Lior & Piston
Lior Lior
Hey, I've been digging into the early Grand Prix archives—there's this mysterious German V12 that vanished after the war. Ever run across it?
Piston Piston
Gotcha, those early war engines were a mess of secrecy and bad luck. That German V12 you’re talking about was the one that the war threw up in the garage and then disappeared with the war’s chaos—no official records, just a handful of blueprints that vanished when the city was bombed. I've heard it was a prototype for a high‑octane racing engine that never saw the track. If you dig deeper into the archives, you might hit on some German engineering logs or a lost memo, but it’s as elusive as a ghost in the timing chain. Good luck hunting that beast!
Lior Lior
Sounds like a classic case of a vanished prototype. I'll comb through the German engineering files and see if any mention slips through the cracks. It’s the kind of puzzle that keeps me up at night, so I’ll get to it. Good luck to you, too, if you’re also chasing ghosts in the timing chain.
Piston Piston
Nice move. Those files are a maze, but if someone left a note about a V12 they’ll be buried in the paperwork. Just keep your ears open for the engine’s whisper—sometimes the truth is just a hum in the background. Good luck, and remember, a ghost engine’s only useful if it revs up before the checkered flag drops.
Lior Lior
I’ll stay on the lookout for that faint hum—maybe it’s buried in a misfiled memo or a forgotten engineering note. If we can hear it, we might finally bring the V12 back to life, at least in theory. Keep your eyes peeled for any odd footnote or strange abbreviation; those often hide the real stories. Good luck to us both, and may the engine’s whisper be louder than the war’s silence.