ChrisB
A-List Customer
- Messages
- 408
- Location
- The Hills of the Chankly Bore
I beleive that human nature does not change, and that each era has the same ratio of virtue to vice.
If some automaker wants to meet my marketing needs, build a simple four-cylinder five-speed manual transmission car with an AM radio, manual windows, and a simple key you can get replaced at the hardware store, and I'll buy one tomorrow.
Quite true, but in my experience a person often has to be made aware of this, then be willing to examine their "knowledge" to determine whether or not it actually does fit their reality and adjust or change that "knowledge" to match their observations....Sometimes the things you are taught don't square with things you see.
It has four gears and the first one isn't synchromeshed. It doesn't have variable speed wipers, nor windscreen washers, you have to cancel the indicators. To demist it you wind open the windscreen, but it does have a briefcase size running board, it also has easy access to the engine via a gull wing bonnet, (hood) the brakes are drum not disc but it can still stop on a shilling, or in the case of the US, a dime. Yet despite it's inadequacies, the one thing that it does have is.......................fun.If some automaker wants to meet my marketing needs, build a simple four-cylinder five-speed manual transmission car with an AM radio, manual windows, and a simple key you can get replaced at the hardware store, and I'll buy one tomorrow.
For people who had lived through the Great Depression and WWII, the 1950s weren't so bad. Those smiles weren't pasted on.
My uncle John, a railway man, was a Nash Rambler guy. Don't recall him ever owning anything elseOh, and about those cars. Ramblers, if you remember them (haven't been mentioned lately), were considered to be basic, sensible cars. Maybe they quit making them because people stopped being sensible. The Land-Rover that I had, purchased at an American Motors dealer in Fairmont, West Virginia, did not have synchromesh from 1st to 2nd, was freezing in the winter, wouldn't quite do 60 on level ground, and had poor gas mileage, about 14 mpg no matter where or how it was driven. Otherwise it was nearly perfect.
You know you're getting old and don't get enough sleep.
And probably still is, built to last and so strong, but did you know that the inspiration for the design came from the WW2 Willis Jeep?The Land-Rover that I had, purchased at an American Motors dealer in Fairmont, West Virginia, did not have synchromesh from 1st to 2nd, was freezing in the winter, wouldn't quite do 60 on level ground, and had poor gas mileage, about 14 mpg no matter where or how it was driven. Otherwise it was nearly perfect.
Ramblers (and their successors, AMCs) had among my people the reputation, rightly or wrongly, as being junk. Tinny. Insubstantial.
But then, there was this eccentric fellow of my acquaintance who, a dozen or more years ago, when I knew him, got around in a late-'60s AMC with something like half a million miles on it. It wasn't that he obsessed over the car. Indeed, the rare extra passenger found himself moving around stacks of newspapers and other crap to clear a space to plant his rump.
Like the original design being of American origin, that V8 is also from the US. There's so many conflicting stories about it that it's hard to separate myth from reality. The story goes that an engineer from Rover, whilst on a tour of Buick, found the remains of a rejected engine in one of Buick's dumpsters, (that's what the Americans call a skip, UK members,) said engineer asked Buick's big wigs if he could have the drawings. "Help yourself," he was told. So he did. And so was born one of the most iconic V8 engines ever. It's like Dolly Pardon's song: I Will Always Love You. Colonel Parker wanted fifty percent of everything, including intellectual rights, if Elvis recorded it. Dolly told him where to go. Whitney Houston did for that song what Rover did for Buick's V8.I have seen one long wheelbase model with a V-8. The owner told me they were imported for only one or two years but probably only in small numbers. The later Discovery model actually looked like a Land-Rover.
Quite true, but in my experience a person often has to be made aware of this, then be willing to examine their "knowledge" to determine whether or not it actually does fit their reality and adjust or change that "knowledge" to match their observations.
At the company I worked for in 1979-81 my immediate supervisor was a man named Bill Hill. Bill and I often drove to the company's various job sites together, and to occupy our time during these local trips he and I would share our life stories and observations. Bill made a strong impression on my young self because this was not merely casual conversation to him. While most people simply waited for their turn to talk during such conversations, he listened to people because he was sincerely interested in what they had to say and what he might learn from that. Also, every time he shared his conclusions/opinions based on his personal observations he would finish by saying, "But don't listen to me; I'm just another [expletive] with an opinion. Look for yourself and make up your own mind about whether or not you agree." This was the first time I can remember anyone from a previous generation admitting they were human, fallible, and didn't "know" everything. Fortunately I listened, and I took this simple statement to heart and began to question and examine everything. It was a valuable life lesson, and I wish I could go back to thank Bill for being more of a positive influence in my life than he probably realized.