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trinacriabob

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Everything posted by trinacriabob

  1. What random thought I really had, based on some discussions I've had with a friend who is looking for a professional job and thinks sending out than you letters help. She is well qualified for any of the jobs she's applying for. I told her my opinion: they've already made up their mind about the candidate, and they do it quickly, after she sort of hinted at seeing this with the results of what's going on. When wrapping up college and more college, the placement office went on and on with their scripted arsenal of job hunting tools and they would always stress the thank you letters. What I saw is that there are certain candidates (graduating students) they liked and it was certain companies who were all over them like a cheap suit. Those people didn't need to send thank you letters, even though I don't know if they did or didn't.
  2. I was looking at consumer reviews of the last few years of Dodge Chargers. Just surfing. I came to learn that these cars weigh about 4,300 pounds. I don't know if that's with a V8, or just the base V6. Two cylinders can shave off about 100 to 200 pounds, based on past cars that published weight with both 6 and 8 cylinder engines. No wonder they feel "planted."
  3. Spotting at the very end of the month. This was a good one. I'm walking out of a place I had just eaten at and there's a car show. Most of the other cars (too garish and not stock enough) didn't interest me. I headed over to this Buick Reatta. This is a view of the rear of this convertible with about 50,000 miles on it. This is the leather interior with buckets and console as seen from the driver's window. For a 2-seater, it's nicely detailed and the dash is substantial. This is an even nicer view of the dash. The volumes are appealing and you can see that it's related to the Riviera produced by the same GM division This shows both the Reatta badging on the door and the typical alloy wheel seen on this specialty 2-seater. Being a 1990, I am thinking this is a Series I 3800 V6. In my '92, I had a series I 3800. My ignition coils on the ignition module were round. There are rectangular. I wonder why there's a difference. This is one clean engine bay. This engine is set up with a very direct connection from the air filter box to the throttle body. Here is the main under hood placard and serpentine routing diagram. It said 3.8 liters at the very left of this sticker. Here is the original sticker. It was built out in Lansing, MI. For 1990, this was a fairly high MSRP. It was about twice what a basic Regal coupe would had on its sticker. This is the owner's manual - "Premium American Motorcars" indeed. This was an interesting item the owner showed me - each Reatta came with a certificate of the people who worked on its hand assembled aspects. The Reatta name is different, but the font is cool. I have seen some of these folks around this car show before and not many of them are very friendly. It seems like a clique that regularly gets together and some of their talk is kind of crass. However, the retired gentleman who owned this car was very polite and enjoyed talking cars. We must have talked GM for about half an hour! A truly random occurrence. I really like the unique Buick Reatta, but am not sure I'd want to own one. But they're great eye candy.
  4. Yes, I tend to agree. I hope so! It's just that, when the deep red fades, it can look like a dark orange when the flag or decal began its life as an Italian one.
  5. I saw this last week. I was leaving the supermarket and she was going in. I noticed that she exited from this truck. Let's see ... Sticker on the left side: "I'm a girl ... Yes, this is my truck" Sticker on the right side: "Shoot like a girl ... if you can!" Flag on the rear: I seriously hope third color on the right is orange, and not red, because I sure as s**t don't want to claim her Bottom line: This gives a new meaning to "Ram tough"
  6. Thank you, thank you! If this is the way it will play out, then that means a person might be able to look at the outgoing model and the incoming model and decide. But it might also mean that, if tapering down production, the opportunity to order the outgoing model - or find it on the lots (where distance is not an issue) - more or less the way you want it decked out might be challenging.
  7. That dash was a little lopsided, and I thought that when they released the last Bonne, but it could be rearranged into shape, somewhat, and convey the same idea. Pontiac has always had the best dashboards of the GM stable, except when they went overboard with them ... just like they did with ribbed cladding. Thank you. I'm totally content with my current car, but understand that I will have to part ways with it sooner or later. That said, if I am going to buy something, I'd like to buy into the current base Charger platform as late as I possibly can. Sadly, my GM rewards points will be thrown to the wind. I do not believe that Chevy/Buick can't support 1 or 2 sedan lines. Perhaps it's that they can't design some smart and appealing ones that would divert customers from being potential Cam-cord buyers.
