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Local car shows are a summer staple up Nawth. It gives the car guys about three months to drive and show what they did in the garage all winter. Reading about all these old automobiles got me looking forward to summer evenings at Dave's Diner or the Frankfort Marina.
Old cars are great in small doses. Folk will say, "They don't build 'em like they used to." There's a reason for that, you know. I had a '64 Falcon with a 101 horsepower 170 cubic inch in line six that couldn't get out of its own way. The Fordomatic offered two forward gears - slow and slower. The windshield wipers offered the choices of on or off. The washers were operated by stomping on a rubber bulb wedged between the high beam switch and the lever for the floor vent.
If it was cold you had to mash the gas pedal two and a half times before you pulled out the choke, started to crank while slowly pushing the choke in until she fired. Then you had to pull the choke all the way out and let it run for a while. Those 13' bias ply tires would thump like nobody's business until they warmed up, too.
I don't think we'd have much patience for that kind of car these days. Shoot, my son just waved his keychain at the window in the hall and his car started out in the driveway. :thumbsup:
Local car shows are a summer staple up Nawth. It gives the car guys about three months to drive and show what they did in the garage all winter. Reading about all these old automobiles got me looking forward to summer evenings at Dave's Diner or the Frankfort Marina.
Old cars are great in small doses. Folk will say, "They don't build 'em like they used to." There's a reason for that, you know. I had a '64 Falcon with a 101 horsepower 170 cubic inch in line six that couldn't get out of its own way. The Fordomatic offered two forward gears - slow and slower. The windshield wipers offered the choices of on or off. The washers were operated by stomping on a rubber bulb wedged between the high beam switch and the lever for the floor vent.
If it was cold you had to mash the gas pedal two and a half times before you pulled out the choke, started to crank while slowly pushing the choke in until she fired. Then you had to pull the choke all the way out and let it run for a while. Those 13' bias ply tires would thump like nobody's business until they warmed up, too.
I don't think we'd have much patience for that kind of car these days. Shoot, my son just waved his keychain at the window in the hall and his car started out in the driveway. :thumbsup:
Daddy would swap a car because it had a flat. One car sticks in my mind...
So when did he trade you in?
Local car shows are a summer staple up Nawth. It gives the car guys about three months to drive and show what they did in the garage all winter. Reading about all these old automobiles got me looking forward to summer evenings at Dave's Diner or the Frankfort Marina.
Old cars are great in small doses. Folk will say, "They don't build 'em like they used to." There's a reason for that, you know. I had a '64 Falcon with a 101 horsepower 170 cubic inch in line six that couldn't get out of its own way. The Fordomatic offered two forward gears - slow and slower. The windshield wipers offered the choices of on or off. The washers were operated by stomping on a rubber bulb wedged between the high beam switch and the lever for the floor vent.
If it was cold you had to mash the gas pedal two and a half times before you pulled out the choke, started to crank while slowly pushing the choke in until she fired. Then you had to pull the choke all the way out and let it run for a while. Those 13' bias ply tires would thump like nobody's business until they warmed up, too.
I don't think we'd have much patience for that kind of car these days. Shoot, my son just waved his keychain at the window in the hall and his car started out in the driveway. :thumbsup: