Richard Rawlings and the Gas Monkey crew have a habit of packing too much into a single video, and this one's no exception. What starts as an update on their outrageous six-wheel Ferrari build quickly spirals into a Lamborghini purchase and a last-minute rescue mission for a buried Chevrolet C10. You’re never quite sure what’s coming next, which may or may not have been scripted, but it makes for a fun watch, regardless. The Six-Wheel Ferrari Finally Moves Under Its Own Power Gas Monkey Garage YouTubeThe headline act here is the six-wheel Ferrari project, and for once, it’s not just sitting in the background looking ridiculous. The crew actually gets it running, driving, and making noise, which feels like a milestone considering how experimental the whole build is. Power comes from a supercharged LT4, and once it fires up properly, the car settles into a loud, aggressive idle that makes it clear this thing isn’t just a visual gimmick.Getting there isn’t smooth. At one point, the team thinks the starter has given up, only to realize the car is running on fumes. Once that’s sorted, the Ferrari comes to life, and the focus shifts to figuring out whether it can actually move like a car instead of a rolling experiment.Out on the ground, the Ferrari shows its rough edges immediately. The steering has a noticeable catch, the alignment feels off, and the gearing doesn’t quite cooperate, especially in first. The clutch engagement looks abrupt enough to make even simple launches a bit awkward. Still, none of that really matters in the moment. The important part is that it moves, turns, and sounds wild doing it.Naturally, things escalate. Rawlings ends up hanging off the side while the car circles around, which feels exactly in line with the kind of testing this project was always going to get. The Lamborghini Buy That Fits The Collection Perfectly Gas Monkey Garage YouTubeRight in the middle of all that chaos, Rawlings casually adds a 1969 Lamborghini Espada Series 1 to his garage. It’s a black-on-black example, and he makes it clear he’s been hunting for one like this for a while. The appeal's pretty obvious: it’s a V12 grand tourer with unmistakable styling and just enough quirkiness to stand out even in a collection full of unusual cars.What makes the Espada segment fun is how the crew reacts to it. Is it a coupe, a wagon, or something in between? That long glass-heavy rear section doesn’t make it easy to categorize, and that’s part of why the car still feels fresh decades later. A Buried C10 Turns Into A Proper Rescue Mission Gas Monkey Garage YouTubeAs if the Ferrari and Lamborghini weren’t enough, the video takes another turn when Rawlings gets a tip about a Chevrolet C10 trapped inside a garage that’s about to be demolished. The property is described as a former meth lab, which immediately adds urgency to the situation. So they decided to get in, pull the truck out, and figure out what they’ve saved afterward.The truck, believed to be from the 1964 to 1966 range and likely a long-bed, is buried under clutter and sitting on flat tires. The garage itself looks like it’s one bad move away from collapsing, which makes the extraction feel more like a time-sensitive mission.Once they get it out into the open, the surprise is how solid it looks. The body appears largely rust-free, which isn’t something you expect from a truck pulled out of a situation like that. There’s even a moment where they find loose change inside and joke about already being ahead on the deal.Source: Gas Monkey Garage (YouTube).