Joined: Aug 2017 Posts: 3,000 Threads: 168
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Location: Sherwood Forest
Car type: 1938 Talbot Ten Airline
02-02-2023, 04:14 PM
(This post was last modified: 04-02-2023, 09:28 AM by Mike Costigan.)
I think you may well be correct; I can recall winter journeys in the family Lagonda in the 1950s when the roads - even main roads - would be packed snow requiring my father to demonstrate four-wheel drifts at any and every opportunity
Joined: May 2018 Posts: 2,942 Threads: 557
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Location: Peak District, Derbyshire
Car type: 1929 Chummy, 1930 Chummy, 1930 Ulster Replica, 1934 Ruby
As a child, I lived in Sheffield at 750 feet above sea level, on a NE-facing hill. Winters were great fun; we could sledge down the side roads - until the council came along with a man standing in the back of an open truck shovelling out not salt, but grit. That situation lasted until perhaps 1954 or 1955 after which salt must have been used.
Joined: Aug 2017 Posts: 2,389 Threads: 33
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Location: Deepest Frogland 30960
Car type: 1933 RP Standard Saloon
Now they just don't come round.
Joined: Aug 2017 Posts: 911 Threads: 22
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Location: Near Cambridge, UK
Car type: 1928 tourer (mag type), short chassis Gould Ulster
Having only just read the other comments in this thread I am reminded that a woman living next door to us paid £275 for an RP from the local garage in 1947, so it had more than doubled in price since new!
Joined: Aug 2017 Posts: 3,000 Threads: 168
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Location: Sherwood Forest
Car type: 1938 Talbot Ten Airline
Thanks for that titbit, Robert; I knew prices in the 1940s were high but I couldn't find any actual values. Significantly £275 may have been twice its new price, but it was also probably ten times its value immediately pre-War!
Joined: Aug 2022 Posts: 149 Threads: 27
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Location: Cheshire
Car type: Austin 7 RN - 1932
Super Pic. Those were the days eh! lads - and you tell the youngsters today about it and they don't believe you. My grandchildren reckon that Grandad can't have a car older than himself.
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Possibly only the super observant would have noticed that, in the Pop Up museum, in one of the exhibits cases I had placed a couple of copies of Glass' Guide one shortly prewar and one post war. The pages that I left them open at showed the huge increase in the value of a Ruby after the war. That was the same for the value of any car, of course.
This was all driven by the introduction of purchase tax. Initially, in 1940, it was introduced at 33.33% but to drive the export trade this was increased to 66% for cars costing over £1000 in 1947. This rate was extended to all cars from 1951. In 1953 it was reduced to 50%.