Lemons. One, of course, is a letter of the alphabet. You might ...
The 2014 season of the 24 Hours of LeMons was the best one yet, with 20 races all over the country, the world-record largest endurance road race in history (the Guinness folks just declared it as ...
The 24 Hours of Lemons is an endurance race with a twist: The cars cost less than $500, and costumes are unlimited. A recent race saw a Toyota Yaris painted like a snail, and a team dressed as bees.
24 Hours of Lemons aims to bring auto racing, and a sense of humor, to the masses One guiding principle: No team can race a car that costs more than $500.
LeMons. Lemons. Get it? Heck, the so-called race doesn't even last 24 hours. And the race car drivers are just unqualified guys driving junkers that can't be worth more than $500, according to the ...
Though endurance racing has always been the underlying, and ironic, premise of the 24 Hours of LeMons, the upcoming Laissez Les Crapheaps Roulez New Orleans event in June will add an interesting ...
Depending on how the wording of the controversial EPA proposal is interpreted, it's either no big deal or the end of civilization.
Autos worth $500 or less have competed for 15 years in a circuslike race called 24 Hours of Lemons. Now electric vehicles have been invited, with no limit on spending.
Biffle won't call it retirement because he's busy racing in the sand dunes or in lemons -- catch up with the two-time national series champ.
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