Pages 46, 48 and 50 of my webcomic featuring the red squirrel twins Russell and Reggie. I've been on quite a roll with it lately (it only takes a day to make each strip) and seem to be starting to enjoy coming up with various story arcs for this series. Page 50 doesn't actually go up until tomorrow so you're all being treated to an early showing of the milestone of the 50th strip!
You can follow the comic here every Friday it is updated (and sometimes I update it on Tuesdays too); http://transmission.thecomicseries.com/
You can follow the comic here every Friday it is updated (and sometimes I update it on Tuesdays too); http://transmission.thecomicseries.com/
Category Artwork (Digital) / Comics
Species Squirrel
Size 798 x 793px
File Size 828.1 kB
Listed in Folders
How to tell if doing an engine swap is the right thing;
1) IF car = FR THEN LS1+T56
2) IF car = FR AND JDM THEN Twin-Turbo 2JZ
3) IF car = RR AND <2,000lbs THEN MR2 Swap; ELSE 911 swap
4) IF car = FF THEN LS1+T56+Dana 44 (FR conversion) ELSE MR2/911 Swap (RR conversion); ELSE YOU HAVE ALREADY FAILED. X3
1) IF car = FR THEN LS1+T56
2) IF car = FR AND JDM THEN Twin-Turbo 2JZ
3) IF car = RR AND <2,000lbs THEN MR2 Swap; ELSE 911 swap
4) IF car = FF THEN LS1+T56+Dana 44 (FR conversion) ELSE MR2/911 Swap (RR conversion); ELSE YOU HAVE ALREADY FAILED. X3
The systems aren't that confusing really. Here's a little explanation;
I don't know much up til 1963, but in those days the number plates had random arrangements of three letters and up to three numbers.
From 1963 to 1982 the number plates ready three random letters, up to three random numbers and were suffixed by a letter that corresponded to the year the car was registered. James Bond's DB5 was 'BMT216A' for example. 'LES350Y' never was registered to a vehicle, but the Y corresponds to the year 1982, when the suffixes ran out.
From 1983 to 2001 they used a 'prefix' system, identical to the 'suffix' system except it was the year letter first, followed by the random numbers and letters. My first car's reg was 'X816RES', for example, corresponding to late 2000.
The current system uses a two letter area code, followed by two numbers for the year and then three random letters. It is more confusing to explain though =P
I don't know much up til 1963, but in those days the number plates had random arrangements of three letters and up to three numbers.
From 1963 to 1982 the number plates ready three random letters, up to three random numbers and were suffixed by a letter that corresponded to the year the car was registered. James Bond's DB5 was 'BMT216A' for example. 'LES350Y' never was registered to a vehicle, but the Y corresponds to the year 1982, when the suffixes ran out.
From 1983 to 2001 they used a 'prefix' system, identical to the 'suffix' system except it was the year letter first, followed by the random numbers and letters. My first car's reg was 'X816RES', for example, corresponding to late 2000.
The current system uses a two letter area code, followed by two numbers for the year and then three random letters. It is more confusing to explain though =P
Thing is the John Shuttleworth character is actually quite funny in an Alan Partridge kind of fashion if you're in on the joke that it's not actually a real person and he's supposed to be kinda pathetic. Some of Graham Fellow's stand-up is quite funny if you're into Vic & Bob, Alexei Sayle and other 90's alt comics.
FA+

Comments