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Everything posted by trinacriabob
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What? It's December 10th? Ain't no one seen any cars? Tonight, I saw a metallic charcoal '06 or '07 Monte Carlo in damn near perfect shape. It had the more vertical spoiler as opposed to the overlaid flatter spoiler, meaning it was most likely an LT and definitely not an LS. And, in December, it's especially heartwarming to see that some people still treasure the large American coupe, something that used to be a staple of our automotive culture.
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I knew this would happen at least a year ago. All one needed to do is go into the Buick showroom when their car is being serviced and see the now lone LaCrosse and Regal over in a corner, or maybe just one of them. When the LaCrosse was on the chopping block, I knew the Regal would be, too. It's weird because, from the dim days where even Buicks had marginal build quality, the brand had come a long ways. At this point, ALL of General Motors will be offering only ONE passenger car that is mid- to full-sized and mid-priced, and that's the Malibu. Would I have thought this was possible as a teen or in my 20s? No. This is just sad. I am now wondering if GM will recant along the way and start expanding their sedan or coupe line in the future because some customers will want them, even though the Asians and the Europeans seem to be content to address North America's demand for sedans.
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@oldshurst442 A lot of good info there! As for video 1, someone needs to inform the person or party who uploaded it that they've misspelled the title. It should be "C'e' La Luna Mezzo Mare" - apostrophe and accent over the e; no h. They way it's spelled, with Che, means the person was thinking it would be pronounced like it is in Spanish. It's not. Instead, "che" would be pronounced as "keh" in Italian.
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When there were FOUR 350 V8 engines - your opinion
trinacriabob replied to trinacriabob's topic in Tech Section
I know that Cadillac used the 350 V8 in the first Seville but I kept it to four divisions because, in that case, they were very forthcoming that Oldsmobile had produced the engine specifically for them, but with (then rudimentary) fuel injection instead of a carburetor. It still looked like a carbureted engine when you lifted up the hood of a Seville with a 350 V8. Good move on Cadillac's part. That's probably why you sometimes still see first-gen Sevilles on the road today. What a success story for Cadillac. -
When there were FOUR 350 V8 engines - your opinion
trinacriabob replied to trinacriabob's topic in Tech Section
Very, very close to what I thought: 1. Olds (by a fairly wide margin) 2. Pontiac (I prefer the under hood layout to that of Chevy, as well as its sound) 3. Chevrolet 4. Buick Also, weren't there THREE 455 big block V8s at one one (Olds, Buick, Pontiac), all different from each other, while Chevy had a 454 V8? -
Need to buy a small tech-y gadget - help, please
trinacriabob replied to trinacriabob's topic in Tech Section
After the holidays, most likely ... -
I was having this discussion with a few people on Friday. GM essentially bought up some independent motor companies (Olds, Buick) to create their large entity and kept their strong divisional thinking for decades after that. Up until the 1970s, FOUR divisions of GM made a 350 small block V8 engine. Essentially, it was each division except Cadillac. Rank these 4 (Chevy, Pontiac, Olds, Buick) in your order of preference: 1, 2, 3, 4 - for whatever reason, such as longevity, materials, intake, exhaust, general configuration (for repair, access), whatever you decide ...
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Need to buy a small tech-y gadget - help, please
trinacriabob replied to trinacriabob's topic in Tech Section
@frogger So, then 2 center stack areas would need to be pulled out - the CD player up above and the area near the cigarette lighter down below. I'll have to look into this. There's a shop that does great electrical work and I will need some small dash lights redone. He has done work for me. The important thing is that, if someone went this way, they should hopefully be able to toggle through their music with their steering wheel controls. -
Haha. There's a lot of truth to that. Greeks have left an indelible (still standing!) mark on Sicily and the southern provinces of Italy, at places like Paestum. I haven't been to Greece as many times as I should have! I've been to Athens and 3 islands. I'd like to go to Athens and then to Corfu (Kerkyra) and get back to Italy from there ... on an overnight ferry ... that way, the passage is just a little bit more in $ than a hotel room and that includes a cabin. It would nice to get up early and see the ferry approach the Italian coast at Bari or Brindisi ... both on the heel of the peninsula. There's no place like the Med!
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100 pages of music discussions ... fine with me ... Have always liked these ... over the years, I finally came to know the name of the artist and the songs. I don't care how much you like "Stairway to Heaven" or "The Immigrant Song," the craftsmanship in these compositions is still way up there. Vince Guaraldi, the jazz musician who composed them, died at a fairly young age and is interred in the same cemetery as Joe DiMaggio. Colma, CA is the "cemetery suburb" used mostly by Catholics and Italians immediately south of San Francisco.
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Impossible to tell. I think that birth order and gender order among a brood of kids, which are not pop psychology topics, have something to do with it. There are the classic expectations of the first born. There is the lengthened leash given to the last born. There is also how closely spaced apart kids are and whether or not there are jealousies as older kids are confronted with younger siblings they have to share with. Then, there is the parenting style and whether the parents were functional, dysfunctional, or a little of both. And it goes on and on and on. I think I'll stop now.
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"Fatal Attraction" had Michael Douglas and Glenn Close. I forgot who the other stars in it were. "Play Misty for Me" had Clint Eastwood, Jessica Walter, and Donna Mills ... and was filmed in the Monterey, Carmel, Big Sur area along the Central California coast. "Misty" was another great song, where its originator was outdone by country singer Ray Stevens in 1975. It ripped up the charts in the U.S. and even in the U.K.
