Re: There are rumors in circulation...
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Quote:
"it's all about fuel cost. Traditional European cars have smaller motors due to the higher fuel costs and stricter air quality rules in Europe." ok. But here is what i do not understand: Note that Germany, based on my research, has the worlds best hiway system called an AUtobahn. An Autobahn that seems to exceed the US Interstate system. Maybe exceeeds the US by a great percentage. **** With UNlimited speed limit!!!! ****. THen why would Germans want 4 cylinder engines ???? HEre in the US, to the best of my knowledge there are NO roads with legal speed limit over 75 mph. I sure wish i could run 100-120 mph legaly like the Germans can. A 4 cylinder just won't cut it. Most production 6 cylinders won't be sufficient either unless we start talking Jag or very expensive hi-performance 6 cylinders. Or, let me pose the question another way: Do most Germans drive the Autobahn rarely exceeding 70 mph???
Posted on: 2011/10/3 20:47
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VAPOR LOCK demystified: See paragraph SEVEN of PMCC documentaion as listed in post #11 of the following thread:f
packardinfo.com/xoops/html/modules/newbb/viewtopic.php?topic_id=7245 |
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Re: There are rumors in circulation...
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Webmaster
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From Wikipedia:
"The German autobahns are the nationally coordinated motorway system in Germany. In German, they are officially called Bundesautobahn (plural Bundesautobahnen, abbreviated BAB), which translates as federal expressways. German autobahns have no general speed limit (though about 47% of the total length is subject to local and/or conditional limits), but the advisory speed limit (Richtgeschwindigkeit) is 130 kilometres per hour (81 mph)."
Posted on: 2011/10/3 22:39
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-BigKev
1954 Packard Clipper Deluxe Touring Sedan -> Registry | Project Blog 1937 Packard 115-C Convertible Coupe -> Registry | Project Blog |
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Re: There are rumors in circulation...
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Home away from home
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Top 100 car registration list in Germany, 2011 (Q2) VW Golf, Jetta VW Passat VW Polo Opel Astra Mercedes C-Klasse Opel Corsa BMW 3er Ford Focus BMW 1er Audi A4, S4 BMW 5er VW Touran Ford Fiesta Audi A3, S3, RS3 Mercedes E-Klasse Skoda Fabia Opel Meriva BMW Mini Skoda Octavia Audi A6, S6, RS6, A7 VW Tiguan VW Caddy VW Transporter, Caravelle Hyundai I 30 Smart Fortwo Mercedes B-Klasse BMW X1 Nissan Qashqai Peugeot 207 Audi A5, S5, RS5 Renault Megane Opel Insignia Seat Ibiza, Cordoba Fiat Punto Ford Focus C-Max Fiat Ducato Audi A1, S1 Audi Q5 VW Sharan Fiat 500 BMW X3 Renault Clio Dacia Duster Renault Scenic Chevrolet Spark (Daewoo Matiz) Seat Altea, Toledo, Leon Ford Kuga Renault Twingo Fiat Panda Opel Zafira Skoda Yeti Ford Mondeo Skoda Superb Mercedes GLK Citroen C4 Mercedes A-Klasse Toyota Yaris, Daihatsu Charade Peugeot 308 Hyundai I 10 Mercedes E-Klasse Coupe Hyundai IX 35 Ford S-Max Suzuki Swift Mercedes Viano Skoda Roomster Mercedes SLK Volvo 60 Citroen C3 Citroen Berlingo Peugeot 206 Ford Ka Ford Transit, Tourneo Toyota Auris Peugeot 508 VW Touareg Dacia Sandero BMW X5 Hyundai I 20 Mitsubishi Colt Nissan Juke Hyundai IX 20 Volvo XC60 Mazda 3 Mitsubishi ASX VW Scirocco Citroen C1 Nissan Micra Toyota Aygo Kia Ceed Mercedes Vito Kia Sportage VW Eos Audi TT Kia Picanto Mazda 6 Kia Venga Mazda 2 VW Fox Honda Civic Peugeot 3008 A momentary glimpse shows that 70% of them are compact cars, all of them go at least 81 mph, a lot run 120 - 130 mph, 10 - 15% of them fly faster than 130 mph. My read is that 2 - 3% are equipped with an eight-cylinder and around 15% have a six-cylinder installed. Quote: ...I sure wish i could run 100-120 mph legaly like the Germans can... Yes Keith, but how long? Many people like it to open the throttle when leaving the town but as faster you drive as sooner you have to stop because it is energy-sapping to drive fast (concentrativeness, fuel). That levels the average speed to 90 mph. If you don't own the road, then driving 130 mph or more for hours with tunnel-view and nonstop brake readiness is a strenuous effort, there are trucks, beginners, voluntary brakemen (self-appointed educators), buses, caravaning Dutchmen (no offense), fog, rain (aquaplaning), slippery