|
Welcome to the Australian Ford Forums forum. You are currently viewing our boards as a guest which gives you limited access to view most discussions and inserts advertising. By joining our free community you will have access to post topics, communicate privately with other members, respond to polls, upload content and access many other special features without post based advertising banners. Registration is simple and absolutely free so please, join our community today! If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, please contact us. Please Note: All new registrations go through a manual approval queue to keep spammers out. This is checked twice each day so there will be a delay before your registration is activated. |
|
The Pub For General Automotive Related Talk |
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
25-12-2013, 12:29 AM | #31 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Canberra Region
Posts: 9,065
|
If people prefer chintzy feature on cars than their fellow citizens being employed, then they deserve everything that happens to society when you have mass unemployment.
__________________
2016 FGX XR8 Sprint, 6speed manual, Kinetic Blue #170 2004 BA wagon RTV project. 1998 EL XR8, Auto, Hot Chilli Red 1993 ED XR6, 5speed, Polynesian Green. 1 of 329. Retired 1968 XT Falcon 500 wagon, 3 on the tree, 3.6L. Patina project. |
||
25-12-2013, 12:36 AM | #32 | |||
Regular Member
Join Date: Mar 2013
Posts: 207
|
Falcons were the same underbody for probably even longer... They had a stretch of upper body only changes for a very long time. Also even though you can bolt a VN front and rear end into a vb-vl. It'll have a wider track and almost rub the guards. So its not really the same width. VT-VZ is quite different, that stuff doesn't bolt in. Neither does the VS front end or any of the VP-VS IRS rear end.
Quote:
Last edited by Cuyper; 25-12-2013 at 12:42 AM. |
|||
25-12-2013, 01:02 AM | #33 | |||
Banned
Join Date: Mar 2006
Posts: 1,223
|
Quote:
And what happened to all those glorious and well equipped Japanese imports of the 70's and 80's? They quickly became smoke billowing **** boxes. They are as rare as hens teeth these days whereas you see plenty of old Holdens and Falcons still getting around. |
|||
25-12-2013, 05:42 AM | #34 | ||||
I am Groot
Join Date: Dec 2007
Location: Burnett Heads, Qld
Posts: 6,840
|
Quote:
Quote:
__________________
.. McLaren F1 Dick Johnson Racing "Those were the days when the cars were cars, they weren't built out of an Ikea pack like they are now and clothed in plastic; they were real cars." John Bowe |
||||
25-12-2013, 08:31 AM | #35 | |||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: Apr 2009
Posts: 2,215
|
Quote:
|
|||
25-12-2013, 09:15 AM | #36 | |||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: Apr 2009
Posts: 2,215
|
Quote:
The aussie people were backward mainly just like the yanks, they loved there drum brake poorly damped understeering cars because that was all they could comprehend. they do not consist of driving enthusiast but just stupid lazy dopey numb skull twerps that some how have a licence. People were mainly poor in this nation if you look back so they bought 6 cyl kingswoods etc = junk but you could get V8's and get them perfoming well but this was fround on by most, even mechanics as they would say why do you want better brakes etc. Look at the aurion they etc of today they don't cut it compared to commodore or falcon to drive and where you can drive them, ok for a city car for some fairy driver as this FWD crap is not made for the majority of true aussie conditions of a 2WD. look at our utes nothing is better than the aussies by far. |
|||
This user likes this post: |
25-12-2013, 10:46 AM | #37 | ||||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: Feb 2011
Location: On The Footplate.
