[PRCo] Re: Clermont - Ferrnand, France
Schneider Fred
fwschneider at comcast.net
Fri Jul 31 17:30:52 EDT 2009
Fix it, I guess.
But then, Jerry, when is the last time you had a flat tire.
Today's steel belted radial tires are amazingly durable. I have
lost two through road hazards, one in 1974 in Washington state and
another when a railroad time fell off a pick up truck right in front
of me on an expressway and there was absolutely no way I could dodge
it. That cost me more than a tire ... it also cost me a wheel.
That's two tires in over a million miles, Jerry.
I also had one go bad on two go bad on rental cars but then maybe
they don't put the best tires on their cars. One happened in
Scotland and the other driving a Ford over an imaginary road (or
trail) in the Mojave Desert while trying to get to the Santa Fe
railroad. Maybe that is because of a** holes like me that the
rental car companies no longer gladly give you new tires when you
chew them up driving over rocks and snakes chasing trains.
If we go back to the 1920s, expensive touring cars might have had one
spare tire on each running board and perhaps some might have even had
a third spare on the rear and they weren't ornaments either.
Even 50 years ago flats were common. My father had a lot of
problems with his 1952 Ford ... the wheel rims would constantly chew
up inner tubes (remember them?). Called rim cuts. He might have
had one or two flat tires a year because of rim cuts. The car was
a mistake to begin with ... the dealer in Lancaster didn't want to
sell dad a 6 cylinder automatic but dad had to have one; he ordered
it through a Pittsburgh dealer and had it made special in Michigan.
What a gutless wonder. It would do all of 15 mph on some Pittsburgh
streets. He solved the acceleration problems and rim cuts with a
1956 Mercury ... he learned his less and bought at V8 (and I don't
mean tomato juice). I don't think he ever had another flat tire.
And, get this Mr. Lybarger, in spite of body to frame squeaks, he did
get 146,000 miles out of the Merc which was phenomenal for those
model years.
(And how many typos are in this one, Ed????)
On Jul 31, 2009, at 5:10 PM, JERRY.MATSICK wrote:
>
> Flat Tires? What in the world would you do with one? Nice
> looking system!
>
>
>
> Jerry M
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Schneider Fred" <fwschneider at comcast.net>
> To: "Skip Gatermann" <biker4 at sbcglobal.net>, "May Jack"
> <Jack.May at americomm.net>, "Craig Phil" <philgcraig204 at yahoo.com>,
> "Bente Bruce" <bbente at bellsouth.net>, pittsburgh-railways at dementia.org
> Sent: Friday, July 31, 2009 5:04:32 PM GMT -05:00 US/Canada Eastern
> Subject: [PRCo]
>
> Isn't this an interesting way of doing business ... a hybrid trolley
> bus or a hybrid streetcar? It has a guideway which
> serves as the power return rail. Therefore we only need a
> pantograph to collect positive energy from the trolley
> wire. But apparently it runs on rubber tires and is steerable,
> following the guideway. And it's as long as a light
> rail car.
>
> Occurs to me that it might be an interesting place to go have
> dinner.....
>
> Clermont - Ferrnand, France.
>
>
> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8GweHFXI3Ak&feature=channel
>
>
>
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