T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
729.1 | | LEZAH::BOBBITT | I -- burn to see the dawn arriving | Thu Mar 14 1991 15:19 | 12 |
| I love Nathaniel. Really. He's got such *spirit*. But I don't always
trust he'll be healthy, especially since his mechanical gremlinitis hit
in November and December of last year. But I can't *imagine* getting
rid of him. But I *will* have to someday, won't I?
*sigh*
This is what happens to people who are allergic to furry pets. They
fall in love with their vehicles.
-Jody
|
729.2 | dreaming | TLE::DBANG::carroll | get used to it! | Thu Mar 14 1991 15:20 | 18 |
| What's your ideal car?
Mine:
Reasonably speaking (ie: something I actually plan to own one day) -
Toyota Celica or Mazda Miata (I have always wanted a convertible.)
When my ship comes in -
Jaguar XJS
Total dream-car -
Lamborghinni Countach
D!
|
729.3 | nostalgia | TLE::DBANG::carroll | get used to it! | Thu Mar 14 1991 15:26 | 24 |
| Jody, some of us who have furry pets fall in love with our cars, too.
I remember Rikki (short for Rikki Tikki Tavi, so named because compared to
the Subaru I learned to drive on and the other cars I had driven to that
point, Rikki handled like the mongoose in the cartoon: quick, turns on a
dime, light and cute, too) - a '76 Honda Civic hatchback, in the days
when Civics were smaller than VW bugs. It was totally stripped down, no
ameneties whatsoever, a gift from my father for my graduation ('85).
It had more shakes and rattles and whistles and whines, but with over 90K
miles never had a mechanical problem (except intermittent electrical
problems.)
I loved that thing to death.
I owned him for one year before I totaled him (and almost myself) hitting
a wet spot at 85 mph on I-84 in Union, Connecticut. I still get moist-eyed
when I pass that spot when I drive down to CT or NYC.
My new car is quiet, smooth, has lots of bells and whistles and it is great
but it has no *personality*. I don't love it and it doesn't even have a name.
*sniff*
D!
|
729.4 | like outfits, to suit the mood | SA1794::CHARBONND | You're hoping the sun won't rise | Thu Mar 14 1991 15:26 | 14 |
| D! ruins a perfectly good rathole... oh well :-)
I sometimes wish I could afford several vehicles, to please my
several selves. I'd have a big 4WD pickup truck for long trips
with lots of gear, a small Jeep set up for poking down old dirt
roads in the boonies, a midsize car for commuting, (like my old
'75 Malibu, plush interior, AC and power to spare,) and one very
fast (!!!) sports car, for those times when I want to push the
limits.
Unfortunately, budget allows me one smallish pickup with 96000
miles on it. (And no four-wheel-drive, waauugghh!)
Dana
|
729.6 | sigh | COBWEB::swalker | Gravity: it's the law | Thu Mar 14 1991 15:39 | 14 |
| If it were possible, I'd have only one car, after my current one.
That's right. One car for the rest of my life. (And given the current
state of technology, that's NOT a wish I want granted, thank you!) This
car would be self-maintaining, self-repairing if necessary, and 100%
reliable. It would look like a Mazda RX7, drive like a Mercedes, and have
excellent head and leg room for 4, or enough room for 2 people plus all
their ski equipment. It would get excellent gas mileage, be cheap
to purchase, own, and insure, and have 4-wheel-drive capability.
I hate shopping for cars and am not looking forward to replacing my current
one. It's such an exercise in compromises.
Sharon
|
729.7 | Why _can't_ they build a Jeep that'll do 140? | SA1794::CHARBONND | You're hoping the sun won't rise | Thu Mar 14 1991 15:50 | 15 |
| re.5 Cheyenne, if you're ever in Springfield (Mass.) stop in
and say hi! and then you can visit the Indian Museum down
the road a piece. (Our hockey team is still called the Springfield
Indians.)
re .6 Yeah, them danged compromises. Since I can't have
everything I have to try and get as many features as possible
in one buggy. So, my next wheels will be a small-medium pickup
with extended cab, nice interior, big engine, great tires,
_loud_ stereo ;-) 4-wheel-drive, and 5-speed. Sort of a go-anywhere
carry-anything sports-car boonie machine.
Now I gotta decide between Nissan and Dodge and...
Dana
|
729.8 | | GEMVAX::ADAMS | | Thu Mar 14 1991 15:56 | 17 |
| First car was Sam (after Sam Adams), a VW bug. Ah freedom!