  8. Dodge Chargers ... and coupons! Coupons are funny because they might expire on July 31 which, to me, means the 31st is included. Some might interpret it to mean they end on the 30th. As for the Charger, they say production for Charger and Challenger will end in 2023. Does that mean 2023 will be the last model year, for which production typically starts later in 2022? Or could it mean that they will still produce them in 2023 so a 2024 model year might be the last one? I'm hoping it's the latter. But I'd prefer someone chimes in and/or may have seen other news and articles.
  9. Good morning .... - - - - - By the way, guys, that "Planet of the Apes" was a good movie!
  10. Seen on July 26 while running errands - I didn't see the driver so I couldn't assess whether he or she was cut from hippiesh cloth ...
  11. Seen on July 21 - this was the sportier model of the first FWD Grand Prix, which had the air intake slots, the headlamps within those narrow horizontal slots, and the "Smokey and the Bandit" pinch in the front fascia. The base models had a more austere and even "less is more" front end ... at least in my opinion. This is somewhere between 1988 and 1994 (+/-). That gas cap door has seen better days. Reminds me of something a la Sonny Corleone by the toll booths for one of the tunnels in NYC.
  12. Seen on July 20 - this appliance needs to breathe, so let it breathe .... can't believe no one in the design department got yelled at for such ugly crap
  13. Seen on July 18 - I have no clue what it is, but it's old ... funky color, too.
  14. If you are talking about specific models, I'd agree that, while the MC was a dud, the Malibu was "safer" than the aero-back-like Buick Century and Olds Cutlass (an insult to the Cutlass name) that they released. I almost forgot that they made a coupe. I think the sedan almost looked worse because of all the window divisions along the greenhouse sides. What surprised me is that some head honcho didn't slap the s**t out of the designers for designs so ugly. (They didn't do that for the Citation's design, either.) Bob Lutz "tossed over the tables in the temple," so to speak, about some fairly bad Hyundai Azera like design work-ups for the first-gen LaCrosse. Boy, did they ever right the ship on that one: Jaguar-esque front end, Mercedes like rear end, and classic tried American greenhouse and sides. I think that the problem with the first downsized late '70s MC is that it too strongly went from being too much to being too paltry. Then, the cheapness of the interior and dash on all Chevy models on that chassis - that ran all the way until the platform was done away with - was almost appalling. It got a little better along the way, both inside and out. Outside, they put quad lamps on the '80 MC and the '81 refresh was a breath of fresh air. It's all water under the bridge, but I have been accused of "living in the past!" 1978 Buick Century sedan - this thing was a fright * 1978 Buick Regal coupe - on the same chassis, but sort of dignified ... not bad. - - - - - * what a hoot it would be to find one with the even smaller 3.2 (196 c.i.) V6, no air, no electric options, and low miles belonging to some elderly person in the heartland where they didn't salt the roads during winter who wants to unload it.
  15. Saw this today in a supermarket parking lot, parked way out. What a feast for the eyes. I think I'm dreaming. The last of the 500 cubic inchers, perhaps. You could have taken MANY high school friends to the drive-in free of charge in a trunk like this if your parents lent you their Eldorado! There's my sled beyond, and slightly to the left. A Cadillac dash shared with its siblings. And, with the placement of that bag, a flat floor due to FWD. I suppose it is strange to take photos of the interiors of random people's cars. My sled as viewed through the hood ornament and finned front fender (say that 3 times, real fast) of this Eldorado. I don't recall if I've seen Eldorado inscribed on other Eldorados, but this was a Biarritz. These look like 50/50 seats with individual armrests. Cadillac used this color (chamois, vanilla, I don't know what they called it) that was not seen in other GM divisions which used a uniform and darker tan interior. Some family friends had this color in the first downsized Coupe De Ville to use the 425 c.i. V8. I can do without the wide whitewalls. The thin whitewalls seen on some Lincoln products might have worked better. I believe a standard whitewall came with the car. I definitely like the opera windows. I prefer a vinyl roof that is not padded. I'm walking back to my car at this point, but this is the first view I got of it as I was about to get into my car to leave. I'm glad I didn't leave. What a presence. I also like the canting and character lines on the belt line near the opera window. This is somewhere between 1975 and 1978. I'm guessing it's a '77 or a '78. If so, the 500 c.i. V8 may have been gone and this vehicle would have been powered by a 425 c.i. V8 by then.. - - - - - With 8 photos (actually more), I obviously liked this car. While it didn't make it day, it helped make it better.
