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Plate cars embody the customer-specific car culture from H-Town

Houston, Texas – Houston’s record car culture took the street on the street as a form of personal expression on wheels in the early 80s.

The plate is short for slow, loud and popping. The perfect description for custom cars with chrome wheels, light candy color, loud stereos and hydraulics.

Stanley “Skibo” Burton says: “I love her because I grew up, like everyone in my neighborhood, put together cars.”

Channing Williams adds: “It is something that I admired as a young child, sees the record – the rims, the color.”

In 1976 Williams had a Candy Red Cadillac el Dorado with 24-inch mobile phone errors.

Burton adds: “You really hold on to have longer bikes. A man can pull up next to me – I have some 12s; someone puts me on with about 26, he got me.”

The tribes are also full of the loudest subwoofers that you can find. Unlimited autostereo on Wilcrest has been modified by record cars since the 1990s.

Owner Khoai Danh said no car was the same: “Everyone has a different vision.”

The hydraulics complete the plate and give it a little jump.

Plates are attention -based, with immediate reactions at every turn.

With the long rims, Williams says: “It is as if you were driving an 18-wheel; you have to know your surroundings.” Burton added that it is one thing with Houston: “If you own it, you know how to glide and get through it is H-Town things to swing.”

(Tagstotranslate) slab

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