Petrolicious

Petrolicious Drive Tastefully® We celebrate the inventions, the personalities, and the aesthetics that ignite our collective lust for great machines. We are Petrolisti.

We are fans and fanatics, collectors and racers. At Petrolicious we seek to inform, entertain, and inspire our community of enthusiasts and pique the interest of those who have been missing out. Join the Petrolisti. Entertain your passion. Drive tastefully®.

Hans Herrmann rose from helping rebuild his family’s café business in postwar Stuttgart to becoming one of endurance rac...
02/06/2026

Hans Herrmann rose from helping rebuild his family’s café business in postwar Stuttgart to becoming one of endurance racing’s greatest drivers. Nicknamed “Lucky Hans,” he built a legendary career with Porsche and Mercedes-Benz, famously driving under a closing railroad crossing during the 1954 Mille Miglia and later winning Le Mans in 1970 aboard the iconic Porsche 917K.

After finally delivering Porsche its first overall Le Mans victory, Herrmann immediately retired at 42, honoring a promise to his wife that he would walk away if he won the race. His legacy extends far beyond the victories, remembered not only for his fearless talent but for understanding when it was time to leave the sport behind.

Hans Herrmann, 1928–2026

Drive Tastefully®⁠

Read more at petrolicious.com

Written by: Kris Clewell
Photos by: Porsche

Ethan Moore can stand in a doorway and name a Maserati A6G by sight.It was a Bay Area shop he had been meaning to check ...
01/06/2026

Ethan Moore can stand in a doorway and name a Maserati A6G by sight.

It was a Bay Area shop he had been meaning to check out. He drove over, found the door open, and stood at it, naming what he saw to himself: a Ferrari 250 California Spider, a Fiat 8V Supersonic, a Maserati A6G. His boss-to-be , Raffi Najjarian, was working on a Jaguar E-Type. Rafi saw him, waved him in, and after listening to a teenager freak out over the contents of his shop, asked Ethan if he wanted a job. “Hell yeah,” he said.

It wasn’t the first time. At 16 he lived down the road from Canepa Motorsport and hung around so much that Bruce Canepa pulled him aside and told him if he was going to be there every day, he might as well work. He did, all through high school, with no experience behind him.

Raffi Najjarian has been working on these cars his whole life. His family were the sole importers and distributors of Ferrari, Maserati, Jaguar, and Lamborghini in Lebanon and across the Middle East through the 1960s and ’70s. Ethan works alongside him now, on multi-million-dollar Ferraris, and helps tune and drive Fiat 8V Zagatos.

His own car is a built 1995 BMW E36 M3. The E36 M3 followed the legendary E30, and for a lot of people it has been the first real sports car, the one that gets you in the door. He spotted it parked on a San Francisco street outside a friend’s shop, track-built, with a roll cage. The color did most of the work. He tracked down the owner, asked if it was for sale, and bought it.

“This car is just absolutely glued to the road,” he says. “It does what I want it to do, and that’s something that’s very hard to find in a lot of cars.” He lives around back roads and mountain roads. The E36 goes out every weekend.

Full film now live on Petrolicious.

Directed By:
Featuring:

bmwm3

31/05/2026

Your dose of Sunday Serenity, where the Ferrari F355 meets the romance of Paris.

No music. No commentary. Just timeless Italian craftsmanship surrounded by timeless culture.

Drive Tastefully®⁠

Watch the full film: https://bit.ly/4v9q4eW

Directed by: Maxence Massaro
Featured: Alexis Parenty
⁠⁠

29/05/2026

Ethan Moore can stand in a doorway and name a Maserati A6G by sight.

It was a Bay Area shop he had been meaning to check out. He drove over, found the door open, and stood at it, naming what he saw to himself: a Ferrari 250 California Spider, a Fiat 8V Supersonic, a Maserati A6G. His boss-to-be, Rafi Najarian, was working on a Jaguar E-Type. Rafi saw him, waved him in, and after listening to a teenager freak out over the contents of his shop, asked Ethan if he wanted a job. “Hell yeah,” he said.

His own car is a built 1995 BMW E36 M3. The E36 M3 followed the legendary E30, and for a lot of people it has been the first real sports car, the one that gets you in the door.

“This car is just absolutely glued to the road,” he says. “It does what I want it to do, and that’s something that’s very hard to find in a lot of cars.” He lives around back roads and mountain roads. The E36 goes out every weekend.

Watch the full film: https://bit.ly/3RAQ9nU

Directed By: Paolo Lekai

24/05/2026

YYour dose of Sunday Serenity™, featuring the Röhrl Ascona carrying the weight of rally history.

No music. No commentary. Just vintage rally endurance pushed to its absolute limit.

Drive Tastefully®⁠

Watch the full film: https://bit.ly/4m0paxg

Director/Editor: Matthias Wagner
Music & sound: P.K. Stephan
Produced by: Unframed Films
Photography by: Jonas Eiden
⁠⁠

22/05/2026

Every system that touches you is built to take a decision off your plate. Phones have taken over, cars stay between the lines, refrigerators order groceries, and most of us don't notice anymore. Justin Cashmore noticed.

His answer was a 1960 Renault Dauphine with no power steering, no power brakes, no traction control, and a supercharged Porsche VR6 behind the seats. He calls it Le Brute. The chassis is cage-stiffened. The shifter throws backwards from convention with a bike handlebar grip for a k**b, and the whole car is right-hand drive because he wanted it that way. Justin used to ride sport bikes but stopped when his daughter was born. He needed the visceral hit back with something around him. Le Brute was the answer.

Drive Tastefully®⁠

Watch the full film: https://bit.ly/42LlYN9

Director: Tiziano Niero
Featured: Justin Cashmore

Ralph Guglielm   and a buddy had brought a spare coil, a fresh battery, a fuel pump, and some good gas up into the Bould...
21/05/2026

Ralph Guglielm and a buddy had brought a spare coil, a fresh battery, a fuel pump, and some good gas up into the Boulder Creek woods, because they knew a 1965 Volkswagen Beetle was sitting there, abandoned between a couple’s breakup. The shift linkage was broken and the coil had gone bad. The price for the 80’s Baja converted Beetle was just fifteen hundred dollars. Getting it running cost less than a hundred more.

Second was where the broken linkage had left it, and there was no roadside fix so Ralph and his buddy drove the car down Highway 9 stuck in second the whole way into Santa Cruz, slip-shifting through neutral with the clutch every time they needed to slow down.

That car is in his garage now, painted as Herbie, number 53, with a red, white, and blue stripe down the middle. He calls it an underdog and uses the word a lot. “The car brings out a good side in me,” he says. “I think I bring out a good side in the car.”

Watch the film on the Petrolicious YouTube Channel.

Words by:
Photography by:

The Venturi 400 GT remains one of the automotive world’s best-kept secrets, a raw French-built supercar that embodied th...
19/05/2026

The Venturi 400 GT remains one of the automotive world’s best-kept secrets, a raw French-built supercar that embodied the same uncompromising spirit as the Ferrari F40.

Developed from Venturi’s one-make racing series, the ultra-lightweight machine paired twin-turbo V6 power, aggressive aero, and a stripped-back driving experience into a road car built with pure motorsport intent.

With only a handful of street-legal examples ever produced, the 400 GT has become an almost mythical figure among collectors and enthusiasts. Its rarity, analog character, and overlooked legacy represent a forgotten era when small manufacturers could still challenge the world’s biggest supercar names through passion, engineering, and sheer audacity.

Drive Tastefully®⁠

Read more: https://bit.ly/4tPqV2z

Written by David Marvier

Back issues of Petrolicious Post are now available in limited quatities.Slow down long enough to enjoy it. Read it. Coll...
18/05/2026

Back issues of Petrolicious Post are now available in limited quatities.

Slow down long enough to enjoy it. Read it. Collect it. Give it to a friend. Leave it on a workbench or in your glovebox.

For those of you who have already subscribed, we apologize for the delay this month. Every issue is shipped via USPS and sometimes we experience carrier delays. You all should be receiving ISSUE 005 in the next few days (add 5-10 days for international orders). We appreciate each and every one of you for subscribing and supporting The Petrolicious Post.

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