Sold him to a guy in Minneapolis whose kids renamed him Herbie.
Second car is Joe (after Joe Coffey), a 1982 Toyota Tercel
(yeah, I go for the cheap ones). Over 200K miles together and
still going strong (or as strong as any little 4-cylinder car
can go).
Wish car? A Cobra. A *red* Cobra.
Fantasy car? A red Cobra that's like Sharon's (.6) as far as
self-maintenance, reliability, and gas mileage.
Next car? Who can think that far ahead? 8*)
nla
|
729.10 | more car stuff | LEZAH::BOBBITT | I -- burn to see the dawn arriving | Thu Mar 14 1991 16:13 | 35 |
| I wish Dodge still made good, solid DARTS. We had one (well many, they
fed each other after their ultimate demises) - but the one I loved was
Dartagnon (yes, a musketeer). He was THE coolest. Had lots of spunk.
I had driving access to a car before Nathanial (a Subablue, which is to
say, a blue Subaru) but I didn't really love it.
I think I like the look of many of the sportier Scirocco's - not sure
how I feel about the new Carottos (Carotta's? Caroda's? what are they
called?) that VW makes.
My next car is sure to be a Honda Civic. Not sure what specific ilk or
color yet.
I love the look of DeLorean's, but I hear they aren't very good cars to
own.
My sister just got her first car, and it's named Samuel. My parents
have owned a long line of cars, my mother always named
hers....she/we've had:
Pywackett
Grundune
Miss Mouse (little gray VW)
Dartagnon
D'artemis
Greenpeace (big green whale of a Buick)
Brown Betty
Sappho
Dastardly Custard
so we're weird. But hey, if you LOVE your car, won't it be INSPIRED to
run better and last longer?
-Jody
|
729.11 | | HPSTEK::XIA | In my beginning is my end. | Thu Mar 14 1991 16:18 | 4 |
| My ideal car will be what Sharon described in .6, plus it doesn't need
fuel to run.
Eugene
|
729.12 | ironically, she didn't get the joke(!) | COBWEB::swalker | Gravity: it's the law | Thu Mar 14 1991 16:18 | 1 |
| My sister named her 1978 (1979?) olds station wagon "Phillip".
|
729.13 | It's just a baby with 70,000 miles | PROSE::BLACHEK | | Thu Mar 14 1991 16:21 | 12 |
| Interestingly enough, my ex-husband's family's cars were always named
Esmerelda (sp??).
I'm still driving my first car...an 84 Mazda GLC. (Before that I drove
the folks car, and then the husband's. It took a divorce for me to get
a car.) I have lots of dreams of buying a fun car, but the $$ and
toting stuff to the dump (er...recycling center) side of me wins out.
Right now I'm trying to decide between getting a new car or driving
this one into the ground. Right now the ground is winning...
judy
|
729.14 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | 9� Weeks ==> life? | Thu Mar 14 1991 16:24 | 27 |
| >In '82 I bought Rozinante,
Is that anything like the ship Roncinante? ;^)
I loved my '85 Mustang GT. A high output V8 and rear wheel drive- a complete
blast to drive, even if it did tempt one to be naughty CONSTANTLY. Only
one ticket the whole time I owned her, though. I traded her at 70k for my
current '89 Probe GT. Front wheel drive and a 4 cyl with a turbo and
intercooler, but it goes pretty good, gets better gas mileage and has ABS
brakes. Not to mention it's easier to drive in the snow...
I also happen to love mom's Lexus LS400 that I convinced her to test drive.
She loves it too. Dad feels almost cheated in his Lincoln Continental. :-)
If I could have the fleet of cars I wanted it'd include a Lexus LS400 for
family events, etc. A 4WD beast for taking me to the remote mountain ponds
where the trout are fat and happy and fond of my feathered creations. I'd
absolutely demand a really hot sports car. The Acura NS-X is quite high on
my list, but I'd settle for a Misubishi 3000GT. ;^) Of course, the Corvette
ZR-1 would be a cool car to play with, and there are any number of high end
Ferraris and Porsches that would really take me to the limit. :-)
My real dream car would be obscenely fast and have frighteningly precise
handling. Sometimes I think I would be better offer driving a Formula 1
racer...
the Doctah
|
729.15 | | ASDG::GASSAWAY | Insert clever personal name here | Thu Mar 14 1991 16:30 | 14 |
| My first car was an '85 Dodge Aries (my Mom bought it for me). It was used
but only had 21,000 miles on it. I got it up to 30K before the
bi-monthly repairs started. Repairs like the exhaust pipes rotting and
taking the starter with them, blown head gasket, new brakes, clogged
heating system, broken windshield wiper motor, plus other maintenance
stuff like batteries, headlights, mufflers, tires......and TONS of gas,
seeing as it got about 21 MPG.