frost, darkness, traffic jams, cellphones, ... and all your sensors report "you are in danger". If you older than 25 then a long-haired speedlimiter sits next to you, if you older than 30 then one or another short-haired speedlimiter sits behind you, if you older than 40 it starts to whisper "drive carefully, drive save, what is more important: the deadline or your wellbeing?" Stan (oregonstan) is right in saying that driving on the Autobahn is saver at the mentioned advisory speed (81 mph). To undercut the minimum speed (62 mph) would be dangerous. The tank capacity of a VW Passat Diesel will take you almost 800 miles at 62 mph or 250 miles at 130 mph. That's a $130 question (one fill) respectively $390 (three fills)! <iframe width="500" height="369" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/cOOcvgNWz5w?rel=0" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe> sources registration list: Kraftfahrzeugbundesamt pic #1: timeinc.net pic #2: mygall.net
Posted on: 2011/10/4 4:14
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The story of ZIS-110, ZIS-115, ZIL-111 & Chaika GAZ-13 on www.guscha.de
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Re: There are rumors in circulation...
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Home away from home
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I don't know what it was that did the trick, but for one day in 2009 Packard dominated the headlines in the world of cars.
If Metro News (2009-09-17, Russian edition) is to be believed then the below shown Venezuelan Clipper is a 1956 ZIS with four-wheel drive and was formerly used by Nikita Khrushchev. Metro News - Facts & Figures: "World's Largest International Newspaper ... has over 67 editions in 22 countries ... published in 15 languages around the world ... over 25 million daily readers including commercial partners" Attach file: (30.23 KB)
Posted on: 2012/5/8 3:52
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The story of ZIS-110, ZIS-115, ZIL-111 & Chaika GAZ-13 on www.guscha.de
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Re: There are rumors in circulation...
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Just can't stay away
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How do the Germans control truck traffic on their Autobahn?
I have driven on the Autobahn and it is not the pleasure one would expect when one is driving a VW Golf. Our Packard s could not maintain the minimum speed (for long)in their environment.
Posted on: 2012/5/8 8:21
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1939 - 120 ,4 dr / overdrive
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Re: There are rumors in circulation...
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Home away from home
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A good 4 cyl is entirely adequate for 130 km/hr - I ran a 2 liter Alfa all day like this. 200 km/hr is more taxing on a sustained basis.
Driver qualification is much more demanding. Lane discipline is much better. I think the weakness is poor compensation for weather - there are spectacular multi-cars in the fog.
Posted on: 2012/5/8 9:52
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Re: There are rumors in circulation...
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Quote:
How do the Germans control truck traffic on their Autobahn? ... Lowell (Saffron), --> this way please to get an overview. source: www.roadtraffic-technology.com
Posted on: 2012/5/8 10:41
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The story of ZIS-110, ZIS-115, ZIL-111 & Chaika GAZ-13 on www.guscha.de
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Re: There are rumors in circulation...
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Home away from home
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Since this has drifted a bit off the "Packard cousins" area, I'd like to ask about a more recent Russian car that Canadians love to joke about, so apparently they were exported to that country: the Lada. Or is it LADA? Has this been a successful car for export? Who manufactures it, it it's still made-- I know nothing. I hope it looks like a tiny '55 Patrician...
This is a very entertaining thread!
Posted on: 2012/5/12 15:02
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Guy
[b]Not an Expert[/ |
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Re: There are rumors in circulation...
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Posted on: 2012/5/12 16:50
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