00:00The USS Compensator handles like a cruise ship on choppy water.
00:08Why did you choose to build this?
00:10Why not?
00:17Howdy, howdy.
00:18How are you?
00:19Can I get a large ice water, please?
00:21This is a one-of-a-kind rig.
00:23And it was more to challenge myself than anything else.
00:26I wanted to see what was the biggest, most impractical vehicle I can build.
00:30And what's bigger and longer than a limo?
00:33Nonetheless, a lifted limo.
00:36This was a massive build on a mini-budget.
00:39Jordan bought a Lincoln town car limo for $1,200 and set about his monster conversion.
00:46It took me about three months to put this whole thing together.
00:49Three months of day-near-12-hour days building this 99% myself
00:53with minimal hand tools, a welder, torch, plasma cutter, a grinder, an impact, and a handful of wrenches.
01:02I spent between $8,000 to $10,000, and that's including the price of the limo.
01:08I was like a kid in a candy shop every bit of the progress.
01:12Why did you choose to build this?
01:14Why not?
01:16I've always wanted a limo for a long time.
01:19I've always saw limos and thought they were really unique rigs.
01:22Named the Compensator, this is unofficially the tallest Lincoln town car in the United States.
01:28Come on up. It won't hurt.
01:30The name's pretty self-explanatory.
01:36The Compensator is powered by a 4.6-liter engine, has air ride suspension, and it's sporting some pretty impressive rubber.
01:44These are military-grade spec tire. I purchased them off of eBay.
01:49They're a 53-inch tall by a 16 wide. They sit on a 20 by 14 wheel.
01:56The weight on one tire is 380 pounds apiece.
02:00The wheel itself is 55 pounds apiece, so you're over grossing 400 pounds per wheel and tire on each one of these.
02:08So I've added over 1,600 pounds of weight to this limo just in the drivetrain alone.
02:15While it's all fun and games off-road, navigating in town is a bit of a challenge.
02:22The car is not useful. It's hard to park. It's hard to drive around town.
02:27I've got to watch my corners, watch my blind spots at all times.
02:31Just for driving, I have a hammer mounted in the front and mounted in the rear.
02:35I typically keep them on at all times when I'm driving down the road.
02:39Unfortunately, I can't go through most drive-throughs anymore.
02:41The limo barely fit as it was bone-stocked through drive-throughs.
02:44I max out the height bar, and it's not the easiest to park.
02:47The limo itself is kind of a challenge. I normally take up two spots, unfortunately.
02:52Sometimes three or four. Normally, you'll catch me at the very end of a parking lot, not up front.
02:59The turning radius on the limo now is actually just slightly worse than it was stock.
03:05The turn radius when it was stock was very terrible.
03:08Now it's just a little bit worse than that.
03:12But that's the fun of it. I love the challenge of navigating through town.
03:16It's like an off-road course inside city limits.
03:21The USS Compensator handles like a cruise ship on choppy water.
03:27This is a hobby of mine, and that's where this has started out.
03:30Just having a passion and throwing stuff together and going, I want to build this.
03:34Now how do I make it work? How do the puzzle pieces fit?
03:37So far, they fit pretty good. There's still kinks that I'm working out.
03:43I've already had cash offers for this thing.
03:45As much as I'd like to sell this and build something cooler, I don't think I could get rid of this one.
03:50I don't think I could sell the USS Compensator. It's almost too sentimental now.
03:55I use it for just driving around, showing it off.
03:58Showing off my hobby, my project, my work so far.
04:01It's just an impractical vehicle that can be dailied, and luckily enough, it's street legal in the state of Oregon.
04:07And I love the six-foot longhorns. They are kind of my pride and joy.
Comments