Posts: 5,086
|
Quote:
"Aussie" utes? "Nothing better"? Tell me where I could find something "Aussie" that does what our Triton dual cab does...and it's not just me...look at the explosion of dual cabs these days. They're the ideal "car" for a lot of people...the room of a sedan, a ute back able to be covered with a canopy to hold huge amounts of stuff, four wheel drive ability, diesels...the list goes on. RWD? Getting the tail out is hardly high on the list of requirements for a family car. Towing? People don't buy Falcons or Commodores to tow big vans and boats...they buy one of the staggering range of AWD or four wheel drive vehicles. Too many people honestly believe that when buyers consider a new car, the first thing on their mind is which end is driving the wheels, what it's 0-100 time is, and what sort of quarter mile time it can post... Quote:
Perhaps you don't remember the "golden era" of Australian car manufacture...the days when even something as simple as a rear window demister or a radio was an option, and sometimes expensive options. Hell, I always wished someone had ticked the option box for power boosted brakes on my VH 265 hemi Charger...the piddly little foreign Mazda Capella (also from 1971) that I owned before it had the following standard which were merely options on the Charger: front disc brakes, power boosted brakes, rear window demister (not even sure you could get that on a Charger), AM/FM stereo, tinted glass, cloth seats, pile carpets...the list goes on and on. Back to the good old days where, unless you stumped up the cash for a car brand new and ticked a lot of option boxes (and as I said, some you couldn't even get), if you bought second hand you were usually up for a lot of extra spending to bring it up to a good standard. Car makers in Australia were lazy...cars weren't just "under-equipped", they were shoddy by todays standards. Hell, sometimes they were even shoddy by the standards back then. Forget the Premiers and Fairmonts and Regals that you see now in immaculate restored condition...the "normal" cars that people bought in large numbers were things like Belmonts, Kingswoods, Falcon 500's, and Rangers. These things were basic, but people were happy with them...because they didn't know better. They'd been convinced that this was "as good as it gets" when it came to "motoring excellence". There were people who were willing to look outside the box and consider something different, and they were often a voice in the wilderness amongst neighbours with underpowered, ill-handling, under-equipped land barges that were dynamically way behind even basic Japanese offerings. They were allowed to continue like this because of strong tariff and tax protections from the government. Today we have pretty good cars from local makers...we have some absolutely excellent ones with amazing features...but they're mostly the imported ones rebadged and localised. The big two cars, Falcon and Commodore, are good...but they could be so much better. The public isn't stupid...they're better educated than ever about cars. They no longer walk into a dealer and believe that their only "choice" is a large six cylinder local sedan that doesn't actually suit their needs these days. Those days are long gone...potential buyers are more badge-blind than ever, because honestly it's hard to buy a "bad" car nowadays. there's such a huge range that you will find pretty much anything to suit your needs, but large scale trends come and go, and the days of big rear drive sedans have "went" to the vast majority of the car buying public. People will not just walk in and plonk down cash on a car because dad had one and his dad had one...they will research carefully on the internet, they will ring around, they'll talk to other people, they'll take time to buy a car, much longer than they ever used to. It's a shame that the car makers didn't see this coming, when it was so bloody obvious. Otherwise we could still see locally made cars on the menu. Last edited by 2011G6E; 25-12-2013 at 11:01 AM. |
||||
25-12-2013, 01:11 PM | #38 | |||
DJT 45 and 47 POTUS
Join Date: Sep 2013
Posts: 7,407
|
Quote:
|
|||
This user likes this post: |
25-12-2013, 03:35 PM | #39 | ||
Regular Member
Join Date: Sep 2008
Location: Maryborough QLD
Posts: 306
|
Lets face it most new cars now are just computers with wheels ,the younger folk wont buy it if it hasnt got blue tooth ,a dvd player and can park itself cause most have no idea how to park and of course cruise control ,stability control ,cause they cant drive either and all the rest of the crap ,our local cars are just as good or better than the imported rubbish pity they didnt load them a bit more with the extras the poor little souls need these days just to drive 5kms to work in their little office
|
||
This user likes this post: |
25-12-2013, 07:23 PM | #40 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: Salamander Bay
Posts: 5,427
|
Not difficult to understand I was just seeking clarification as people have different ideas of what constitutes a local car. many said the Laser was not a true local car as it was just a Mazda 323 in CKD kit form
__________________
[SIGPIC][/SIGPIC]
Everyone starts off with a bag full of luck and an empty bag of experience. The trick is to fill the experience bag before the luck bag is empty. "It is better to remain silent and be thought a fool than to speak out and remove all doubt." Start a new career as a bus driver Rides: FG2 XR6 stock at this stage but a very nice ride xc 4 DOOR X CHASER 5.8 UNDER RESTO |
||
25-12-2013, 07:38 PM | #41 | |||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: Feb 2011
Location: On The Footplate.
