Long before most of us really became aware of the world we live in, in 1989, a guy by the name Doug Malewicki was hard at work creating mechanical wonders. Responsible for a wide range of contraptions ...
Robosaurus — the 42-foot robot-dinosaur star of monster truck rallies, TV shows and movie fame — came, saw and shot 20-foot flames Saturday night at the Miramar Air Show. Controlled (from its head) by ...
Robosaurus just sold in all of it's car-crunching amazingness, for a sale price of just $575,000 here at the Barrett-Jackson classic car auction and told the world he'd promise "not to eat any of your ...
Sunday! Sunday! Sunday! See the fire-breathing Robosaurus auctioned off in Scottsdale! See the 40-foot tall metal monster move crush the crowded throngs of auction-goers! See the 20-foot long flames ...
Modeled after Trasformers toys, Robosaurus is a transforming dinosaur robot, with the driver (or “pilot”) sitting in the head of the ‘bot, with the ability to transform from a 48-foot semi trailer ...
If the “cash for clunkers” program seems like a good deal for the everyday man, just imagine how happy Robosaurus must be these days. At more than 40 feet tall and 62,000 pounds, the monster has a ...
When Doug Malewicki attended his first monster truck car show in the late 1980s, he walked away thinking it was extremely stupid. Giant, oversized trucks battering and steamrolling junk cars? Silly.
SYDNEY - A giant fire-breathing robotic dinosaur that eats cars has returned to Australia for this year's Royal Easter Show. The Robosaurus, which stands four stories high, has steel jaws and a fire ...
Robosaurus torches cars and tosses them to the ground with contempt, as he makes his debut in Sydney, Australia. This is not your average robot monster: It took 30 companies two years to create this ...
Wanted: good home for 31-ton robotic dinosaur, completely up-to-date on all immunizations and oil changes. This frisky 40-foot tall, fire-breathing bot answers to the name Robosaurus, and a traumatic ...
Ever taken a ride in a 31-ton, 40-foot-tall car-crushing robot dinosaur? Neither had we. So last month, Autoweek's Alanis King went down to an event in Dallas, hosted by Texas Motor Speedway, to check ...
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