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On older Austin-Healeys, competition-minded customers often installed special higher-rate springs to prove high-speed cornering. New standard springs on the 1963 model are an approximation to those, steering characteristics are improved throughout speed range. As before the Healey understeers mildly up to the point where the rear lets go, but directional stability is better. Stiffer springs have done nothing to eliminate road shocks reaching the steering wheel, and bumps on a corner can affect the car's stability to an uncomfortable degree. Body roll is as absent as ever on the 3000. There are no complications about seeing your line through a turn since you sit in exactly the same vertical position regardless of how many times you may have to alter your direction. This is an inherent quality of the Austin-Healey which probably has served to endear it to more drivers than has any other one of its good qualities. As for habitability, there are new improvements. We all remember the great step forward initiated in 1957, when the top could be put up or down by one man alone.

Now he can complete this operation without getting out of the driver's seat. And instead of side curtains the car now has roll-up windows. These refinements, coupled with the Healey's two occasional rear seats, make genuine sports-car driving acceptable to a new class of customer. The extra seats are, of course, just as occasional as those in a Porsche 356-B or a Volvo P-1800, and on a long trip should be considered just storage space. We have always had difficulty in trying to drive straight-armed in an Austin-Healey. The short seat travel makes it almost impossible even in the 1963 model, and the muscular force required to turn the wheel makes it inadvisable anyway. The large-diameter steering wheel provides good leverage for taking sharp turns, however, and the steering ratio is high enough to enable women to drive it enthusiastically. Whether the car, as a two-seater, provides any enjoyment that, for instance, the MGB does not give, is questionable. With a top speed perhaps 10 mph higher, and taking about one second less over the standing quarter-mile, the Austin-Healey is so closely matched to the MGB in performance as to make you wonder about the monetary value of two occasional seats.

We drove a couple of cars in the course of this test. They were identical, differing only in color. Our impressions of the Healey are drawn from several hundred miles of all kinds of driving on all kinds of surfaces. We found the car to be a nearly perfect expression of the pre-war two-seater brought up to date. It has the same kind of go-to-hell rakishness we all loved in the TCs and Healey Silverstones, but it tempers these characteristics with wind-up windows and creature comfort that those semi-classics never knew. As we've pointed out, it's strong and reliable. We just wish that it had a more modern chassis and suspension system to match its up-to-date mates in the BMC model line-up. Though its basic design is a decade old, the Healey will still find an eager audience with the more traditionally minded enthusiast. It is a true sporting machine in the sense that it looks fine, sounds fierce, and goes fast. If it rides hard and crosses cracks in the road with a loud thump, so what?

We can remember when unyielding suspension and continual tightening of all the nuts and bolts on the automobile were status symbols to be treasured by any true aficionado.No Shave November is less than 2 weeks away which means it’s time to start preparing for the beard you’ll no doubt be rocking this season. Here’s a list of the 10 best beards in hip-hop ranging from clean and trim to scraggly and wild. Take a look at all 10 below. Although he’s newer on the scene than most of the others, Kyle Myricks, better known by his stage name Stalley, has been rocking full beards since his debut mixtape Goin Ape. A practicing Muslim, the Ohio native stays true to his beliefs and is known to pair his thick facial hair with a fitted cap or an oversized beanie. One of the original West Coast gangster rappers, Ice Cube has been rocking some form of facial hair or another for the better part of 20 years. Always kept relatively trim, the iconic Compton rapper has had beards of all lengths and sizes appropriate for both the thugs of southside LA and those watching him on TBS from the safety of their home.

The drummer behind some of hip-hop’s most soulful beats also happens to have one of the most recognizable facial silhouettes in the industry. ?uestlove’s curly, stocky beard seems to be an extension of his afro creating a seamlessly integrated head full of hair. Victor Vazquez, also known as Kool A.D. from the white guilt art project Das Racist, has been growing some of the game’s gnarliest beards since the group first came onto the scene with the bizarre, “Combination Pizza Hut and Taco Bell.” The Oakland native has had beards of various lengths and sizes, letting the hair grow well up into the high-cheekbone area dangerously close to his equally-thick eyebrows. The Chicago rapper is so well-known for his beard that it was considered news-worthy when he decided to shave it for his role in the film New Year’s Eve. No worries though as the film has long been forgotten and the beard is back and as glorious as ever. Frontman of industrial rap group Death Grips, MC Ride could pass for a thinner yet equally terrifying version of street brawler Kimbo Slice.

His thick, unkempt beard complements the tattoos covering his body as well as the band’s cryptic lyrics which frequently require his jaws to call out. Despite a setback to his gangster image when he was outed as a former correctional officer, Rick Ross has managed to literally become a boss by founding the succesful record label Maybach Music Group. It’s hard to even imagine the Miami rapper without his signature beard as it strikes the perfect balance between thickness and tidiness. The Philly native is as well-known for his full neck beard as he is his stint with Roc-A-Fella Records. Like rapper Stalley, Freeway is a practicing Muslim and keeps his beard out of faith. His new album Diamond in the Ruff drops next month and his beard will without doubt be right there with it. Before joining the heat of the rap game, Action Bronson was a respected fire-flame gourmet chef in New York City. His signature red beard is as much a part of him as food is to his rhymes and although he’s newer to the scene with respect to others on this list, his vibrant beard and jovial manner set him a cut above the rest.