First car was a Peugeot 504 second hand 7 years old, kept it going for another 18 years.
What no insulation Jonathan?????
I didn't think about insulation back in the late 70s but had noticed the car had a lot of felt insulation as I had stripped out the inside of the car. I did add a bit around the front speakers. The rear speakers were fully enclosed. That reminded me, I put new carpet in the car.
Friends who travelled in the car always commented how quiet & comfortable the car was. I just took it for granted.
The 504 came to Australia as a "flat pack" & were assembled locally, as were a number of previous models.
In the early 80s the cleaner at work had a 505!
I do remember as a kid my parents had a Beetle, us kids used to sit in the area behind the seats sometimes when driving. How is was back then.
They bought it second hand but it turned out there was still money owing on the car. The finance company broke into our garage & stole the car. We got it back eventually.
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Procrastination, mankind's greatest labour saving device!
50L custom fuel rack 6x20W 100/20mppt 4x26Ah gel 28L super insulated fridge TPMS 3 ARB compressors heatsink fan cooled 4L tank aftercooler Air/water OCD cleaning 4 stage car acoustic insulation.
First car was a Ford Prefect Ute. Un-Killarney. No water pump so boiled most of the time which it didn't seem to mind for 10 years.
Neil
Ah, the cars were known as "Defect". Had one for my "work car" when working in the bush, but had to change it to 12 volt because on cold mornings it wouldn't start. Gutless as all getout, not helped by 3 speed gearbox, but I knew a family of 6 that used to squeeze into theirs for regular 200km trips, about 3 hours of torture, each way. Cheers
Was fun in a different sort of way....even that great long gear lever with the humungous throw. I nearly hit a roo one night ....thought I was gunna go straight under him....or at least trip him up .
Cheers Keith
-- Edited by Keith P on Wednesday 14th of December 2022 06:32:08 PM
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Nuthin is ever the same once I have owned it ......
I used to drive the kids in the Morris Mini (850 engine) from Adelaide to Middleton to go camping and there was a certain spot along the way where the road had a hump and the kids would say faster mummy faster we want to fly, and we did for all off 2 seconds.
Sure was. Very nice car, leather seats and a plush lining. The people I was with used to refer to it as the Mafia staff car, only thing, it was French not Italian.
Ours was a Singer Gazelle. Beaut little car never let us down in five years. Before that we had a 650cc Matchless/AJS sports twin with a Steib chair attached. Nearly killed me three times till I put the chair on when we had our daughter. Pehaps I should say nearly killed myself, can't really blame the bike!
They were happy days.
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1951 Citroen, right hand drive, black. Chick magnet for some reason. File photo.
I saw a bloke race one of those at Liverpool Speedway many years ago.
Yes Yobarr, you are correct, the gearstick did in fact emerge from the dashboard. I went to school with a guy that had one and yes I recon it was a *chick magnet*
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Welcome to Biggs Country many may know it as Australia
I saw a bloke race one of those at Liverpool Speedway many years ago.
Yes Yobarr, you are correct, the gearstick did in fact emerge from the dashboard. I went to school with a guy that had one and yes I recon it was a *chick magnet*
My first car was a Singer SM sports, paid 10 quid for it around 1956, not a bad motor, aluminium body over a wood frame, brakes were almost non existent but it was pretty quick.
No passenger seat, recall losing a girl friend over the very low door, whilst showing off doing wheelies on an oval somewhere, she was perched on a box, fortunately no serious damage done
My first car was a Singer SM sports, paid 10 quid for it around 1956, not a bad motor, aluminium body over a wood frame, brakes were almost non existent but it was pretty quick.
No passenger seat, recall losing a girl friend over the very low door, whilst showing off doing wheelies on an oval somewhere, she was perched on a box, fortunately no serious damage done
Not the car, stock photo.
Singer SM Sports eh. They certainly were powerhouses, were they not, with a neck-breaking 48hp (36 kw) from their 1497 cc engine.
Ahh, things certainly have changed. Probably a good thing that they had little power, considering that good brakes were not even an option.
First car back in the distant past in the UK was a MG 1300. Racy at the time despite the shape as it had twin carbs !! Nice british racing green colour with a grey /cream interior Even remember the plate fbd737.
luvly comfy wide back seat too ,but thats a story for another time .lol. Its strange how you can remember details from 50+yrs ago ,but not what you had for tea yesterday .
Rock on people .Andy .
First car back in the distant past in the UK was a MG 1300. Racy at the time despite the shape as it had twin carbs !! Nice british racing green colour with a grey /cream interior Even remember the plate fbd737. luvly comfy wide back seat too ,but thats a story for another time .lol. Its strange how you can remember details from 50+yrs ago ,but not what you had for tea yesterday . Rock on people .Andy .
Not a lot of 1300's seen in Aust Andy, nice looking car, twin carby;s were the thing back then, bit of a bugger to keep in tune as I recall.
The Singer motor boasted an over head cam life was certainly simpler before the computer age.
Australia had the Morris 1100S, 1275cc, basically the Cooper S motor.
Was effectively the same motor, but was well down on power, about 20% less than a standard Cooper S. Amazing that today's cars have so much more power than older models. The first Falcon GT was very powerful for its day, at 230hp (about 175kw), but now there are many cars with greater power. Cheers
My first car in 1968 was an EH Holden panel van (after an earlier vehicle which will remain un-named because it died shortly after purchase). The EH was RACV tested before purchase and deemed to probably need a new engine. It had done 108,000 miles and over the next eight years, that went up to 220,000 miles before I sold it with still the original engine. I loved that car because it was so quiet, reliable and versatile. It did a half lap of Oz and many other long trips. Two extra fuel tanks were fitted under the floor to boost capacity to 27 gallons (123 litres) which gave a range of 800 plus miles (1,300+ km). The best fun was when we filled the tanks for the first time and watched the service station attendant's (remember those) puzzlement as to where all the fuel was going. It was a great vehicle, but time and rust works its magic and it is only a memory now, sadly replaced by more vehicles than I can now recall.
My first car in 1968 was an EH Holden panel van (after an earlier vehicle which will remain un-named because it died shortly after purchase). The EH was RACV tested before purchase and deemed to probably need a new engine. It had done 108,000 miles and over the next eight years, that went up to 220,000 miles before I sold it with still the original engine. I loved that car because it was so quiet, reliable and versatile. It did a half lap of Oz and many other long trips. Two extra fuel tanks were fitted under the floor to boost capacity to 27 gallons (123 litres) which gave a range of 800 plus miles (1,300+ km). The best fun was when we filled the tanks for the first time and watched the service station attendant's (remember those) puzzlement as to where all the fuel was going. It was a great vehicle, but time and rust works its magic and it is only a memory now, sadly replaced by more vehicles than I can now recall.