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-   -   2020 New Random Pics (http://forums.pelicanparts.com/showthread.php?t=1065287)

ErVikingo 12-02-2020 10:52 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by RonDent (Post 11125659)
This what happens when you don't properly maintain your equipment.

Please refer to my prior post. From my untrained eye, maintenance was not an issue. Acts of God took their toll. From January 1st to the 10th, the U.S. Geological Survey, reported more than 950 earthquakes and aftershocks. Over 500 of them had magnitudes of 2 or higher. 7th Jan a magnitude 7. It has not stopped since.

Look at this table as of 14:45 on 2020.12.02:

Puerto Rico has had: (M1.5 or greater)

15 earthquakes in the past 24 hours
122 earthquakes in the past 7 days
394 earthquakes in the past 30 days
9,404 earthquakes in the past 365 days

For the record the Observatory was not owned nor operated by the island's government. It was owned by the US National Science Foundation and was being operated (after Cornell left) by the Ana G. Méndez University and the University of Central Florida. UCF manages the facility under a cooperative agreement with Universidad Ana G. Méndez and Yang Enterprises Inc. for NSF

http://www.naic.edu/ao/repairs-update


Random Pic:

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GH85Carrera 12-02-2020 12:40 PM

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GH85Carrera 12-02-2020 12:48 PM

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masraum 12-02-2020 12:56 PM

https://www.caranddriver.com/reviews/a15142239/oldsmobile-vista-cruiser-455-road-test-archived-review/

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Quote:

The original Boss Wagon—the 1966 Plymouth Fury III so much beloved of Car and Driver—has now seen its second birthday and is about to come face to face with its fifty-thousandth mile. Both the concept and the vehicle have worn extremely well, so well in fact that we decided to do another one.

This time we selected an Olds F-85 Vista-Cruiser, largely because several engineers whose opinions we trust have called it the best-handling and most stable of all of the current crop of station wagons, and because Oldsmobile Division has been showing such extraordinary signs of life in the areas of enthusiasm and high performance. The Olds—albeit strictly a one-off custom job—is a worthy successor to our aging Plymouth, and if it is a bit more boss than wagon, we can only defend it on the grounds that we are car nuts, not teamsters.

In the Wagon Department the Olds loses to the Plymouth. It is just as long and just as heavy, but much narrower inside and out, making it considerably tighter and more limited for both people and cargo. In fact, its smaller interior dimensions are the only feature of the entire package that qualify it as the intermediate-sized car its F-85 nameplate implies. It is a great big car, friends, make no mistake.

It is in the Boss Department, however, that the Olds excels our Plymouth and just about anything else we can think of. It is a veritable bear. It goes, stops, steers, and handles like hell. It is so fast you wouldn't believe it. It does a big 94 in the quarter-mile, with an ET of 14.7 seconds, but unlike so many cars that deliver lots of sturm und drang in the quarter, it is perfectly happy to turn a corner or stop at the end.

New York National Speedway, where we conducted our performance tests, features a 0.5 mile shutdown area and a short return loop that can be negotiated at about 55 mph by test drivers with more brio than brains. The Olds was so good going through the quarter, then being hurled through the return loop that followed, that we'd like to see the whole procedure added to drag racing programs as a special event. The funny cars might end up a little less funny as a result.

To say that our Olds wagon was nonstandard would be an understatement of massive proportions. Basically a double-domed Vista-Cruiser, its standard-equipment 350 cu. in. V-8 was replaced with a mighty giant of a ram-air 455 developing tons of torque and herds of horsepower. And the enthusiasts in Lansing weren't content to substitute just any old 455, they went a step farther and breathed all over the thing, bolting on a set of 4-4-2 heads, a special capacitor discharge system, and the camshaft from their hottest '67 4-4-2 option. The result was the strongest, most responsive powerplant of any we've driven in the seven-liter-plus category.

Big engines are usually thundering torquers, but shy on the zappy responsiveness of small-displacement screamers. The 455 combined the best of both worlds—bags of torque, but very sporty at the same time. It normally only wound to about 5400, but if it had turned any higher than that it would undoubtedly have detached our retinas. What's a big engine for? Retina Detaching is a mere hazard of the trade. Besides which, it's worth it when you come across something as close to Truth as Boss Wagon's Cousin.

