mods and sods
Posted: Mon Mar 06, 2000 5:25 pm
Howdy pard,
I appreciate the note and yes, some of the comments were pretty funny,
that one about the lucite block was definitely the best, it caught me
off guard and I didn't know quite how to respond to it. It was a well
placed punch for sure. When I started this whole thing out, all I
wanted to do was to make people think a little bit and to try to remind
them that the best thing about an old car is that it IS an old car
complete with all its quirks and short comings but things escalated very
rapidly and soon got totally out of hand. My own car is far from
pristine, I don't use it like I used to but it sure as hell ain't no
garage queen either and it has louvers in top the bonnet and a leather
hood strap but these are period mods and none of which alter the
character of the car and anyways, they were done many, many years ago
and I don't think I would do them now. That Datsun box has got to have
a very different steering ratio which will have a profound effect on the
way the car drives and handles to the point where driving it is no
longer like driving a T-MG and re-engineering the block to be cast in a
totally different material will make it a different engine and amounts
to an engine swop in my book. That's the only point I was trying to
make. I wasn't trying to tell people what to do, everyone is the owner
of their own car, for sure, and can definitely do whatever they want to
with it, if I decide to take my car out into the yard tomorrow and set
fire to it, I can do that and nobody can say otherwise ('cept maybe the
fire department but what the hell do they know about MGs?). I would
just like folks to think about it a little bit from one who has
considerable MG experience. It seems to me there are a lot of chips on a
lot of shoulders out there and I guess I knocked em all off at once.
I might have bid on the St Christopher/Carry & Lambert badge Keith,
it sounds familiar but I don't know what cars Carry & Lambert sold. I
don't collect badges (see "me" for mrbadger on ebay) but sometimes one
will catch my eye and I bid on it. I have been selling a lot of cars on
ebay lately (I have been a dealer in vintage British sportscars for 35,
or so, years) and this spring, I will be offering four TCs, a TF 1500, a
1930 18/80 MK-II roadster, a P-type basket case, and many others. Those
four TCs are all good old original motorcars just coming out of long
storage, they will be sold to the highest bidder but i kinda hope they
end up being appreciated for what they are.
That's just about it my friends, if I offended anyone, I do
apologize, it's just that I have my opinion and you have yours. To the
person who said "we don't need your kind", I will not make a response.
In a little while I will be going on holiday, I'm taking my wife and
10 year old son to Portugal, Spain, Gibraltar, and Morocco and when I
return in 2 1/2 weeks, I will be very busy doing the things I enjoy
most, selling vintage British sports cars and driving my old TC and you
can be certain that when I do, it will be JUST THE WAY THE GOOD LORD, IN
ALL HIS WISDOM, INTENDED FOR IT TO BE! (Lord Nuffield, that is).
Cheerio and happy motoring, it's been fun.
Badger
I appreciate the note and yes, some of the comments were pretty funny,
that one about the lucite block was definitely the best, it caught me
off guard and I didn't know quite how to respond to it. It was a well
placed punch for sure. When I started this whole thing out, all I
wanted to do was to make people think a little bit and to try to remind
them that the best thing about an old car is that it IS an old car
complete with all its quirks and short comings but things escalated very
rapidly and soon got totally out of hand. My own car is far from
pristine, I don't use it like I used to but it sure as hell ain't no
garage queen either and it has louvers in top the bonnet and a leather
hood strap but these are period mods and none of which alter the
character of the car and anyways, they were done many, many years ago
and I don't think I would do them now. That Datsun box has got to have
a very different steering ratio which will have a profound effect on the
way the car drives and handles to the point where driving it is no
longer like driving a T-MG and re-engineering the block to be cast in a
totally different material will make it a different engine and amounts
to an engine swop in my book. That's the only point I was trying to
make. I wasn't trying to tell people what to do, everyone is the owner
of their own car, for sure, and can definitely do whatever they want to
with it, if I decide to take my car out into the yard tomorrow and set
fire to it, I can do that and nobody can say otherwise ('cept maybe the
fire department but what the hell do they know about MGs?). I would
just like folks to think about it a little bit from one who has
considerable MG experience. It seems to me there are a lot of chips on a
lot of shoulders out there and I guess I knocked em all off at once.
I might have bid on the St Christopher/Carry & Lambert badge Keith,
it sounds familiar but I don't know what cars Carry & Lambert sold. I
don't collect badges (see "me" for mrbadger on ebay) but sometimes one
will catch my eye and I bid on it. I have been selling a lot of cars on
ebay lately (I have been a dealer in vintage British sportscars for 35,
or so, years) and this spring, I will be offering four TCs, a TF 1500, a
1930 18/80 MK-II roadster, a P-type basket case, and many others. Those
four TCs are all good old original motorcars just coming out of long
storage, they will be sold to the highest bidder but i kinda hope they
end up being appreciated for what they are.
That's just about it my friends, if I offended anyone, I do
apologize, it's just that I have my opinion and you have yours. To the
person who said "we don't need your kind", I will not make a response.
In a little while I will be going on holiday, I'm taking my wife and
10 year old son to Portugal, Spain, Gibraltar, and Morocco and when I
return in 2 1/2 weeks, I will be very busy doing the things I enjoy
most, selling vintage British sports cars and driving my old TC and you
can be certain that when I do, it will be JUST THE WAY THE GOOD LORD, IN
ALL HIS WISDOM, INTENDED FOR IT TO BE! (Lord Nuffield, that is).
Cheerio and happy motoring, it's been fun.
Badger