Vietnamese craftsmen took an old mid-90s Nissan Maxima and turned it into a copy of the Lamborghini Revuelto, which is not embarrassing to show even at an exhibition.

The authors of the project are the NHET TV team, known on YouTube for their ability to create “supercars from nothing.” Their portfolio already includes homemade Bugatti Chiron, Ferrari LaFerrari, Pagani Huayra, Koenigsegg Jesko, and Aventador SVJ. But the new project surpassed all previous ones – because from metal scrap, they essentially built a Lamborghini from scratch.

Instead of just attaching a plastic body kit to the old body, the craftsmen removed the original V6 engine from the Nissan and welded their own steel frame. Next came real magic: from sheet metal, they bent panels, coated them with clay, sanded the lines, and made fiberglass molds. This is how the precise outlines of the Revuelto gradually appeared.
The interior was created in the same way – from the dashboard to the center console. The entire process, which NHET TV posted in a three-hour video, looks like automotive ASMR: the sound of an angle grinder, a hammer, and welding instead of commentary.
The result is impressive – the finished copy is so convincing that it can confuse even experienced supercar fans. Moreover, it received a functional active rear wing – just like the real Revuelto.