Finally dumped it at 60K when the wheel bearings went. Got my Civic,
35-40+ MPG, no problems.
I will NEVER buy another Chrysler, no matter what Lee says.
Lisa
|
729.16 | | RAVEN1::AAGESEN | to each their royal surface | Thu Mar 14 1991 17:06 | 12 |
|
i don't think i can ever remember not owning my volkswagon scirrocco!
it's and `83, and PAID for. (-:
as much as i would like to own a new car, the one i have right ow is
such a good little car, i can't justify the extra $300+ a month
payments for something i would "prefer".
~robin
|
729.17 | Subarus never die | VINO::LANGELO | Fighting for Our Lives | Thu Mar 14 1991 18:18 | 14 |
| I refer to my car, a black subaru, as my "dykemobile". She just turned
7 and has about 96XXX miles on her. Great car, no rust, runs good, the
radio still works well and she's got bucket seats that recline all the
way back (OK, no mention about what that's good for ;-)) Just gotta get
rid of her before the exhaust system rusts out again. Exhaust systems
on Subarus cost megabugs!
My ideal car...
I kind of like the little cars that the Jetsons fly around in. I mean
you don't have to stay on the road, you can just go all over space.
Great for exploring and you can make your own path!
Laurie
|
729.18 | modest dreams | DENVER::DORO | | Thu Mar 14 1991 19:30 | 8 |
|
re .2 dream car.....
a VW "bug" convertible, Fire Engine Red, White rag top, Interior redone
in plaid seats, with a heater that works.
=jamd
|
729.19 | | OXNARD::HAYNES | Charles Haynes | Thu Mar 14 1991 20:25 | 17 |
| Black BMW 325e - won't go any faster than 135 mph, 'cause I'm chicken.
I love this car. I hate people who buy fast cars then load them up with
a lot of junk and never drive them. This is a touring car - I put 20k
miles on it a year with driving to Yosemite, Lake Tahoe, and San Diego.
Used to be (before kid) that Janice and I would drive the 600+ miles to
San Diego for the pure pleasure of it.
The only person who has ever fallen asleep coming back from Yosemite
with me driving that car is a friend of mine who rock climbs for fun
and drives cabs in Boston for a living.
Other car - Subaru Legacy 4wd station wagon. The "kid car". Makes a
great ski car too...
I love both my cars!
-- Charles
|
729.20 | my "kids" :^) | LDYBUG::GOLDMAN | The simplest things... | Thu Mar 14 1991 20:30 | 36 |
| My first car was a '75 ('78?) Red Ford Granada. Dad bought it
for me in about '85 from a friend of his, who had already
affectionately named it "Baby". It came complete with mascot -
this little dog-like thing that sat on the dashboard (it was
pretty small, actually). I actually grew to love Baby - she was a
great college car. But she started having her problems after a
year or so, and dear Dad had another friend with a '76 Vega he
wanted to get rid of.
So...on to this car which I didn't even bother naming. Ugh -
I really HATED that car (but it was transportation, so I couldn't
really complain). There were so many times I thought I'd have to
get out and push the car to make it go! There's this hill on
Route 2 that's a key test for my cars now...in the Vega, I could
have the gas pedal to the floor and barely hit 30mph!
When I graduated, it was time for a real car - one that would
be good for commuting 80 miles a day (that's what I would be doing
at the time). Well, I really had my heart set on a Toyota (Celica
or Corolla Hatchback) but found that 1) I couldn't *really* afford
one and 2) they were kinda hard to find at the time I was looking.
So I did the next best thing - bought a half-Toyota! :^) I got a
Nova, which in three months will be all paid off!! This car has
been very good to me - other than routine maintenance and one
accident (in which I got hit), there really haven't been any
problems. My dad affectionately refers to her as Nelly Nova (this
from the guy who drove Ollie Oldsmobile for a while! :^) ).
I'll probably keep her for at least a year after she's paid
off, but I really want something sportier now! Don't really know
what though. I'm not sure I like the new Toyota Celica look
anymore. The Miata is gorgeous but outta my range! I'd love a
convertible, but around here, I don't think it's too practical.