Posts: 5,086
|
Quote:
It also worked the other way...the Ford Maverick (Nissan Patrol) went back to the local Ford warranty of 1yr/20,000...half the warranty the exact same vehicle came with when the badge said "Nissan". Ah yes...the good old days when local makers were so trusting of their magnificent product that they offered half (or less) of the warranty of those pesky rubbish foreign cars... Good point you make...do CKD cars count as "foreign" even though they're pretty much completely screwed together here...? I also love it when people start deriding modern safety and convenience features as "unnecessary toys" or similar terms, especially the way foreign cars are usually packed with these features as standard. I'd pose this question: would you rather buy a completely Australian built car without cruise control, CD player, ABS, stability control, and all the other normal modern car features we have come to expect, just to say you "bought Australian"...? If so, then you must like the good old days of the 70's, when Australian cars were indeed lacking in everything but the gullible public had been brainwashed into thinking they were "world standard"... Last edited by 2011G6E; 25-12-2013 at 08:03 PM. |
|||
25-12-2013, 08:13 PM | #42 | ||
Regular Member
Join Date: Sep 2008
Location: Maryborough QLD
Posts: 306
|
1970 -71was a very good year i thought ,GTHO aint nothing built like it today ,and if they made one today id buy one ,without all the bells and whistles ,and really the only problem with the later ones was rust ,but super reliable and very comfortable cars to drive ,and the bloody doorhandles were a bit of a problem on the xd xe series
|
||
This user likes this post: |
25-12-2013, 08:35 PM | #43 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: Feb 2011
Location: On The Footplate.
Posts: 5,086
|
Yep...same problem was had with the TE Cortina...what the hell did Ford make them out of? Compressed toilet paper bonded with Clag glue...? They had the structural strength of a strand of uncooked spaghetti...
|
||
26-12-2013, 03:38 AM | #44 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: Jan 2005
Posts: 3,198
|
Holden Piazza? came out about 86 I think.
A rebadged Isuzu, looked stylish at the time, but handled like a bag of spuds the testers said. |
||
26-12-2013, 05:53 AM | #45 | |||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: Feb 2011
Location: On The Footplate.
Posts: 5,086
|
Quote:
Interestingly, after very slow sales because of a too-high price, Holden dropped the price by about $6000 shortly after it went on sale. The people who had bought one already were very angry about this (understandably) and Holden gave them refunds of the extra money they'd paid. |
|||
26-12-2013, 09:16 AM | #46 | |||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: Apr 2009
Posts: 2,215
|
Quote:
Dual cab room, haha what are you 5 ft tall. you wont get me in the back of one it's bad enought in the front sholders touching the driver at times and as far as handerling goes they are just junk, you may have your air bags ABS etc but that wont save you, it mainly gives fools a false sense of conferdance. Valiants haha ! HG V8 Premier or XY V8 Fairmont what other imported car could better them at the time. |
|||
This user likes this post: |
26-12-2013, 12:27 PM | #47 | ||
Regular Member
Join Date: Apr 2006
Posts: 300
|
Something to consider, from my point of view.
i got my license in 1993, and so did a lot of my back then mates. In this period, all the cars on the 2nd hand market were 10-20 years old and that is what we ended up buying. From my experiance we ended up in Holdens and Fords, because the imported 'Jap' cars from that era were so crap it wasn't funny. For example, a lot of the NA 4cyl were so slow they made a 202 kingy/torana a fast car. Not only that the rings in most 4cyl cars of that era wouldn't last 100K (this is before the fuel injected cars of the late 80's), and maybe apart form some fancy steroe and a/c, there was hardly anything in the 'options' that would have made any of them more desireable. It wasn't until the 90's that fuel injected jap cars became reliable as well as gained a better more realistic performance. And so it was somewhere around the mid to late 90's that these cars were looked upon as 'reliable' again. The prices of these fell dramatically as well. They now have a very solid following.
__________________
: Z series Clubsport HRT edition.. e46 320ci 2.2ltr Stocko |
||
26-12-2013, 04:07 PM | #48 | ||
Donating Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Hunter Valley
Posts: 4,300
|
|
||
26-12-2013, 05:02 PM | #49 | |||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: Feb 2011
Location: On The Footplate.
Posts: 5,086
|
Quote:
We should be happy to live in an era where there are just about no truly "bad" cars. Back in the seventies, it was a real coin toss, no matter who you bought one from...even the same model from one maker could vary wildly in quality and build finish from car to car. |
|||
This user likes this post: |
26-12-2013, 07:09 PM | #50 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Canberra Region
Posts: 9,065
|
I find it laughable that you use the Mazda Capella as some great example...
