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Re: the ultimate ride

To: "William Moyer" <William.Moyer@millersville.edu>,
Subject: Re: the ultimate ride
From: "davidwjones" <davidwjones@cox.net>
Date: Fri, 20 May 2005 13:50:13 -0400
Begging your pardon, Bill, but at age 17-20, a back seat is NOT an "option"
--and the bigger the better...lol.

---About 2 years ago, a kid in a brand new 5.0 litre Mustang pulled up
alongside at a light and proceeded to rev the thing unmercifully, while
looking over in his dark glasses and nodding toward the road ahead...  I
smiled and motioned toward a nearby parking lot. We drove in and parked and I
kind of laughed at the situation and told him that if he had the amount of
time, work and cash wrapped up in a car that I did, that he would not wind the
hell out of it either, or stoplight race a "road car". I also conceded that it
was an overmatch, and that that was beside the real point.  --It turned into
some pretty good car talk, actually, and I think by the time we drove away, I
had made a convert. -It's not always the fastest car that's the most fun or
most rewarding.
  ----- Original Message -----
  From: William Moyer
  To: Austin Healey list
  Sent: Friday, May 20, 2005 11:58 AM
  Subject: the ultimate ride


  Folks, for a group of people who can endlessly discuss tires (not that
  there's anything wrong with that), I don't think we're ever going to find
  completely common ground on the "ultimate ride".



  Perspective.  When I was 8 the ultimate ride was a couple of boards and an
  orange crate with four old rusty roller skates nailed to the corners.
  Braking and suspension were optional and ignored as engineering principles.
  Steering effort was high and erratic, trending to understeer.
Acceleration
  was limited due to lack of horsepower.



  When I was 14 the ultimate ride was my high school homeroom teacher's
Karmen
  Ghia.  It, too, had a panic bar and I remember grabbing it the one time he
  drove me home.  Oh my, my teacher could drive me home without being sued.
  Imagine that.



  When I was 17 and could actually drive my ultimate ride was anything that
  moved in the general direction that it was steered and had enough
  acceleration to outpace Bugs Bunny as he chased the turtle.    Rear seats?
  An option.  Rear brakes?  An option.  A luxury even.  Replace the exhaust
  system every year?  Expected.



  In short, the quality of "ultimate" isn't embedded in the object; it's
  embodied in the person.



  Chimera and I have been beaten by a Miata on a short straightaway, he lost
  me in the distance and I wasn't about to fight him for space on the blind
  corner of that two-lane country road.  My fuel injected Ford Explorer would
  leave me behind on a quarter mile.  I just don't care.  When I'm driving
the
  Healey I feel good and there are smiles and thumbs-up all around.  When I
  want to push it, I can.  Maybe some other car would do the same but I don't
  think it would do it any better.  That sounds pretty "ultimate" to me.



  Bill Moyer, BJ7 aka Chimera




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