Did you recently take on (or consider) a loan of 84 months or longer on a car purchase?
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Have You Ever Heard of a _________?!!
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They made a very small delivery van, didn't they?
There was a piano store in the town where I grew up and they had one of these. I remember seeing it in a junkyard a few years later.
Kind of an interesting car, but I'm not so sure it was a great idea to put the gas tank right over the engine...hm....
Lloyds were also quite peculiar (like Goliath, all part of the Borgward "empire")...the domestic models had bodies made out of...of...leatherette!
It was a popular car, sold in 72 countries at one time, and in 1958 the third best-selling car in Germany.
How the mighty have fallen!
I think they were 400 series or maybe 600's.
When I was 16 years old, a buddy and I went to Catalina Island where they were dumb emough to rent these for sightseeing! To 16 year olds!!
They were far from new then and were pure junk.
Ours was even worse off upon it's return!
The neat trick these days is to buy a 600 and put in an 850 Spyder motor, then you can run 'em on the highway.
Remember the roller coaster at the Pike?
A buddy of mine and I were riding bicycles down a steep hill in San Pedro once. We got too close together and my pedel went into his spokes.
It sounded like someone playing a harp! Anyway, as his front wheel collapsed, he ran headlong into the rear end of a Renault Dauphine!
He went over the top, did catastrophtic damage to the Renault and his bicycle.
Of course, we got the hell out of there. It was 4:00 in the morning on my paper route.
Every porch light on the block came on. I still laugh about that, but then, I wasen't the guy that hit the Renault!
But I digress...
My brother had one and had pretty good luck with it, but then he worked in the Renault Parts Warehouse in Inventory Control, so....
The Dauphine was a brilliant concept put poorly executed. At one time in 1960 Renault was outselling VW in America. A poor parts and service network and a product that could not be made right quickly enough doomed the car by the end of that year...the VW was no sterling car either, but you could get parts and you could get it fixed and it had an excellent build quality.
The Dauphines had a two tone horn. Some dork in our high school thought it was cool to drive down the street holding down the horn button while he flipped the two tone switch back and forth. It sounded like a british police car! A couple of the school tough guys got tired of hearing this and had a "chat" with him. He quit doing that after that.
I think the best car in that class at the time was the Volvo PV 544. Not a whole lot more money than a VW and a much better car in my humble opinion.
That color was called evening orchid and was only used for one year on Chevys and Pontiacs.
It was one of those love it or hate it colors, I guess. I am one of those who really liked it!
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I never saw a Ferlac on a Dauphine, only on the later R10...if you so much as just touched the shifter, you'd go back into neutral, no matter what speed you were going. But once you got the hang of it, it worked okay for a few days...
I had a Gordini and it was a nice little car...a bit fragile, but for its day pretty preppy...I had a Gordini R8, which was quite rare even then.
2020 Acura RDX tech SH-AWD, 2023 Maverick hybrid Lariat luxury package.
It's really a very clever gadget, and it may yet find greater use. Or it may be obviated by continuously variable valve timing.
Didn't Volvo buy the DAF group at some point?
The CVT patent issue is interesting. That technology was widely used for variable speed industrial equipment for many years, both here and abroad. Reeves was a major manufacturer. With the advent of low-priced inverters for AC induction motors in recent years, I expect this CVT market is now much smaller.
Interesting side note...belt driven transmissions are really an American invention.
I think the whole idea behind the invention was to provide a simple automatic transmission in an economy car...in that sense, the car certainly succeeded, and has my admiration. The Daf wasn't some silly little mistake, but it was the wrong car for the times. If Honda can't make a success out of something, you can forget it I think.
I recall seeing a news story about a number of US cars that were on display at a Moscow exhibition hall, perhaps an earlier step in this same automotive detente. Pictured was a 1960 Impala Hardtop, complete with 348 CID "big-block" insignia. The Russian people apparently had no particular interest in 335 HP, automatic transmissions, or the hardtop styling. Their predominant question was reported to be, "What's the purpose of the tail fins?"
Good question, I'd still like to know!
Seriously, the old USSR never tried to export cars, because:
(1) they could never supply their own market(due to poor manf. efficiencies)
(2) what they made was not suitable for W.Europe or N.America
Their attempt with the "LADA"(FIAT) was unsuccessful-they sold a few in Canada, mainly because they were dirt cheap-can any Canadians enliven us with some LADA stories?
I, too, would enjoy hearing some LADA-Fiat stories from the perspective of North Americans who were raised on Fords, Chevies, and Dodges.
Also a 1947 nash with a Chevy V8, but that's another story.
2020 Acura RDX tech SH-AWD, 2023 Maverick hybrid Lariat luxury package.
If the '47 Nash were a little coupe and the V-8 was artfully installed, that could be kinda nice...power steering and a/c especially...but I myself would like the exterior completely stock, especially the wheels....fake 'em out ("why can't I pass that old pile?")
Re: the Ford, the last issue of Motorweek had some pictures of versions of the new mini ( I think). One was a bread van style, that looked an awful lot like the Anglia.
2020 Acura RDX tech SH-AWD, 2023 Maverick hybrid Lariat luxury package.
I was told that a Buick Reatta was made in Italy. Can this be confirmed?
Tab
I think they meant the Cadillac Allante, which had the body fashioned in Italy.
The Reatta was a FWD V-6 with plastic fenders and, for its day, fairly attractive looks. The car has a small but very loyal following, and fits IMO quite nicely in the "oddballs and curiosity" section of the collectible car market, along with Allante and Delorean and Avanti and Fiero and the like. The O&C cars in the market seem to have reached a certain floor value below which they do not sink, so there is some value there, but they also never seem to appreciate further, so they are rather stagnant if one is looking for future "investment" potential.
You will find some Reatta links starting at this website:
http://www.classicar.com/bombsight/links.html
I'll try to further investigate the Italian connection, but as of now, I don't think that was the case.