AM/FM radio in 1971? FM didnt become online in Sydney until the mid 70s, letalone actually mainstream. I actually dont think it would have even come with FM radio standard when it wasnt even up and running yet? Maybe overseas? Carpet? What good is carpet when most roads/carparks/driveways outside the major cities was still dirt? Im sure that real families appreciated the fact that you could barely fit four people in them, letalone five or six like you could in a Kinga or Falcon. Oh, do you recall when the AU ute came out that people flocked to it, because they were sick of under equipped, unsafe, under powered Jap utes? Hell, even a 2013 Hilux Workmate isnt any better equipped than an XF ute.
__________________
2016 FGX XR8 Sprint, 6speed manual, Kinetic Blue #170 2004 BA wagon RTV project. 1998 EL XR8, Auto, Hot Chilli Red 1993 ED XR6, 5speed, Polynesian Green. 1 of 329. Retired 1968 XT Falcon 500 wagon, 3 on the tree, 3.6L. Patina project. |
||
26-12-2013, 08:33 PM | #51 | |||
Banned
Join Date: Mar 2006
Posts: 1,223
|
Quote:
|
|||
This user likes this post: |
26-12-2013, 08:38 PM | #52 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: Mar 2010
Posts: 1,481
|
The first Holden ever built "Australia's own car" was built in Detroit.
From the National Museum of Australia's website: http://www.nma.gov.au/collections/hi...type-car-no.-1 "Prototype No. 1 was built by hand in 1946 by American and Australian engineers at the General Motors workshop in Detroit. After months of durability and performance tests in America, three prototypes were shipped to Australia. Legend has it that the cars were driven under cover of darkness to the Fishermen's Bend factory in Melbourne. Registered as JP-480, Prototype No.1 was tested on a circuit east of Melbourne specifically designed to replicate Australian driving conditions." |
||
26-12-2013, 11:23 PM | #53 | ||
Peter Car
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: geelong
Posts: 23,145
|
Not to mention the Jap crap of the era could not last very long on what we considered "roads" at the time, when Australia was mostly goat tracks.
Kingy's and Falcons were built strong to handle the pounding they would receive on those harsh roads, whereas most imported stuff would just fall to pieces. The idea that these cars where somehow superior because they had a few more gadgets is just plain idiotic. It's like the flog you meet who thinks he is an absolute hero cause he has a BMW, and when you see it it's a 10 year old 318i that probably cost him 5 grand to buy used. |
||
26-12-2013, 11:48 PM | #54 | |||
Banned
Join Date: Mar 2006
Posts: 1,223
|
Quote:
|
|||
27-12-2013, 08:53 AM | #55 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: Jan 2005
Posts: 3,198
|
Holden Shuttle van? another Isuzu.
Came out about 83 I think. |
||
27-12-2013, 11:04 AM | #56 | |||
Petro-sexual
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Melbourne
Posts: 4,527
|
Quote:
And that covers EVERY industry. |
|||
2 users like this post: |
27-12-2013, 11:29 AM | #57 | ||
Long live the Falcon GT
Join Date: Feb 2008
Location: Victoria
Posts: 1,630
|
I'm confused??
The 1957 Chevrolet Sedans that were sold here RH/Drive wore Australian GM-H tags and were fully imported?? Ok - they weren't wearing 'Holden' badges.... But there are plenty of Holden's that wear Chevrolet badges???
__________________
|
||
27-12-2013, 11:43 AM | #58 | ||
Regular Member
Join Date: Mar 2008
Posts: 459
|
They were assembled by Holden from imported CKD kits.
|
||
This user likes this post: |
27-12-2013, 11:57 AM | #59 | |||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: Apr 2009
Posts: 2,215
|
Quote:
The Holdens made in 1948 were mainly some what different to the 1949 ones as no one could buy one of them off the showroom and the motor was a bit different as i think the block was not cast in aus different rods etc. I think the first lot of XK Falcons were usa cast engines but just assemble here and other things were phased in as the months rolled on. |
|||
27-12-2013, 12:38 PM | #60 | ||
Regular Member
Join Date: Jun 2010
Posts: 487
|
|
||