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I'm guessing you are referring to the one by Roberta Flack and which was featured in the movie "Play Misty for Me," sort of the "Fatal Attraction" of the previous decade. Roberta Flack and this song are symbiotic even though, technically, it's not hers. It originated in 1957. And, after Roberta Flack, many other musical artists have taken a whack at it.
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Gotta be in the mood for this one ... sometimes yes and sometimes no. I looked up the year of its origins - 1979.
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I just saw this thread in the "sidebar." My friend has a 1994 SS that he uses during warm weather in addition to his daily driver. His 1994 has less than 100,000 miles. It's black with a gray interior. He bemoans not having an "operating console," thus a 1996. However, with a 1996, he'd lose the cool digital speedometer and the 4 symmetrically arranged gauges for fuel, temp, volts, etc. and get analog dials. We all have dream garages! And they change ... as we add one car and drop one car. They also mean ka-ching - ka-ching. My wallet looks better after getting back to basics - one daily driver. But I've had that extra Camaro and extra Cutlass Supreme Brougham coupe here and there and have learned to accept that that habit had to be expunged ... at least for me!
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Most likely a 100% polyester-nylon blend to make the velour go the long haul. The burgundy cloth bucket seats in my last car held up unscathed over a dozen years, including the driver's seat. Either way, you have a rolling bordello. What I like is the "craftsmanship" and detail in those "old schoolz," the cool street name for those sorts of sleds. If you've experienced them at some point in your life, you'll never forget them. If you're a millennial or born even later, this whole discussion might be meaningless.
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My dad was the opposite. Ford-Lincoln-Mercury or Chrysler? No way. For him, Buick was his first choice, with Olds being a close second. Cadillac was not in his price point and would not have worked well with the crustier aspects of his personality. That "deuce and a quarter" in coupe form looks surprisingly nice and the vinyl top appears to be a full one. What a beauty! I'm taking that to mean just velour and tweed, but that other types of cloth seats are acceptable to you. Once a person has burned their legs on vinyl/leather seating while wearing shorts and driving in a desert climate, vinyl/leather are no longer an option ... for me.
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It's great to get new windshield wipers. Instead of waiting them to become obnoxiously noisy, I just head to the auto parts store right after Thanksgiving every year and throw on a new set, ideally after scouting a deal. I have Bosch wipers on this go round.
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The fact that they chose the Olds 307 (5.0) V8 to power some of the latest and biggest Cadillac Fleetwood Broughams speaks to how good the engine is. When I would drive my parents' cars with 5.7 liter and 4.3 liter Olds V8s over those concrete bridges in California with all the balustrades, I would lower the passenger window to hear the beautiful sound those engines made echo back at me, providing it was a rural road and there wasn't much/any traffic. @oldshurst442 I once saw a '91 or '92 Toro in a small town on the coast and it was the base model in that color called Light Driftwood Metallic (or something like that) and it had the vaned alloy wheels to sporty it up some. Maybe it had a trestle shifter, too, if I recall, but couldn't look since it was moving. Granted, it was V6 equipped by then but, of the final set of personal luxury coupes by GM, that one would have worked for me.
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Solid in which way? Cast iron block-heads? Are there 3 variants of V8-6-4 which start out with those different displacements? I always assumed the numbers would look "different." I could have sworn I saw some late Eldos with this body style with a rectangular badge saying 4100 toward the end, maybe 1983 and 1984. There was a Lebanese guy who had a beautiful Eldo of this vintage in tri-dark/medium blue: body color (metallic) - vinyl roof - leather seating. @Robert Hall For some reason, the burgundy leather interior in an upscale white GM convertible just worked. That combo sort of owned that era.
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Of the 3, the Riv had a nice real tail lamp assembly. The grille, called the Parthenon by a reviewer of the '77-'78 model, was too much. The Toro was clean looking and its price point was more "reasonable." The Eldo was definitely a big improvement for being a nicely proportioned Cadillac, and also one with clean lines. I'll agree with you there. The issue was the price point (higher). Also, some funky engines that turned out to be problem children found their way into the Eldo during this body style run and that didn't help the car. When I see a nicely kept one on the road, I really appreciate looking at it.
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I came across this photo. In an in-demand neighborhood near downtown Atlanta. I should mention that there were 2 of them parked there, one behind the other. Probably a 5.0 L Olds V8. Could also be had with the Buick 4.1 V6, which also found their way into a small number of Cadillacs in that era as a "credit" option. Its sibling, the Toro, was less clunky looking and easier on the eyes.
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Well, we're up to 500 pages of random thoughts! Random thought: while inconvenient for a big hub city like New York, the Big Apple sure looks like a postcard when blanketed in snow. Stay safe, all you folks living in areas experiencing adverse weather.
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Also seen on different days of the long Thanksgiving weekend. Things CAN be black and white. Dodge Charger, latest rendition, in black, seen in the neighborhood: Dodge Charger, latest rendition, in white, and exactly how I'd order it if in the market today - white, black cloth interior, no spoiler, alloy wheels, the base Pentastar V6 engine, and one helluva car for under $30 K.
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Also seen last month was this 1965 Ford Mustang, probably the genesis for the term "pony car." I saw the owner, an early enough senior, asked him questions, and he would answer them with completely unrelated information. There was another person with him who had the answers. My questions: Which engine? Which trans, as in how many speeds? Is it air conditioned? The answers, provided by the younger person with him, were: 1) a 289 c.i. V8, 2) a 3 speed automatic, and 3) yes, it was air conditioned. It had less than 50,000 miles but, when the engine came to life, there was a fair bit of rumbling.