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On Sun, 08 Jan 2006 14:10:45 -0800, Richard Riley
wrote: Ralph Nader did go after VW - he got them to stop selling The Thing in the US after 2 years. I don't think Nader went after the Thing...that was about ten years after his heyday. The Thing tanked because it was a piece of crap. It had all the drawbacks of the standard Beetle (low power, poor heater, floorboard rust-out, fairly poor mileage) and none of the good aspects, and zero quality. And next-to-no occupant protection. I owned one for ~20 years, I should know.... Ron Wanttaja |
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On Sun, 08 Jan 2006 16:24:22 -0800, Ron Wanttaja
wrote: I don't think Nader went after the Thing...that was about ten years after his heyday. The Thing tanked because it was a piece of crap. It had all the drawbacks of the standard Beetle (low power, poor heater, floorboard rust-out, fairly poor mileage) and none of the good aspects, and zero quality. And next-to-no occupant protection. I owned one for ~20 years, I should know.... Ron Wanttaja -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- How many USA cars have you owned for 20 years, Ron? Barnyard - If I had an inquiring mind, I'd want to know - BOb |
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On Tue, 07 Feb 2006 13:58:47 -0600, City Father wrote:
On Sun, 08 Jan 2006 16:24:22 -0800, Ron Wanttaja wrote: I don't think Nader went after the Thing...that was about ten years after his heyday. The Thing tanked because it was a piece of crap. It had all the drawbacks of the standard Beetle (low power, poor heater, floorboard rust-out, fairly poor mileage) and none of the good aspects, and zero quality. And next-to-no occupant protection. I owned one for ~20 years, I should know.... How many USA cars have you owned for 20 years, Ron? *Owned* the "Thing" for almost 20 years, only drove it for about eight. Was a third/fourth car for much of the time I owned it, quietly rusting away in the garage. It was a spare car when I was single (bought in ~1978), then my wife's daily commuter 1981-1984 until we bought her a Nissan pickup. After that, just took it out on warm, sunny, Seattle evenings to drive around with the top down. Had 88K miles when I sold it, basically because I was tired of it cluttering up the garage. We've owned the pickup for the past 22 years, same thing....been sitting nearly idle since '93. Think I've put about 4,000 miles on it in that time. Don't object so much to it, since there are times you absolutely *need* a pickup truck. It now sits in my hangar, so the garage isn't cluttered. The Thing's only advantage is that you could carry a full sheet of plywood in it. Not *totally* in it, mind, but it would sit flat. But if I were offered the choice of being in an accident in the Thing or in my 22-year-old pickup, I'd be in that Nissan *real* fast. The Thing had big storage pockets in the doors...pretty convenient, until you realized that the outside of the storage pocket was the inside face of the exterior sheet metal. Absolutely nothing to resist a side impact but flat 0.060 steel. If you slammed the doors, the whole side of the car would shake back and forth. Didn't make much difference to a dashing 24-year-old Lieutenant, but as you get older, that sort of thing does give you pause. Have driven several US-made cars for longer periods, including more miles. Have owned two US cars older than 20 years old ('46 and '51 Willys Jeeps, back in the '70s), still wish I had them. Ron Wanttaja |
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On Tue, 07 Feb 2006 19:07:05 -0800, Ron Wanttaja
wrote: But if I were offered the choice of being in an accident in the Thing or in my 22-year-old pickup, I'd be in that Nissan *real* fast. The Thing had big storage pockets in the doors...pretty convenient, until you realized that the outside of the storage pocket was the inside face of the exterior sheet metal. Absolutely nothing to resist a side impact but flat 0.060 steel. If you slammed the doors, the whole side of the car would shake back and forth. Didn't make much difference to a dashing 24-year-old Lieutenant, but as you get older, that sort of thing does give you pause. I currently own a '97 Nissan Hardbody that was purchased new. A sheet of plywood doesn't lie flat, however the airbag is a plus. It's my third Nissan truck. Don't stay in 'em 20 years, tho. Gotta' feed the economy once in a while.... Sometimes Detroit. Other times, Tennessee or Ohio. Even made the mistake of buying a Kansas City built FORD... Once. - Barnyard BOb - |
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("- Barnyard BOb -" wrote)
Even made the mistake of buying a Kansas City built FORD... Once. Try one built in St Paul - Ranger's only plant now that NJ is done. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Twin_Cities_Assembly_Plant Ford's oldest and BEST plant! http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:F...ck_and_dam.jpg I worked there for one week in 1978 - they were changing over from cars to trucks. I was 18 and stoopid, so I left for something less difficult and more fun. I was on the chassis line - ugh! Montblack UAW baby! $12.50/hr after a probation period. I was making $8.50/hr temp wages. |
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I worked there for one week in 1978 - they were changing over from cars to
trucks. I was 18 and stoopid, so I left for something less difficult and more fun. I was on the chassis line - ugh! Montblack UAW baby! $12.50/hr after a probation period. I was making $8.50/hr temp wages. Was this what you were making in '78 Montblack? Wow that's good money back then I bet. The Monk |
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![]() "Ron Wanttaja" wrote in message ... snip Have driven several US-made cars for longer periods, including more miles. Have owned two US cars older than 20 years old ('46 and '51 Willys Jeeps, back in the '70s), still wish I had them. Ron Wanttaja The first 4X4 my Dad had on the farm was a Willy's Jeep. He later bought a Willy's pickup and had the local FFA chapter repaint it. I restored a 1948 Willy's Jeep pickup back in the late 70's / early 80's. Fond memories! My new bride loved driving it. You could go lot's of places in one... you just couldn't go there very fast! Joe Schneider 8437R ----== Posted via Newsfeeds.Com - Unlimited-Unrestricted-Secure Usenet News==---- http://www.newsfeeds.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 120,000+ Newsgroups ----= East and West-Coast Server Farms - Total Privacy via Encryption =---- |
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"JJS" jschneider@remove socks cebridge.net wrote in message
... The first 4X4 my Dad had on the farm was a Willy's Jeep. He later bought a Willy's pickup and had the local FFA chapter repaint it. I restored a 1948 Willy's Jeep pickup back in the late 70's / early 80's. Fond memories! My new bride loved driving it. You could go lot's of places in one... you just couldn't go there very fast! Joe.......... Try the new Jeep with the Hemi. . . ![]() Rich "My wife's got the 300C - I've got the '65 Corvair" S. |
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