#26
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Looks like that -- would help keep them cool if parked close to a conflagration, assuming they were lined up with the cart that is and not turned off to the side.
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#27
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Better than a beaded seat? Looks very uncomfortable.
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Buvez toujours, mourrez jamais. Rabelais |
#28
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Ancient Buick
Vintage Buick outside the General Motors Office at Fishermens Bend, Melbourne.
I don't know if it was originally built like that or whether it is a restoration conversion. I don't fancy those tyres in the wet or the dry. Not that this answers the above question, but my parents had a 1935 straight eight Buick sedan the body for which was built at Holden's Body Works in Adelaide (I think) but no idea whether the chassis and engine were built in the US or not. Last edited by YM-Mundrabilla; 26th July 2018 at 12:58. |
#29
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[QUOTE=YM-Mundrabilla;16481.
I don't fancy those tyres in the wet or the dry. .[/QUOTE] Those type of tyres handled snow conditions much better than modern ones, their thin profile allowed them to cut through the snow and find hard surface, modern wide profile (tread) tyres fitted as standard from new cannot do that; you have to have winter tyres to handle deep snow. Living and driving in hilly Yorkshire (in the past) snow never stopped us Just look at some old films and see how cars of the 1920's coped, nothing seemed to stop them (except perhaps water in the carb) Just as an aside I keep a set of 'Snow Socks' for my wheels in winter when needed, made of some material designed in Sweden, so easy to put on and take off, no messing with chains. When your done you can put them in the washing machine and store them in the spare wheel well when dry, allowed me to go in a front wheel drive car where 4 x 4 were struggling, they also work in the sand |
#30
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Personal experience from around 50 years ago - Those skinny tyres on large rims tend not to aquaplane but just cut though water on flooded roads, leaving the contemporary cars of that time floundering with their 'newer wider better' tyres on smaller diameter rims.
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The Mad Landsman |
#31
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Quote:
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#32
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I got studs on medium broad tires and four wheel drive, that is the only way to reach our house in parts of the winter. And with dry powder-snow on really cold slick ice that will not do either.
Last edited by SJB; 26th July 2018 at 21:15. |
#33
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The old 2CV was brilliant in snow, thin tyres cut through, low power doesn't spin the wheels.
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Buvez toujours, mourrez jamais. Rabelais |
#35
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A common conversion was quite brutal, chop the back off a big powerful saloon and stick a crane on to make a tow truck, I saw one Sunbeam, the doors were upholstered in reptile skin of considerable opulence. Another thing I saw a lot of was pretty well any old car with the output from the gear box fed to another gearbox to pull mowers etc for agricultural purposes. Not quite sure of the details, there was a man called Sonny Parker who did them, the garth at his farm was full of old cars.
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Buvez toujours, mourrez jamais. Rabelais |
#36
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Quote:
Maybe that is true in your place, or in the Netherlands or Denmark. Living in a country where horizontal roads are mostly fantasy, then unless you have got a differential lock (or whatever you call it in English) you will the moment one of the drive wheels spins - which will happen in every tight corner uphill - be driving a one-wheel-drive car. And in that situation on a steep hill, having the thin wheels of a 2CV or a VW Beetle, or whatever, just means less traction. If you want to drive off-road in snow, very wide rubber belts on a set of drive wheels, and skis on the steering wheels may be the best thing. With snow of any normal height here you would not get anywhere at all off the road in a 2CV. The way to get up the steep hills in an ordinary car is to keep your speed - and how do you keep your speed up in a 2CV - by turning the engine off and pushing it? But the first thing you want in Winter Norway, is a car so balanced that it lets go on all 4 wheels at the same time, that unheralded feature of the Volvo may save your life ove and over. Last edited by SJB; 28th July 2018 at 13:22. |
#37
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It was pretty flat round Shrewsbury (probably still is).
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Buvez toujours, mourrez jamais. Rabelais |
#38
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Quote:
The overhead valve was probably good if you could keep the oil up to the rocker arm. For a long time dad could not. I don't know if it was the oil pump that was crook or the rocker bearings sloppy but the car ended its life minus the rocker cover and a big oil can inside on the floor. This would have been back in the late 1940s/very early 1950s. The more things change the more they stay the same - we had a 2000 Holden Barina (a straight Opel from Spain I think) it screwed up the OH cam due to insufficient lubrication too. Bastard of a car - nearly as bad a our son's Volkswagen Polo. Last edited by YM-Mundrabilla; 28th July 2018 at 15:47. |
#39
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Quote:
Believe it or not here in the British Isles we have quite a few roads which are not horizontal, it is also against the law to use studded tyres, winter tread tyres are okay. Where-as when working in Switzerland it was compulsory to fit winter or studded tyres from October to March, but that was nearly 50 years ago, most people kept two sets of wheels but things may have changed. Here in the UK we have far more vehicles than Norway, a larger population, more flats/apartment blocks with no facilities for keeping a spare set of tyres/wheels, we would all like motoring utopia, but alas it ain't going to happen, we learn to live with what the law and physical restrictions allow. |
#41
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I walked up the Wrekin last year for first time since I was a kid. It didn't seem very flat to me … mind you, that was 60 years on …
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