Date: Sun, 19 Sep 2021 16:35:02 +0200
Reply-To: Raimund Feussner <ray@V6BUS.DE>
Sender: Vanagon Mailing List <vanagon@gerry.vanagon.com>
From: Raimund Feussner <ray@V6BUS.DE>
Subject: Re: A FUNNY AT THE LOCAL QWIK LUBE
In-Reply-To: <CACvdLxPfs64jkAYnX5sqgMNQyqUn-8uZ8rs6mbcEfU1nx9PD5A@mail.gmail.com>
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More often than not , people finding them odd is a compliment. Even
finding them "cute".
If the young mechanic appreciates the vehicle, that´s great.
Fluids behind license plates. Young guy will find out eventually, won´t he?
That´s the curiosity i expect.
Admitting "I have no clue where to find/ how to do" this or that, that´s
a strength. Especially if he wants to really know for next time!
My last post was more about when "on-board-diagnostic-port boys"
approach any kind of classic with ignorance.
Raimund
Am 19.09.2021 um 16:23 schrieb David McNeely:
> Hmmm..... . Our vehicles were strange back in the day, and some of the
> oddities still don't make sense to me, though I have come to live with
> them. I certainly can see how young folks who ARE interested in vehicles
> would still find them odd. Most of them I encounter really are interested
> in them, though, and ask more interesting questions than some of the ones
> posed above. Find out on their own? There are far more makes of vehicles
> now than back in the day, and ours are going away. I don't recall as a kid
> in the fifties looking into gas tank placement on 1920s era automobiles,
> though I did take an interest in automobiles.
>
> But are all the design eccentricities really all that odd, or do they just
> add up to odd when taken collectively? The oil filler placement for
> example: Is that any more odd than the placement of the gas filler
> placement under the license plate on fifties era sedans must have seemed
> when it first appeared?
>
> All that said, I really find it odd that the things people today shopping
> for a vehicle look at are how many and where the cup holders are, and
> whether it has tires thinner than a pancake (considered desirable, for what
> bizarre reason I cannot fathom).
>
> old man mcneely
>
> On Sun, Sep 19, 2021 at 7:06 AM Raimund Feussner <ray@v6bus.de> wrote:
>
>> Especially young car mechanics need to have enough interest in classic
>> 30+ year old automobiles,
>> otherwise they chose the wrong job.
>>
>> And with our beasts becoming classics,
>> any german shop´s young guys asking these questions make me leave
>> instantly.
>> I expect at least the curiosity to find out on their own (I admit the
>> washer fluid is a tough one).
>>
>> Cluelessness about our cars might have been acceptable in 2000, but not
>> today!
>>
>> Regards
>> Raimund´s 2p for Beetles, Vanagons, steering column shifters,
>> carburettors, and all these other quirks...
>>
>> Am 19.09.2021 um 15:39 schrieb Jim Felder:
>>> This was also happening 30 years ago LOL
>>>
>>> Jim
>>>
>>> Sent from my iPhone
>>>
>>>> On Sep 19, 2021, at 5:34 AM, John Rodgers <jrodgers113@gmail.com>
>> wrote:
>>>> Pulled my van in for some servicing. First question by young attendant
>> was
>>>> 'What is it?"
>>>> Second question; "Where is the engine?"
>>>> Third question: "Where do you put the oil in?"
>>>> Fourth question: "Where do I check the brake fluid?'
>>>> Fifth question; "Where do I check the washer fluid?"
>>>>
>>>> I do get so amused at the expressions on these young guys face as they
>> hunt
>>>> for service points on my 30 year old van.
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