Joined: Mar 2015 Posts: 5,442 Threads: 231
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Location: Scotchland
An article that compares the two designs will be factual - I for one hope nothing will be imagined to embellish and titillate, however plausible it may be in the writers’ heads.
Joined: Aug 2017 Posts: 686 Threads: 112
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I think it would be incorrect to assume that at the very least, whatever Stanley's knowledge of the Peugeot might have been, Sir Herbert would have known about the car. As an engineer, he would have exposed himself to engineering ideas of the day, especially in the automotive world and either used and modified, or discarded ideas he saw as lacking or unnecessary. That's what fascinates me about that period of automobile design. Engineers were trying different ideas. That the Seven got so much right, at such an early time, is remarkable. It had four wheel brakes. Unlike the Model T, it had a "real" gearbox. Just my two pence worth.
Erich in Mukilteo
Joined: Jan 2019 Posts: 1,567 Threads: 20
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Location: Bala North Wales
Car type: 1933 RP Standard Saloon
If memory serves me correctly, I believe that Henry Ford got his designers to come up with a transmission that was both foolproof an easy to use, given the difficulties encountered with operating the gearboxes of the day.
Joined: Aug 2017 Posts: 2,400 Threads: 33
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Location: Deepest Frogland 30960
Car type: 1933 RP Standard Saloon
Don't do anything to the engine until you've drained the sump and put some clean oil in it!
Joined: May 2018 Posts: 2,953 Threads: 558
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Location: Peak District, Derbyshire
Car type: 1929 Chummy, 1930 Chummy, 1930 Ulster Replica, 1934 Ruby
15-04-2023, 04:28 PM
(This post was last modified: 17-04-2023, 12:35 PM by Tony Griffiths.)
I'd very much second Reckless Rat's opinion - in fact, I'd go further and suggest it would be a very good idea to remove the sump and clean out all the muck that will have settled to the bottom over the last 50 years. That, of course, assumes that there is oil in the sump. I recall a 1932 saloon that had been standing for at least ten years; the dipstick showed the oil to be as-new, but when the sump was removed that there was a thick layer of black dirt in the bottom.