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post-gazette.com http://snipurl.com/1l0sj How did Toyota manage to squeeze the U.S. passenger-car market from the U.S. giant, General Motors? |
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post-gazette.com http://snipurl.com/1l0sj How did Toyota manage to squeeze the U.S. passenger-car market from the U.S. giant, General Motors? |
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Let's put it this way: I bought a 1974 Corolla 1200 for $2525, with an AM/FM radio and a rear window defroster. >more crap snipped |
#5
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On Thu, 17 May 2007 20:13:31 +0200, George Orwell wrote: post-gazette.com http://snipurl.com/1l0sj How did Toyota manage to squeeze the U.S. passenger-car market from the U.S. giant, General Motors? |
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Cause they build good cars? Because they were ahead of the Economy cruve 30 years ago? Let's put it this way: I bought a 1974 Corolla 1200 for $2525, with an AM/FM radio and a rear window defroster. One neat little thin I liked was the heater and radio had no dash lights, there was a green piece of plastic with a dome light bulb behind it that lit up the dash, and a little tab on it. When you pulled the tab, it opened the green lens and you had a map light. It was built into the overhang of the dash so you could have the map light on and not upset your view of the road. Simple little thing, but obviously meant a lot since I still remember it after 33 years... It got 38 MPG on the highway, until I changed the tires from Bias-Ply to Michelin Radials. Then it got 38 MPG IN TOWN. The Nova I looked at was $3595, a V8 that got 18 MPG overall. And didn't have a little green maplight. |
#6
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In <Ja13i.12051$CQ4.12007@trndny06> Vash The Stampede <Tri... (AT) 2AM (DOT) cn> writes: On Thu, 17 May 2007 20:13:31 +0200, George Orwell wrote: post-gazette.comhttp://snipurl.com/1l0sj How did Toyota manage to squeeze the U.S. passenger-car market from the U.S. giant, General Motors? Cause they build good cars? Because they were ahead of the Economy cruve 30 years ago? Let's put it this way: I bought a 1974 Corolla 1200 for $2525, with an AM/FM radio and a rear window defroster. One neat little thin I liked was the heater and radio had no dash lights, there was a green piece of plastic with a dome light bulb behind it that lit up the dash, and a little tab on it. When you pulled the tab, it opened the green lens and you had a map light. It was built into the overhang of the dash so you could have the map light on and not upset your view of the road. Simple little thing, but obviously meant a lot since I still remember it after 33 years... It got 38 MPG on the highway, until I changed the tires from Bias-Ply to Michelin Radials. Then it got 38 MPG IN TOWN. The Nova I looked at was $3595, a V8 that got 18 MPG overall. And didn't have a little green maplight. That's a nice story. However, did you ever drive a Nova with a 350 V8? I did, and it was the most fun I ever had. No, it didn't have a little green map light, but it did have a great roar and great acceleration. I would have been lucky to get 18 MPG, but back then gas was cheap. The Nova was probably one of the best and most reliable cars built by GM through the 70s. Both the 6cyl and 8cyl were good engines.- Hide quoted text - |
#7
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In <Ja13i.12051$CQ4.12007@trndny06> Vash The Stampede <Trigun (AT) 2AM (DOT) cn writes: On Thu, 17 May 2007 20:13:31 +0200, George Orwell wrote: post-gazette.com http://snipurl.com/1l0sj How did Toyota manage to squeeze the U.S. passenger-car market from the U.S. giant, General Motors? Cause they build good cars? Because they were ahead of the Economy cruve 30 years ago? Let's put it this way: I bought a 1974 Corolla 1200 for $2525, with an AM/FM radio and a rear window defroster. One neat little thin I liked was the heater and radio had no dash lights, there was a green piece of plastic with a dome light bulb behind it that lit up the dash, and a little tab on it. When you pulled the tab, it opened the green lens and you had a map light. It was built into the overhang of the dash so you could have the map light on and not upset your view of the road. Simple little thing, but obviously meant a lot since I still remember it after 33 years... It got 38 MPG on the highway, until I changed the tires from Bias-Ply to Michelin Radials. Then it got 38 MPG IN TOWN. The Nova I looked at was $3595, a V8 that got 18 MPG overall. And didn't have a little green maplight. That's a nice story. However, did you ever drive a Nova with a 350 V8? I did, and it was the most fun I ever had. No, it didn't have a little green map light, but it did have a great roar and great acceleration. I would have been lucky to get 18 MPG, but back then gas was cheap. The Nova was probably one of the best and most reliable cars built by GM through the 70s. Both the 6cyl and 8cyl were good engines. |
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On May 17, 4:21 pm, 6forPizza <6forPi... (AT) hotmail (DOT) com> wrote: In <Ja13i.12051$CQ4.12007@trndny06> Vash The Stampede <Tri... (AT) 2AM (DOT) cn writes: On Thu, 17 May 2007 20:13:31 +0200, George Orwell wrote: post-gazette.comhttp://snipurl.com/1l0sj How did Toyota manage to squeeze the U.S. passenger-car market from the U.S. giant, General Motors? However, did you ever drive a Nova with a 350 V8? I did, and it was the most fun I ever had. No, it didn't have a little green map light, but it did have a great roar and great acceleration. I would have been lucky to get 18 MPG, but back then gas was cheap. The Nova was probably one of the best and most reliable cars built by GM through the 70s. Both the 6cyl and 8cyl were good engines.- Hide quoted text - Did you forget they also offered a 153 cid four cylinder engine in the original Chevrolet Nova? It was more or less 2/3's of a Chevy 6. It was last offered in 1970. In the late 60's almost nobody cared about fuel economy. I doubt if 5% of Nova were ordered with this engine. I've never seen one myself. Ed |
#9
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My '02 Sedona had a belt. I even changed it at around 80K just to be safe. I'm pretty sure my wife's '05 Vue has a belt, too. |
#10
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On Thu, 17 May 2007 20:21:33 +0000, 6forPizza wrote: |
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I kept the Nova for 5 or six weeks, and when gas hit $0.75 a gallon, I traded it back! Luckily, they went for it and gave me my Corolla back! |
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