scottyrocks
I'll Lock Up
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- 9,178
- Location
- Isle of Langerhan, NY
I learned early in my driving career that more important than how fast a car went was how well it stopped.
Even more critical with motorcycles.
I learned early in my driving career that more important than how fast a car went was how well it stopped.
Even more critical with motorcycles.
..,
Meanwhile, my gripe of the evening is this: now that the smoking of dope, excuse me, "recreational use of cannabis," is legal in our fine state it seems that the thing to do on a lovely Friday night is for a couple of shambling chuckleheads to fumigate the entire sidewalk out front with the repulsive eye-watering stench of their favorite intoxicant, to the point where customers are complaining about it. Do us a favor, Jay and Silent Bob, if you must macerate your frontal lobes with that stuff, kindly put a plastic bag over your heads first.
I learned early in my driving career that more important than how fast a car went was how well it stopped.
Oh, so you drove a Ford Car too?
To this day nothing frightens me as much as the memory of the sound of the gears in my differential ratcheting against each other after the soft babbit thrust washer disintegrated, sending me flying nameless down a rather steep hill into a busy intersection. Amazed that I made it past 19.
The one and only time that I have had such a buttock clenching moment was when descending a steep one in four hill and the hydraulic hosed perished, sending fluid between the brake and the drum. How thankful I was to know how to double declutch.I’ve lost brakes entirely a few times, once in a ’64 MGB (blown rear wheel cylinder in a single circuit braking system) just as I was turning westbound on James Street off northbound Ninth Avenue. Anyone who has done much driving in Seattle could tell you that’s not where you wanna be without brakes. But it’s amazing how such circumstances sharpen one’s focus.
I replaced the 1200cc engine in my first Beetle with a 1600cc dual port that I had built up to 1835cc. That one had no problems getting up to freeway speeds (and then some ). But in my '63 with it's stock 1200cc engine and my '66 with it's 1300cc engine, it always felt like the engines were working too hard at 65 mph and it made me uncomfortable. So, yeah, if I had a choice and the extra time, side roads and surface streets were preferred. And since you mentioned it, I don't miss those drum brakes that didn't work 5-10% of those times when you really needed them. I know of at least one chain link fence that I would have driven straight through if my emergency/parking brake hadn't been properly adjusted; missed it by >< that much. I haven't experienced that level of "pucker factor" in any other vehicle I've driven.I was doing a bit of reading about the freeway flyer tranny.
My car, a stock 1200, does not sound or feel at all strained at 65 (indicated 70) mph on the highway. But that's as fast as I'll drive it (most people are still whipping by me, anyway), though, mainly because of the 4-wheel drums. And I leave lots of space.
I much prefer side roads at 45-50 mph.
Do you have Sod's Law in The States, or an equivilent? Meaning if it can go wrong it will, with added sh*t on top. In Sod's Law, the coke bottle would have been full, in your panic to kick it clear it would have shaken up, forcing the cap off, drenching your feet and legs and probably frothing up enough to obscure your vision.My own life-before-the-eyes moment came in my Beetle, the day an empty Coke bottle on the floor rolled under the pedals so I could depress neither the clutch nor the brake, as I approached an intersection. After weighing my options I swerved to the side of hte road, took my foot off the gas, and stalled out. They didn't cover that in driver's ed.
Do you have Sod's Law in The States, or an equivilent? Meaning if it can go wrong it will, with added sh*t on top. In Sod's Law, the coke bottle would have been full, in your panic to kick it clear it would have shaken up, forcing the cap off, drenching your feet and legs and probably frothing up enough to obscure your vision.
Actually ICE of old predates the current ICE, nether of which refer to the blocks of cold water that chill our drinks. ICE of yesteryear meant In Car Entertainment which means: what flash sound system do you have in your car?I use the acronym ICE (internal combustion engine). No confusion here (I understand IC).
Crystal methamphetamine? In Case of Emergency? I Can Empathise?ICE in the US right now has a rather hot-button meaning.
On this side of the pond that's commonly referred to as Murphy's Law: "Anything that can go wrong, will." The "added sh*t on top" is implied by use of the word "anything".Do you have Sod's Law in The States, or an equivilent? Meaning if it can go wrong it will, with added sh*t on top. In Sod's Law, the coke bottle would have been full, in your panic to kick it clear it would have shaken up, forcing the cap off, drenching your feet and legs and probably frothing up enough to obscure your vision.
On this side of the pond that's commonly referred to as Murphy's Law: "Anything that can go wrong, will." The "added sh*t on top" is implied by use of the word "anything".
Based on some of the "man/woman on the street" interviews I've seen on You Tube, I'd bet most Americans below a certain age wouldn't know the phrase these days either.That's a curious thing!
"Murphy's law" is such a popular phrase, worldwide. And the Germans of my generation surely heared of it. But when you would interview people here on the streets, in general, they wouldn't know the phrase, mostly.
So much for german general education.