Stanley Doble
Call Me a Cab
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The color used by HD was called "khaki". They started using it in WW1 (before that, their bikes were gray). In the thirties they started offering different colors.
The color used by HD was called "khaki". They started using it in WW1 (before that, their bikes were gray). In the thirties they started offering different colors.
The color used by HD was called "khaki". They started using it in WW1 (before that, their bikes were gray). In the thirties they started offering different colors.
Nope, still ugly and on a car whose electrical system was designed by Rube Goldberg, whose interior was so small and tight that the pedals are too small for human sized feet and for putting a battery in the passenger compartment behind the dash so it could leak on the carpet and eat through it----there is no exception.
James you are impressive - you found an ugly example of a Jaguar sports car in Racing Green. I - with one caveat - concede. The caveat is that at Le Mans, in the '50s and '60s, those Jaguars in Racing Green looked pretty darn good. But maybe, as you pointed out, that doesn't translate to normal people cars.
Nope, still ugly and on a car whose electrical system was designed by Rube Goldberg, whose interior was so small and tight that the pedals are too small for human sized feet and for putting a battery in the passenger compartment behind the dash so it could leak on the carpet and eat through it----there is no exception.
Three very valid points! lol
lolThe only car that gets more miles vertically on a lift than on the road is the old joke.
Extra points for Di-Noc inserts!
The pedals look like those sorry "fun size" chocolate bars. The pedals on a pedal car are bigger and spaced further apart!
Compared to my MG the pedals look massive. The pedals on the MG are so pathetic, that, think RHD here, I have had a metal plate fixed to the side fabric because my foot constantly scuffed the material, causing it to wear a whole in the fabric. Much as I like the car, you have to learn to drive them with your big toes.
It's not my idea. That is what Harley Davidson called it. I know what they looked like, I owned a dozen HDs at different times, the oldest a 1929 45. A friend had a 1913 V twin with transmission in the rear wheel, it was an original unrestored model and it was gray. Supposedly they switched to khaki when filling military orders during WW1.
I thought the Harley green was called khaki but according to an online source they called it olive drab or olive green.