Bolted to this superstrong engine was a pumped-up 3-speed Turbo Hydra-Matic that shifted more crisply and authoritatively than most manual boxes. Only when it got hot from repeated acceleration tests and a lot of forced manual upshifts did it lose some of its sharp punch, and then only between second and third. The final-drive ratio (with limited-slip) was the optional 3.42 instead of the standard Vista-Cruiser's 2.78, and it ran on Olds' beautiful styled steel wheels (from Motor Wheel Corp.) with 6.0-in. rims and Goodyear H70-14 Polyglas tires.

The front suspension is part of Oldsmobile's police "Apprehender" package, as is the rear, only the front is pretty straight while the rear bristles with evidence of the same special attention that the engine got. The front's made up of stiffer springs and shocks and a stabilizer bar. The rear has stiffer shocks and springs, plus the control arms and rear stabilizer bar from the 4-4-2. Brakes are disc front/drum rear, again of the police "Apprehender" (not to be confused with "Apprehensive') genre.

ENGINE TYPE
pushrod water-cooled V-8, cast iron block and heads
Displacement:
455 in3, 7450 cm3
Power:
390 hp @ 5000 rpm
Torque:
500 lb-ft @ 3600 rpm

DIMENSIONS
Wheelbase: 121.0 in
Length: 217.5 in
Width: 76.7 in
Height: 56.8 in
Curb weight: 4380 lb

C/D TEST RESULTS
Zero to 30 mph: 2.0 sec
Zero to 60 mph: 6.2 sec
Zero to 100 mph: 16.8 sec
Standing ¼-mile: 14.7 sec @ 93.6 mph
Top speed (estimated): 127 mph
Braking, 80-0 mph: 237 ft
Tell me that a bunch of you codgers don't want the car described here.

GH85Carrera 12-02-2020 01:18 PM

I don't. My parents bought a 66 Olds Delta 88 with the same engine above. I never drove it as I had to buy my own car, but my brother drove it some. He could do a burnout for over a block, it just never stopped. It was the era of 22 cents per gallon gasoline.

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This is a very remote area. ^^^^

tdw28210 12-02-2020 03:44 PM

[QUOTE


Tell me that a bunch of you codgers don't want the car described here.
[/QUOTE]

We grew up with the "big boy" version of the Vista Cruiser wagon. The "Custom Cruiser".

http://www.rocket100.com/olds_models...ser%201974.jpg

Bob Kontak 12-02-2020 04:13 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by tdw28210 (Post 11126419)
Quote:

Tell me that a bunch of you codgers don't want the car described here.[/B][/I]
We grew up with the "big boy" version of the Vista Cruiser wagon. The "Custom Cruiser".

http://www.rocket100.com/olds_models...ser%201974.jpg

Sigh. Low grade sheet metal. Rust and paint adhesion problems despite the knife through warm butter styling.

We had a new 1973 Delta 88 in rust belt PA that lasted no more than two years because of the embarrassment of driving a rusted, unsightly pig. Not one of us kids grew up with it cause it just occupied the driveway for a little minute.

Random: Opel borrows some styling from Erwin Komenda.

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Heel n Toe 12-02-2020 05:51 PM

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Baz 12-02-2020 07:10 PM

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GH85Carrera 12-03-2020 07:34 AM

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Racerbvd 12-03-2020 08:40 AM

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GH85Carrera 12-03-2020 10:25 AM

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Baz 12-03-2020 02:10 PM

https://my.evilmilk.com/p/1/t/6ex-1t1pa9.jpg

flatbutt 12-03-2020 03:06 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Baz (Post 11127633)

How in the heck am I supposed to NOT look at her longingly?

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Steve Carlton 12-03-2020 04:29 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by flatbutt (Post 11127698)
How in the heck am I supposed to NOT look at her longingly?

Imagine how happy she will make you after about 6 months.

Baz 12-03-2020 04:35 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Steve Carlton (Post 11127822)
Imagine how happy she will make you after about 6 months.

Flat would have her replacement in place way before then!

Not really random - followed this long hood for a while today on the barrier island.....

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ludditeengineer 12-03-2020 05:18 PM

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VINMAN 12-03-2020 05:21 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by flatbutt (Post 11127698)

I cant even remember how many times Iv'e done this section on the trail...



.

flatbutt 12-03-2020 05:34 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by VINMAN (Post 11127892)
I cant even remember how many times Iv'e done this section on the trail...



.

Practically my backyard.


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Nostril Cheese 12-03-2020 05:47 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Baz (Post 11127633)

Yes please.

May i retort?

http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1607050009.jpg


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