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5th July 2019, 18:28 | #11 |
Posted a thing or two
Rover 75 Saloon Join Date: Dec 2017
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I reckon the Golden Age was the late '80s and the '90s, for this reason. Car reliability had improved tremendously with fuel injection systems being almost universally dependable. Many manufacturers (especially Peugeot) were making very well galvanised bodyshells, so your car shell would last at least 10 years, and they hadn't yet been forced into putting so many pollution monitoring sensors and systems in that you need a computer program to diagnose and reset fault codes before you can start actually fixing a "problem" which might turn out to be only a faulty sensor! I still reckon the most reliable car ever was probably a late '90s Honda Civic. Even Renault got it right with the Mk1 Megane 1.4 and 1.6 16valve cars - these are very reliable, and fixable, if needed, unlike their "clever electronics and security" successors.
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6th July 2019, 01:29 | #12 | |
Gets stuck in
MG ZT-T Join Date: Jun 2016
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Quote:
My ZT190 came from the Netherlands as did two local Rover 75s and two MGFs. They will be well taken care of here.
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ZT-T190, Anthracite, LHD, Left the Line on June 24, 2002, Sold new in Switzerland, spent time in Germany, Imported to Canada in September 2021 |
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6th July 2019, 06:05 | #13 |
This is my second home
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I think we should remember that those that predict the demise of the car are people who live within Cities and the M25 “bubble” in particular.
So crowded that public transport actually works within the “bubble”. But move outside and the public transport infrastructure falls apart. Unless we have something like “jaunting” evolve as in “The Stars my Destination” I can’t see the demise of car ownership for the majority. |
6th July 2019, 13:37 | #14 |
I really should get out more.......
MG ZT-T 260 Join Date: Feb 2016
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So true, I live in a village about 3 miles from the nearest town but you would think I live in the middle of know where when it comes to public transport. There are buses that run through the week from about 6.30am up to about 7pm but after that and at weekends it is a car bike or shanks pony. Even Taxi's charge extra as they wont get a return journey.
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6th July 2019, 14:03 | #15 |
Posted a thing or two
Rover 75 Saloon MGZT Join Date: Jul 2012
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i was listening to a radio interview with some car guru and interestingly they asked him re automated cars and how soon.
His reply was alot of the hype re automation in cars is still some 20 years off as the current technology really is not up to it yet realiability and safety wise. He went on to say how current manufacturers are all trying to out do each other with gadgets in their cars which has left some generations unable to operate these cars, citing a car he had to start for a friend and couldnt figure out how to start it.After trying a number of things he realised he had to plug the whole key casing into the dash then press the start button. A totally pointless way to start a car. As he said, it appear there is now no uniform set of standards for cars anymore. Also cited alot of younger people cant afford to buy a car due to limited incomes so there answer is to use public transport and live within public bus routes. |
6th July 2019, 16:12 | #16 | |
This is my second home
MG ZT-T 190 Join Date: Jun 2009
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6th July 2019, 16:49 | #17 |
This is my second home
Rover 75 cdt club + Rover 2.5 KV6 Conni SE Join Date: May 2008
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What a miserable world these eco warriors and greens want to live in. Mind you, they might stop gripping about everything they have not got then. The problem is all us older citizens have got mostly everything . We have the houses,cars, foreign holidays , a bit of money. All they seem to have is the bellyache about anything. Today’s young society will eventually inherit what we have over the years created by hard work and due diligence. Will they feel the same then? Let us older people have a moan about these young upstarts? No let them get on with it. They will soon have something to really moan about when the next real thing happens.
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Great Barr, Birmingham. |
7th July 2019, 09:57 | #18 | |
Gets stuck in
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Only time it played up AA came out (Homestart) and found that the collision cut-out had tripped. A quick push and running again. She has suggested replacing it with something modern....I told her quite bluntly that the Honda will outlast her, anything else will be headaches. And yes, it still drives like new, glides along like a small 75
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• This vehicle was the 8,186th ZT-T to run off the production line, out of 8,249 • This vehicle was the 1,723rd ZT-T 190 + to be made out of 1,756 • This vehicle was the 149th ZT-T in Mica Blue (Ignition) (code: JGY) to be made out of 160 Mica Blue (Ignition) ZT-Ts |
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7th July 2019, 10:33 | #19 | |
I really should get out more.......
MG ZT-T 260 Join Date: Feb 2016
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7th July 2019, 16:28 | #20 | |
Loves to post
2004 Rover 75 Tourer CDTi Join Date: Apr 2016
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You *are* talking about those lovely two-wheeled, human powered vehicles behind that hideous mobility scooter, aren't you Brian?! I'm afraid the truth is that in the city, even though I love my cars (6 of them at last count!) they're artifacts of the past and rapidly looking old fashioned and are, unfortunately, very much part of the problem, not the solution. The golden age of car ownership is, I think, probably tied in with the colden age of consumption, which is sometime in the late 1950's into the 1960's. As soon as environmental matters such as recycling, air pollution and global warming etc., became economic factors compromises started having to be made which killed it off. Oh, to be able to run today's econimical, reliable, comfortable and safe vehicles with those values, in a zero-consequenses environment! |
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