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  • With more than a billion cars in the world nowadays, it’s astonishing that we can remember

  • where we parked the darn thing.

  • Yep.

  • It’s amazing how little people know about their own vehicles!

  • Like, have you ever wondered what the world’s most favorite car color is?

  • No, it’s not puce.

  • How much of your car is recyclable?

  • Or why does your turn signal make this annoying clicking sound?

  • Well, check these out: - The first cars weren’t equipped with a

  • steering wheel.

  • When a driver needed to turn, they had to use a special lever.

  • - The heaviest limousine calledMidnight Riderwas produced in 2004.

  • This huge vehicle weighed more than 50,000 pounds, which is three and a half times as

  • heavy as an elephant!

  • At about 70 ft long, the limo could comfortably seat 40 passengers and 4 crew members, had

  • three different lounges and a separate bar.

  • - The world’s lowest street-legal car is Mirai, which meansfuturein Japanese

  • that’s where the unusual vehicle was built.

  • This single-seater rises less than 18 inches above the ground.

  • And since it’s a slightly scary experience to drive Mirai on a busy street, when someone

  • does, there’s always a guarding car in front of the little vehicle, and another one behind.

  • - The average family car spends 95% of its lifetime parked.

  • Surprising, huh?

  • - A dashboard was originally a wooden part attached to the front of a carriage pulled

  • by a horse.

  • It prevented mud from splattering onto the driver.

  • - Do you like the smell of a new car?

  • Then, I’ve got some bad news for you: it’s actually the odor of different volatile organic

  • compounds used to build vehicles.

  • The smell does no good to your health, and manufacturers are adopting various techniques

  • and measures to get rid of it.

  • - More than 250 million car tires are thrown away every year.

  • - The world’s first speeding ticket was issued in 1904.

  • The offender was going at a speed of 12 miles per hour in the area with a speed limit of

  • 8 miles per hour.

  • By the way, at that time, most cars couldn’t drive faster than 45 miles per hour.

  • - Electric cars aren’t a recent invention.

  • In 1900, almost 40% of all cars were electric.

  • Around 40% of vehicles were powered by steam, and a bit more than 20% were fueled by gasoline.

  • - The average driver spends 5 months of their life waiting in their car at red lights.

  • - In 1960, $3,000 would have bought you a brand-new car, for example, Buick Le Sabre.

  • These days, you would have just enough to get a steering wheel, transmission, and two

  • doors.

  • - The average car is stuffed with 55 pounds of copper wiring, which is as heavy as 6 medium-sized

  • domestic cats!

  • And an electric car has three times this amount of copper (which is 165 pounds or 18 kitties!).

  • Yeah- that’s a crazy comparison compounding copper into kitties, but were creative

  • here on the Bright Side.

  • - When asked, more than 90% of drivers confess they regularly sing behind the wheel.

  • What’s your favorite tune to sing while driving?

  • Tell me about it in the comments.

  • - Up to 75% of all the Rolls Royce cars ever made are still on the road these days!

  • - The largest speeding fine ever was a reported $290,000 ticket a Swiss motorist got in Switzerland.

  • The Ferrari Testarossa driver was going through a 50-mile-per-hour zone at a speed almost

  • twice as high.

  • The fine was calculated based on the driver’s wealth, plus, it was a repeat offense.

  • Zoom zoom.

  • Ka-ching!

  • - There are about 1.2 billion cars in the world these days.

  • For comparison, in 1986, there were only 500 million.

  • Experts are sure that by 2040, people all over the world will own more than 2 billion

  • cars.

  • - Every day, around 165,000 cars are produced worldwide.

  • It adds up to more than 60 million cars a year.

  • - One of the world’s most loved cars is Volkswagen Beetle: more than 20 million units

  • have been sold all over the world.

  • It was also called the most popular car of the 20th century.

  • - The last car that still had a cassette player was the Ford Crown Victoria in 2011.

  • After that, you had to buy CDs for new music playing devices installed in vehicles.

  • - The three-point seat belt saves one life every six minutes.

  • By the way, this safety measure was invented by Volvo in 1959.

  • The company didn’t patent its invention so that other car producers could use it for

  • passenger safety as well.

  • - Airbagsspeed is faster than the blink of an eyealmost 200 miles per hour, and

  • it takes one just 40 milliseconds to deploy after an impact.

  • - Almost 80% of the average car is recyclable.

  • In some countries, automobile recycling is one of the largest industries.

  • - The turn signal makes its trademark clicking sound because of the heat.

  • You switch on the blinker, the electricity heats up a special spring, and the thing keeps

  • bending until it comes into contact with a small strip of metal.

  • As soon as these two components get connected, an electric current passes through them and

  • powers the turn signal light.

  • After that, the spring cools down and returns to its original shape, switching the light

  • off.

  • Then, the process starts again to produce a new flash.

  • The sound you hear is made by the spring as it bends back and forth.

  • - By the way, since more cars are getting computerized, lots of manufacturers start

  • to rely on computer technologies to activate turn signals.

  • This way, the whole process that once produced the clicks is skipped.

  • Interestingly, some drivers get unsettled when they don’t hear the familiar sound

  • after activating the blinkers.

  • That’s why in some computerized cars, the sound is still there.

  • - The longest car in the world was built in the US by Jay Ohrberg in 1986.

  • Its length was a jaw-dropping 100 feet, which is as long as five giraffes, or more simply,

  • a 5 on the Giraffe scale!

  • The incredible car featured a swimming pool with a diving board and a king-sized water

  • bed.

  • Even better, it could be driven as a rigid vehicle or adjusted to bend in the middle!

  • - White is the world’s most favorite car color.

  • Being more noticeable, white vehicles are 10% less likely to get involved in road accidents

  • than others.

  • One more super-popular car color is silver.

  • - One of police cars in Dubai holds a Guinness world record for being the fastest police

  • car in the world.

  • The Bugatti Veyron has an engine that can produce 1,000 horsepower, and its top speed

  • reaches 253 miles per hourthat’s a 3.5 on the hurricane wind scale!

  • - In some countries, police cars carry teddy bears.

  • These stuffed toys are used to calm down scared kids who got lost.

  • - Several decades ago, Japan was the world’s leading car manufacturer.

  • These days, it’s only the thirdafter China and the USA (with China producing almost

  • 25% of the world’s cars!).

  • - The world-famous three-pointed Mercedes-Benz star was chosen to represent the company’s

  • dominance in three places: the land, sea, and air.

  • Somehow I have not yet seen their car which can drive, float and fly, so if you have,

  • jot something in the comments please.

  • - Audi’s four overlapping rings emblem symbolizes four originally independent companies that

  • eventually merged into one, the famous Audi Group.

  • - As for the BMW logo, it comes from the company’s original productionairplanes.

  • The blue and white circle (akatarget sign”) symbolizes a white spinning propeller against

  • the blue sky.

  • - The BMW M5 has such a quiet engine that the car has to play fake engine noises through

  • its audio system to remind the driver that it’s actually working.

  • - The world’s cheapest car is Tata Nano, a tiny thing shaped like a jelly bean.

  • This rear-wheel drive vehicle can accelerate up to 65 miles per hour and costs around $2,000.

  • - It's a wide-spread misconception that just a few countries have left-hand traffic.

  • In reality, not more than 65% of the world’s population drive on the right side of the

  • road.

  • - Driver surveys show that 16% of all car owners never wash their cars.

  • - When Mary Anderson invented the first effective windshield wipers, they were considered an

  • unnecessary distraction until drivers realized they were game changers.

  • - Historians believe that the wordcarcame from the Latin wordcarrus” (which

  • means a wheeled vehicle).

  • Another version is the Middle English wordcarre” (a two-wheeled cart).

  • - The first car radio appeared in 1924.

  • This device had an exorbitant price that could reach $130.

  • It may seem like not a big sum, but how about this: the average car price was around $540

  • at that time!

  • The car radio was believed to be distracting, and many safety agencies were trying to ban

  • it from cars.

  • - Hyundai Tucson has a special edition that contains a zombie survival kit, just in case.

  • Hey, if you learned something new today, then give the video a like and share it with a

  • friend!

  • And here are some other videos I think you'll enjoy.

  • Just click to the left or right, and stay on the Bright Side of life!

With more than a billion cars in the world nowadays, it’s astonishing that we can remember

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