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Date:         Fri, 23 Nov 2001 18:46:48 -0800
Reply-To:     Mike & Shari <mjgarske@HOME.COM>
Sender:       Vanagon Mailing List <vanagon@gerry.vanagon.com>
From:         Mike & Shari <mjgarske@HOME.COM>
Subject:      Re: Friday Humour
Comments: To: georgejoann@JUNO.COM
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii; x-mac-type="54455854";
              x-mac-creator="4D4F5353"

Being a long time fanatic of Italian cars I laughed my ass off when I read the Italian entry. My favorite example are the Alfa Romeo belt tensioners that were used on the '80 through '91 V6's. Instead of 'caving in' and utilizing a simple spring tensioner like everyone else, they had to have their own oil pressurized version which, to a car, ultimately spewed oil all over the engine compartment. Usually when you were many miles from help. Incidentally, I visted several car factories and their corresponding musems one year, Volkswagen, Porsche, BMW, Alfa and found the folks in Milano to have the best musem but the most grass growing on their test track.

Mike G.

George Jannini wrote:

> A DIFFERENCE IN PHILOSOPHY > > Each car maker on the planet has a different philosophy about How a > Car Should Be Put Together. Let's take a single case... > > Let us say there is a single hypothetical panel in a hypothetical > car. As a baseline, a totally unbiased (and therefore, Martian) > engineer examines this cover and determines that it should be held in > place with five Phillips head (cross head) screws. > > JAPAN: The Japanese would hold it down with exactly five .05c screws. > Boring, reliable, soulless, exactly what is needed. > > UNITED STATES: For a long time, a US car's panel would be held on > with three screws. This has changed, and now not only does it have > five screws, all floor workers must have a communal decision as to > how many screws it needs, and have the ability to stop the line > entirely should a single screw be a funny color. > > GREAT BRITIAN: As with the US, previously this car's panel would be > held on with three screws. Additionally, these screws would be > flathead style and made of Britishinium Metal, a mysterious alloy > that can rust sitting under six inches of oil. Nowadays all the car > companies have been sold to the US or Germany, so see those entries. > > FRANCE: Only Americans would be so obnoxious as to think how a panel > is held on is important. Unions and employee pride are of far more > concern. Please come with us to strike for ten more weeks paid > vacation. > > GERMANY: Every panel on every car is held on with precisely ten > aircraft grade titanium/tungsten alloy nuts and bolts torqued to > precisely 15.402 lbs-ft. Replacements are sold only in sets of 20, > and typically cost $350US. A German mechanic will explain to you, in > graphic detail, exactly what would happen should you use a "lower > quality" nut or bolt. > > RUSSIA: Owing to parts shortages, each panel is welded in place. > A cutter costs 8,000,000,000,000,000 rubles (about $12.15 US), and > the official wait is approximately 28 months. However, a stranger > named "Igor" will sell you a cutter right away for $40 US (cash > only). You notice PROPERTY OF SOVIET ARMY scratched out on the side. > > ITALY (Goes Fast approach): The Italian is somewhat > different. If the panel has something to do with making the car Go > Fast, it will be just like Germany's entry, with the addition that > every bolt head will have a beautiful logo cast into it. > > ITALY (Everything Else): The Italian panel has no screws at all. > Rather, it is held in with a very clever arrangement of grommets, > snap rings, and C-clips so that it seems to be Part of the Car. > However, due to lack of testing, the rubber in the grommets rots in a > few years, and since the panel can only be removed with special tool > AR001.2399943.011034444.2.1.1, the rubber is hardly ever replaced and > so tends to rattle. Enthusiasts of this car will have endless debates > on the value of this panel, some will remove it, some will maintain > it religiously, and at least one author will write a book telling you > how to make a tool that will work out of a '73 GMC lug wrench. > > SWEDEN: The panel in a Swedish car is held on with 25 screws. > Curiously, one has to put the car in reverse in order to remove it. > > George/ATL > '89 Westy Wernher > ________________________________________________________________ > GET INTERNET ACCESS FROM JUNO! > Juno offers FREE or PREMIUM Internet access for less! > Join Juno today! For your FREE software, visit: > http://dl.www.juno.com/get/web/.


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