When it comes to personalizing a Rolls-Royce We’ve seen everything done, from almost driving to the ecstasy of luxury as the latest Droptail to outright atrocities that should be punished by the auto gods if they ever existed. The silver shade in the pictures was made in just three days by our R&D team wires only The result of this haste is clear, Although the purpose for which it was made did not require an extravagance of good taste.
This exotic silver shade was made for the Puerto Rican rapper, singer, songwriter, record producer, and professional wrestler known as Bad Bunny. The car has a special role in Bad Bunny’s latest music video, “Where She Goes.”. The entire video takes place in the desert, so apparently the singer needed a vehicle that would adapt to that terrain.
The most noticeable thing about “Preparation” is the absence of a Silver Shadow roof, which would have been neat if they had left it that way, but apparently they wanted the Rolls-Royce to be safe, so they decided to arch it for security with four additional smiley headlights. . The suspension has been raised approximately 7.5 cm and flared wheel arches have been installed to accommodate 31×10 RBP Repulsor M/T RX off-road tires. The drive is still in the back and we’ll have to see how the Silver Shadow “beach” behaves on the sand.
The satin champagne polish aims to give the whole look a touch of elegance. Fortunately, the interior has not been modified, except for the disappearance of the roof and the installation of a roll bar. In case all the “surgeries” performed on Silver Shadow weren’t enough, Bad Bunny wanted to put his personal “touch” on and decided that the winged lady who crowns the radiator of any Rolls-Royce, Spirit of Ecstasy, would wear a ski mask. The poor “flying lady” sure would have appreciated that mask being put on her so she wouldn’t see what they did to the silver shadow.
More than 30 years devoted to automotive journalism and the lifestyle that has always accompanied cars, first as director of three publications and now as a collaborator. As much as they try to make us believe that cars are simple tools for getting around, they are, to me, true evocative works of art and the first modern artifact that provided the majority of humanity with a real form of freedom and knowledge of others. worlds, long before the Internet existed.
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