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
It's interesting to reflect on how vehicle technology has advanced since 1900 due to a combination of market-led competition and government regulations. In the 1960s* and 1970s flyweight hatchbacks with vast performance - but few safety features - killed hundreds of thousands every year across the world. Seat belts (thanks to Volvo who refused to patent the cross-lap system), air-bags, crumple zones, anti-side-intrusion bars, superior rustproofing, better tyres, etc. have made things so much safer. Cars now weighing twice as much as the same models of 30 years ago yet are more economical, comfortable and with better road-holding. After five years they are no longer the rusted-through-death-trap-as rotten-as-a-pear Mk.1 Ford-Escort and continue to survive crashes just as well into old age as when new. Although these developments are all most welcome, has something been missed, or deliberately excluded - and might this be 'longevity'? Could designers make a 'lifetime' car or truck that could last, say, 50 years without major work? Or would that be the death of motor manufacturing and fashion-led consumerism - and lead to a communist-style "Trabant situation"?
*The highest UK deaths-on-the-road figure in peacetime was 7,985 in 1966.
Joined: Aug 2017 Posts: 427 Threads: 35
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Location: Garden of England
Car type: ARQ Ruby July 1936
Forgive me if my memory is playing tricks with me but I am pretty damn sure I recall many years ago an independent fellow invented and patented a rubber formula that would produce an “everlasting” tyre, his patent was immediately bought out for a suitable sum by one of the giants of the time, Dunlop’s, Goodyear’s etc and the formula quietly filed away, never to be seen again.........
Denis S
Joined: Aug 2017 Posts: 1,533 Threads: 60
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Kept in storage at Area 51 along with the everlasting match, cure for cancer and the skeletons of aliens?
Joined: Aug 2017 Posts: 1,337 Threads: 34
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Location: Cheshire
Car type: Race Ulster, 1926 Special, 1927 Chummy, 1930 Box
20-11-2020, 03:59 PM
(This post was last modified: 20-11-2020, 04:00 PM by Alan.)
Probably an urban myth, but it is true that tyre manufacturers sell their product very cheaply to car companies to get them as original fit. Then overcharge us for the replacements.
Alan Fairless
Joined: Aug 2017 Posts: 1,337 Threads: 34
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Location: Cheshire
Car type: Race Ulster, 1926 Special, 1927 Chummy, 1930 Box
When you buy your new Audi A3 (other car models are available) it’s 205/55HR16 tyres have likely been developed to suit the handling characteristic of that particular model. I know this because it’s what I did for a living for 20 years last century. It still goes on. When they wear out what you replace them with is a tyre of the same size developed by the tyre company to be cheap to manufacture. It’s likely designed to wear out quick too because they want to sell more of them. The thing to do is to buy your tyres not from quickfit but from your car main dealer. It’s expensive but you should get original fit tyres.
Alan Fairless