  16. I'll take the Bonne, not knowing what that Chevy is.
  17. They all stayed on for years, as did the "Brady Bunch" after the series ended. Putting these sitcoms into perspective from today's lenses, people would be in an uproar that they're too white and not diverse enough. There were families like that then ... and now. A person can check out some suburbs in the Mountain West, the Midwest, and the Southeast and see that. They will be far less common in other regions of the U.S. A living room American (Canadian, etc.) kids probably knew all too well ... Back on topic, these were good shows, as was "Bewitched." The best "Brady Bunch" episode had son Greg losing his dad's prints for a perfume company main office which ridiculously looked like a huge powder puff on stilts (sort of bad, like the basket building in OH). The prints slid out of a tube that Greg was transporting. (With AutoCAD, that would be a non-issue today.) As for "Bewitched," the best moments were probably of busybody Mrs. Kravitz exasperating her husband Abner, even though she really did see what she reported to have seen. Gladys and Abner ... classic!
  18. Very sad that Tony Dow, Beaver's older brother Wally on "Leave it to Beaver," recently died from cancer. This tame "peaches and cream" sitcom well before the "innocence lost" factor in America and Beaver, Wally, Larry Mondello, and all those kids seem ageless and eternal. I've seen it in reruns and the best episode had to have been when they dared each other to climb a billboard for a soup product that had a cup emitting steam to see if there really was soup in it. They made the climb. It all went south from there. R.I.P. Tony Dow
  19. From that photo, definitely. One of those movies where they want to get at the goods and have to stealthily find a way to do it.
  20. Ouch! Yes, maybe something like that.
  21. I just found this. In the '77 to '78 intermediate downsize, Chevy did the worst job of the GM divisions - referring to both the Monte Carlo and the Malibu. Find used 1978 78 Chevrolet Monte Carlo Collector Survivor, Mint Condition, Orig 50K Miles in Temecula, California, United States (2040-cars.com) Here is a near perfect '78 base coupe. The front end and the heavy side sculpting for a "smaller" MC were a fail. At least it has bucket seats and a console. It also has some electric options (moot). Sitting under the hood is the old school Buick supplied 231 c.i. V6. It's a California car that has about 50,000 miles. The link to craigslist is no longer active. I wonder how much he wanted and/or got for it.
  22. This was in a class by itself! Bombastic, excessive, call it what you want ... but what a neat and unique Cadillac.
  23. That would have been a serious amount of money for a car during the Eisenhower years. I'll never forget when they introduced the Maybach by bringing the luxury car to America aboard the QE2 but, instead of putting it in the hold, they put it in a metal framed glass box that sat on one of the pool decks up near the funnel. There's a longer video showing the QE2 sailing into NY and a helicopter lifting it off the ship with a banner saying Maybach.
  24. On this day in 1956, Italian Line's post WW2 transatlantic flagship, the SS Andrea Doria, was off the coast of Nantucket and due in nearby New York the following morning. At about 11 pm, while people were dancing in the ballrooms and awaiting the midnight buffet, she was impaled by the outbound SS Stockholm, which was about to begin crossing the North Atlantic in an easterly direction. It has been called the greatest rescue at sea. The list of the Doria rendered half of her lifeboats unusable, so the nearby French liner Ile de France, as well as the "offending" Stockholm and smaller ships belonging to the U.S. armed forces, took on the survivors. The loss of life amounted to 46 on the Doria and 5 on the Stockholm and involved passengers and crew near the zone of the impact. While there were injuries, everyone else on board the two vessels survived. I wake up on July 25 and remember that the Andrea Doria collision and sinking happened on this day. You guys knew I'd post this.
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