I know, the heck with being practical - go for fun! :^)
amy
|
729.21 | 20K? Ha, that's not driving! | TLE::TLE::D_CARROLL | get used to it! | Thu Mar 14 1991 22:03 | 8 |
| >I hate people who buy fast cars then load them up with
> a lot of junk and never drive them. This is a touring car - I put 20k
> miles on it a year
I hate people who buy fast and fancy cars and never drive them.
D! who puts 25-30K on her car just commuting to work and going to
Boston 3 or 4 times a week
|
729.22 | Maybe not the way *you* drive... | OXNARD::HAYNES | Charles Haynes | Fri Mar 15 1991 00:41 | 3 |
| phlbtttt...
-- Charles
|
729.23 | Scarlet Lady | YUPPY::DAVIESA | Stain me with your kiss | Fri Mar 15 1991 04:21 | 14 |
|
I love my car.
She is an indulgence, and a luxury, and she's known as the Scarlet
Lady to my friends....a scarlet G-reg Toyota Celica 2.0 GTE (I think).
I never was interested in cars per se, but I just love the feeling of
driving her - an early spring morning, windows down, a chill in the
air, loud music......
Recently I thought that I might lose her (rumour of change in the
car scheme ) - I took a whole reel of photos to remember her by.
Luckily, it *was* a rumour and she's still with me.
'gail
|
729.25 | Little red festiva | KAHALA::CAMPBELL_K | Little things DO matter! | Fri Mar 15 1991 09:50 | 17 |
| My trusty little red Festiva is a great sport. She's endured the
humiliation of popsicle drippings, garage entrance scrapings, canary
yellow paint spills and muddy feet on the dashboard with true grace
and dignity. She ALWAYS starts, except for the time she was two
months old and her battery died, and I insisted on a new one installed
free of charge. She represents my first successful attempt at
independence; I researched consumer reports and haggled ferociously
with the dealership to get the price I wanted, with the warranty I
wanted. I test drove a pretty blue one from the lot, then spotting
her in the showroom, I pointed and said "I want THAT one." To the
chagrin of the manager, I would not purchase her until they cleared
the way from the showroom and let me drive HER. She's a gem.
Wow, I never thought I felt emotional about a car, really! Thanks
for the topic
Kim
|
729.26 | | BOOKS::GERDE | Cymbal crash 2X only...DTN 237-6302 | Fri Mar 15 1991 09:50 | 12 |
| Well, right now I have 4 vehicles ... three with 4 wheels and 1 with
two wheels. The two wheeler ('85 Kawasaki 454) is for sale. I had my
fun with motorcycles, and have moved on to roadsters.
For practicality I have an Astro minivan ... carries my drums, moves
things, and tows my travel trailer.
For eccentricity and winter driving I have my 1971 SAAB 96.
For fun I have a 1968 Triumph TR250 roadster.
Jo-Ann
|
729.27 | | STAR::MACKAY | C'est la vie! | Fri Mar 15 1991 10:04 | 14 |
|
Why do some people think that married women with kid(s) should drive
station wagons? I have been day dreaming about a new car (I really
need one, got 120k miles on my current one!). People keep asking
if I am getting a stationwagon or a minivan. Now, I don't mind
if that's my third car, but it isn't fair if my husband has the
Toyota Supra 99% of the time and I end up driving a boat (I can't
afford a Volvo turbo wagon). Are women supposed to be slow drivers?
I mean, when my kid(s) are grown (not have to pay daycare or college)
I'd love to get a Jaguar XJS or a Ferrari. In 20 some years, if you
see some old lady in a nice sport car, wave!!!
Eva
|
729.28 | | DDIF::JUDY | kneedeep in the hoopla | Fri Mar 15 1991 10:34 | 32 |
|
Let's see, my first car was an '82 Chevy Cavalier Type 10
that I bought from my dad. I had the worst luck with that
car. Flat tires, losing gears, more replaced parts....sold
it to my brother and he totalled it 6 months later (with brand
new tires!)
After that I bought an '84 Chrysler Laser Turbo. Loved that
car. Wasn't crazy about the color (brown) but had much better
luck with her than with the other thing. And how I *loved*
the turbo. Had it for almost two years but got the itch (like
my dad) for something different. On the day I was to go looking
her clutch went. Driving it to the dealership for trade in was
not fun.
