Wild moment a teenager’s burnout in a Holden Commodore goes horribly wrong
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Wild moment: A teenager’s burnout in a Holden Commodore goes horribly wrong while trying to impress a car rally
- A Kiwi teenager crashed his V8 Commodore after attempting a burnout
- The teen was seen revving his engine before crashing into a parked car
- The crash happened during a gathering for car enthusiasts at Bastion Point in Auckland
- Fellow car enthusiasts called the driver’s behavior ‘reckless’ and ‘sad’
A teenage driver trying to impress other motorists at a car rally has crashed his V8 Commodore into another car in an attempted burnout.
The accident happened Sunday afternoon at Bastion Point Near Auckland’s Mission Bar, a popular meeting point for car enthusiasts.
You can see the teenage driver of the black Commodore trying to impress other attendees of the meeting by revving his engine before getting burned out on a narrow road.
The driver then loses control of his car and swerves to both sides of the road before crashing into a white BMW and Toyota MR2.
The teenage driver lost control of his V8 Holden Commodore, crashed into one car and damaged another.
The car enthusiast who made the video of the crash, Scott Atkinson, told The Daily Mail: ‘The Holden driver didn’t care. He got out of his car with a chuckle.’
‘He took a picture [photo] of him on top of his car, called a tow truck and left. No apologies, just exchanged insurance information.’
A second video posted after the crash shows the destruction left by the teen.
‘No! No! No! My dream car,” you hear the owner of the red Toyota MR2 yell, his hands on his knees in disbelief.
In an interview with the New Zealand Herald, the owner of the white BMW expressed disappointment at the damage to his car, but was also pleased that there were no major injuries.
“Yeah, nothing is happening, it’s terrible what happened, but honestly, it’s a car that can be replaced. I’m just glad no one was hurt,” he said.
His car is now completely written off.
Fellow car enthusiasts took to social media to denounce the driver’s actions, calling him a “wannabe boy racer”
“This behavior is common in our automotive community and is highly frowned upon, we hate it when people do it,” Atkinson said.
‘Both [cars] beaten up just because some reckless driver tried to show off his mates.’
Other car enthusiasts took to social media to voice their opinions, one wrote, “Sad that when people don’t play by the rules of the car, someone else always pays for someone else’s stupidity.”
Another said, “This is why the rest of us hate wannabe boy racers.”