Now I have an '87 Toyota 4x4. Runs great and haven't had any
major problems. Had to have the exhaust replaced three weeks
after buying it but the dealership gave me a 'break'. (how
nice of them, I was still peeved) She has a few bangs in her
and is starting to rust in a few places but I think I'll
probably keep her till she's paid off. (another 2 1/2 years)
I never really named any of my cars. My mom always calls hers
Jezebel. And she refuses to drive/buy anything but a Chevy
Caprice Classic. Drove the first one into the ground and
bought another one.
My dream car? '64-'68 black Mustang convertible. white interior
and hot pink pinstriping.....sigh......
JJ
|
729.29 | does this belong in the 'true confessions' note? | SA1794::CHARBONND | You're hoping the sun won't rise | Fri Mar 15 1991 10:53 | 4 |
| re .27 Corollary - when I see a woman driving a minivan or station
wagon I automatically assume she's married with children (at
least 3.) If I see a woman driving a 4x4 I assume she's either
married or living with someone (no kids) and it's _his_ truck.
|
729.30 | | DDIF::JUDY | kneedeep in the hoopla | Fri Mar 15 1991 11:12 | 9 |
|
re: .29
Exactly why I want to get a vanity plate (the ones you can
buy in the store) that says "Hers, Not His" or "No, this is
NOT my husband's truck" =)
JJ
|
729.31 | Sterotype alert! | CSC32::M_EVANS | | Fri Mar 15 1991 11:28 | 11 |
| But Dana, my 4x4 cost less than a station wagon would have ;-) and it's
all mine (and the bank's). Seats five and plenty of cargo space for
all the outdoor gear we want to take and the dog. But, maybe this is a
Colorado anomoly.
In the but there's still hope type of way, The last time I went to
gas up my trooper, there were four other 4x4's of varying varieties,
all being filled and driven by women. The dealer who sold me my
monster told me about half of the 4x4's he sells are to women.
Meg
|
729.32 | I hate cars now | TOOK::CURRIER | | Fri Mar 15 1991 13:13 | 50 |
| My first car was a (ery) used blue '58 Chevy. We called her Bertha the
tank. My father used to get season passes to the drive-ins that would
admit a car-full for $1. A whole bunch of us would pop pop-corn, bring
our own sodas and go the dirve-in every time the movie change for only
pennies a head.
My first new car was a yellow '67 Mustang convertable - a small 8 with
no extras. It was a very dependable car.
In '70 I traded up to a '70 red Mustang conbertable with ALL the
extras. The biggest 8 you could fit under the hood of a Mustang -
Hirst speed shifter - close ratio stearing - etc. etc.... A/C
stereo tape deck. It went faster in reverse than most car went in
forward. Kept it for 5 years - but after I had it a few years an
air-head swerved onto the wrong side of the street and did a real
number on it. It was in the shop for months - due to legal hassles (I
couldn't drive for a few months anyway - it was in it when it was hit)
and some cowboy did a number on the clutch. It was never the same
after that.
Next car I decided it was time for a change. I got a '75 Vovlo (top of
the line). It was OK for ~ 3 yrs - but then it started to have
problems. It cost almost as much to keep it runninig the last 2 years
as I paid for it.
While I had the Volvo, I acquired a husband and we aquired a '78
Porsche. Boy we loved that car. We never drove it in the winter.
Taking it for its first spring drive was always a blast. It NEVER gave
us any trouble. IT was a great road car. IT was the only car I was
comfortable in when I was pregnant. Our mechanic put a child car seat
in it and our daughter loved it also. Her first complete gramatically
correct sentence was "Daddy can I drive the silver car?" All good
things must come to an end - and the poor silver car met its end on 93.
A bufoon weaving and out of traffic at high speeds ran over the front
of it and in the ensueing wild ride itr bounced off the guard rail in
the median strip several times. My husband says the spinning out at
high speed with cars coming at you no matter which way you look really
gets the adrenalin going. The seat belts really worked well - my
husband walked away from it.
We have a '79 Rabbit which was the Porsche's winter alter ego. We also
have a '87 mini-van. This is our second mini-van. I blew up the
engine on the first. I figured it was a fluke - so I got another. But
I had to replace the head gasket early on. I've heard this is a common
problem. I doubt I'll get another. As to women generally driving the
family-mobiles and being slow drivers - don't bet on it - and if you
see me coming - stay out of my way. As they say - it ain't the meat,
it's the motion.
|
729.33 | | STAR::BECK | Paul Beck | Fri Mar 15 1991 14:27 | 4 |
| > re .27 Corollary - ...
Would that be a Toyota Corollary?
|
729.34 | | LAGUNA::BROWN_RO | | Fri Mar 15 1991 14:40 | 18 |
| infamous cars from my past:
"The Rustang": a 1965 you-know-what, in advanced stage of body-rot,
purchased for $125.00, ran for years while I was a student. A great
car, fun to drive, until the leaf springs came through the
trunk floor, and the floor fell out on the driver's side. Hauled
away for unpaid parking tickets.
"Nashty": a 1941 Nash, looked like a cartoon version of streamline,
wide whitewalls, giant tube radio with great sound, drove it until
it threw a piston.
"The Nun_mobile": 1977 Plymouth Volare station wagon, black, so
christened by a friend who thought it was the kind of car that nuns
would drive. It had a 318 v-8 and could haul.
-roger
|
729.35 | a love/hate relationship | CSSE32::RANDALL | Bonnie Randall Schutzman, CSSE/DSS | Fri Mar 15 1991 14:47 | 6 |
| My grandmother's most/least favorite car was a black 1939 Packard
that she called either "The Hearse" or "The Lumber Wagon,"
depending on whether she was more offended by its appearance or by
how big and hard to steer it was.
--bonnie
|
729.36 | | IE0010::MALING | Mirthquake! | Fri Mar 15 1991 16:05 | 6 |
| I like my toy auto silly car (Toyota Celica) :-)
And I think CRXen are cute, I call them Japaneese Beetles :-)
Mary
|
729.37 | | SCARGO::CONNELL | People can live on moments of magic. | Fri Mar 15 1991 16:59 | 21 |
| The Beast, my first car was a 1965 Buick Gran Sport. It was one of the
last of the 401 cubic inchers. Loved that car. I was stopped doing 125
in a 60 zone. The officer had a brand new 1972 Chrysler 440 Police
Interceptor. Nothing was supposed to be able to touch them. He told me
that if I hadn't slowed down to get off the turnpike, he never would
have caught me. I was impressed with my car. Even more when I went from
Rt 62 in Burlington Mass. to Baboosic Lake Road in Merrimack, N.H. in
20 minutes one Saturday. THis is a distance of about 30 miles and not
all highway. At least 5 miles was regular road. All I know is I left
burlington at 10:30 in the AM and had to be at the Catholic church in
Merrimack by 11:00. I still had 10 minutes left when I got out of the
car. This car and I could do no wrong. I came close to becoming a
grease spot on the road so many times, but this car wouldn't let me. It
was a big old boat anchor. I loved the power. Muscle Car yeah.
Burlington Vt. to Concord NH. in 1.25 hours. Nasua to the Coast in 15
minutes.
Phil, who remembers being young and stupid, but still remembers feeling
the NNNEEEEEDDDDD FFFFOOOOORRRR SSSSPPPPEEEEDDDDDD.
|
729.38 | I want my Fiat X19 back! | LRCSNL::WALES | David from Down-under | Sun Mar 17 1991 06:59 | 20 |
| G'Day,
I've had a couple of bombs and about 4 years ago I was hassling my
manager about getting me a company car. We investigated job changes
etc but had no luck. I eventually went out and bought a Fiat X19. Now
that is a great car. For those that don't know it is a two seater,
mid-engined, targa-topped fun machine. They're not the fastest machine
on four (two sometimes :-) ) wheels but they handle exceptionally well
because of the mid mounted engine. Anyway, wouldn't you know it, two
years later my job changes slightly so I qualified for a company car!
I toyed with the idea of keeping the Fiat but simple economics said sell
it. The day I gave over the keys of my Fiat to the new owner was one
of the saddest days of my life.
My company car is a Ford Telstar (aka Mazda 626) hatchback which is
a good car but it doesn't even come close to the Fiat in the 'fun in
the sun' stakes.
David.
|
729.39 | cars i have known | VAOU02::HALLIDAY | this lovely mess | Sun Mar 17 1991 12:04 | 13 |
| i drive my trusty decwreck, a black '90 taurus. it has a 3 liter v6 and
a carrying capacity of 4 dykes. the first car i ever drove on a
more-or-less exclusive basis was a '65 vauxhall. not exactly suited for
freeway driving (unlike the taurus - ZOOM!), but amazing gas mileage
from its 1 liter sewing machine-cum-engine. my mom and dad still have a
'78 toyota celica liftback that i wouldn't mind having, but my real
dream car would be an early ferrari dino - remember the sexy little v6
jobs from the mid-70s?
crxen are neat, but i don't fit in them very well. too bad...perhaps
i'd compromise on a taurus sho. or maybe something german. hmmm...
...laura
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729.40 | Let's hear it for a 8-seater van | SNOBRD::CONLIFFE | out-of-the-closet Thespian | Mon Mar 18 1991 10:05 | 14 |
| I must be getting old, but I think I've finally acquired my dream machine, and
it surprises me. About three months ago, we bought a '91 GMC Safari van/wagon
with the "grand touring options". This beast has automatic transmission,
cruise control, various eletrical gadgets, traditional (analog) instrumentation
and seats more people than I know! It's great for towing the camper, dragging
theatre stuff around, dragging TV/Film stuff around, long journeys, short
journeys, taking our son and his friends on Cub Scount outings, lunch outings
at work, erc etc etc. Literally, this is the first vehicle that I have owned
(well, co-own with GMAC at the moment!!) that I can find nothing wrong with.
Most every other car that I have owned has had something that I said "well, the
NEXT car that I own will have <mumble>" about it!
Middle aged
Nigel
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729.41 | Blackbeast | TLE::DBANG::carroll | ...get used to it! | Mon Mar 18 1991 10:53 | 12 |
| I should mention...one of the main reasons I decided to go for practical
(sedan) rather than lust (CRX) is because I already own one lust-object
vehicle - my motorcycle. Really, I would like a car that is speedy and
handles like a sports car - but no car I could possibly actually own could
have better acceleration or feel than a *motorcycle*. So I already have one
impractical but fun two-seater...and a practical five-seater for good
measure.
D!
[But then there are people like Nancy who have a two-wheeled toy *and* a
four-wheeled toy.]
|
729.42 | at the risk of offending, I'll let it all hang out | BLUMON::GUGEL | Adrenaline: my drug of choice | Tue Mar 19 1991 15:21 | 18 |
|
I haven't read all the replies in detail, but I will *never*
understand this naming of cars. They are just machines, after all.
It seems so stupid and silly to me. They really don't have
personalities...well, at least *I'm* not that superstitious.
(Rathole: Remember Stephen King's _Christine_? I did like that movie,
however.)
And at the risk of further offending, ;-), I'll say that I can't
stand the Californian (LAish) overly and exaggerated materialistic
attitude toward cars. Like they're something to die for...really?
Shades of the self-satisfied, smug, gas-guzzling American culture.
That's not my style.
So I drive a Mazda 323 - good basic transportation with good gas
mileage...good for commuting and getting around. Tell me what else
I need from a car?
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729.43 | I don't like ANY cars! | CADSYS::CADSYS::RICHARDSON | | Tue Mar 19 1991 16:12 | 18 |
| My mother, who used to always drive Fords but now owns a Chyrsler, used
to name all the Fords "Betsy", but I don't know why.
I don't like ANY cars. When my old Chevy blew its engine just over a
year ago, I spent way too much time trying to find a reasonable used
car as a replacement. I wanted a small, front-wheel-drive, four-door
car, automatic transmission (I have a bit of arthritis in my hips so I
can't always comfortably manage a clutch), and enough trunk or covered
hatch space for the stuff I usually haul - without spending a FORTUNE.
I would have preferred a used Toyota or Chevy Nova (same car with
different nameplate for the years I was looking at) since I prefer a
hatchback, but eventually bought a VW. It's a CAR, what can I say?
There is a guy in my group who LOVES cars, a real "gear-head", who
spends all his free time lovingly rebuilding, polishing, and driving
his precious cars - real strange stuff!
/Charlotte
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729.45 | And sometimes I call it Orange... | SONATA::ERVIN | Roots & Wings... | Tue Mar 19 1991 16:49 | 9 |
| Charlotte,
>>There is a guy in my group who LOVES cars, a real "gear-head", who
>>spends all his free time lovingly rebuilding, polishing, and driving
>>his precious cars - real strange stuff!
My car is named 1975 MGB and is still for sale. You think this
'gear-head' would be interested in buying it? ;-)
|
729.47 | VW Bug | LEZAH::QUIRIY | Love is a verb. | Tue Mar 19 1991 17:53 | 39 |
|
I can't really get into naming my cars either.
I was fond of the first car I ever really owned, a green VW bug. I
bought it for $400 without an engine, got a rebuilt engine for $200,
and 4 old porsche wheels with decent tires on 'em for another $200.
Friends helped me put the car together and taught me how to maintain
it. The fenders and the trunk were all dinged up so I eventually
brought it to a body shop where they replaced the fenders and trunk
lid and painted it metallic green. I couldn't afford new bumpers
(or trim) when they were finished so a friend helped me to make
"temporary" wooden bumpers out of 4"x4" (6"x6") pine. They looked
so good I never tried to find chrome ones. The day before I left
Tacoma, WA, and about a week or two after I'd gotten the car out of
the body shop a big truck backed into me and crunched my trunk lid.
I hitched my bug behind my friend's UHaul and we set out from
Washington heading east; he to Tennessee, and me, ultimately, to
Massachusetts. Somewhere in (I think it was) Wyoming I picked up
a huge tumbleweed and put it in the backseat.
The heater worked pretty well when I first got it but after almost 10
years of faithful service, the heater boxes were rusting out and I used
to keep a blanket in there in the winter; due to a slight accident (a
friend borrowed the car) the trunk lid didn't close tightly and I used
to get quite a good draft through the fuse box right onto my knees.
Needless to say, the defroster didn't work either and I tried to keep
well-stocked with de-icer. I just didn't drive if the weather was
freezing rain or sleet.
But, darn, I loved that car. It had personality, character. I only
got stuck in the snow once, and one time I even pushed a Chevy that had
gotten stuck. (They laughed when I offered to help...) It had over
200,000 miles when I sold it to get something with more comfort and
I feel no attachment for this car at all (Toyota Tercel, 1983). When I
first got it I couldn't believe how comfortable it was nor how FAST I
could go! :-) But it's no fun and I know I'll get another bug someday.
CQ
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729.48 | Non-computer bugs | VINO::LANGELO | Fighting for Our Lives | Tue Mar 19 1991 22:02 | 23 |
| RE: -1
My first car was a bug also, a super beetle and it was 13 years old.
Yah, it had character too and believe it or not the heater actually
worked :-) I had it when I was in college. I used to throw all kinds of
junk in the backseat: computer printouts, books, notebooks, old socks,
clothes, trash from fast-food places etc. I never really knew what
color the backseat was cuz it was always buried in junk. One time when
I cleaned out the backseat I found a banana peel buried underneath all
the junk in the back. It had been there a while :-) like weeks.
About a year after I had it it won't start in the rain. So any time it
was raining I knew I was in trouble.
Hahahahah...I was thinking about one snow storm we had. The house my
family used to live in had a steep driveway. My father was having
trouble getting all the cars up the driveway but when it came time for
my little bug, no problem. It zipped right up the driveway and didn't
get stuck once. :-)
Then I bought my subaru in '85 and I've had it ever since.
Laurie
|
729.49 | | USWS::HOLT | | Fri Mar 22 1991 02:00 | 2 |
|
I never did understand car-directed athropomorphism..
|
729.50 | wabbitt has her personality gender confused tho | MELKOR::HENSLEY | nil illegitimi carborundum | Fri Mar 22 1991 14:08 | 9 |
| I am not sure if this qualifies as anthropomorphic, but I refer to my
trusty old diesel rabbit as der disesl (of course it probably is das
diesel....) and want it to have personalized plates (which I am sure
are taken in vanity-plate-California)
PETRA.
feminine form of Peter (in at least one language!)
|
729.51 | | GAZERS::NOONAN | I said NO! Now stop whining! | Fri Mar 22 1991 14:24 | 8 |
|
...actually, I could live with an Eagle Talon. No, really! I could.
E Grace
|
729.52 | dreams that won't die | CISM::MCATEE | | Wed May 01 1991 17:08 | 17 |
|
My first car was an '85 Honda Civic - I called it "Baby", partially
because it looked like a baby and also because it was my first car (and
I was able to buy it cash down). I drove it out to college in Chicago
(from Boston), drove it all over the state of Illinois, and drove it
home this past summer when I moved back home. I loved that car!
However, as happy as I was with it, I kept dreaming of a faster,
sleeker, more expensive sports car. Let's face it - ya just don't get
checked out as much driving in a Honda Civic as you do in a sports car.
Well, six weeks ago, I let my baby go. It was a hard decision. I
bought a beautiful Mitsubishi Eclipse DOHC T (same car as an Eagle
Talon). I will be in debt forever - but I am very happy that I made
one of my dreams come true.
Nancy
|