I think the biggest problem is that kids are immortal. Nothing kills kids! Well, it was true when I was a kid, or at least I assumed so... Brakes? Seat belts? Maintenance? Who needs 'em! What can you do to kid-proof an old car... * Take off the sway bars (oops, two of mine don't gots one) * Put in a tilt switch that shorts the points when the car gets more than 0.1G in any direction. * Drain the gas. Seriously, I'm not sure I'd let most of my adult friends drive my Ramblers, never mind kids. The cars are fine, it's them humans I don't trust. They all grew up with plastic cars with plastic cup holders and a cheap plastic switch on everything. I barely trust myself to not screw up. Imagine the sweat your grandpa would shed, letting even us experienced car nuts drive a Model T or brass era car? Leather clutch?! Straight gears?! Same difference. (Actually, you could do the tilt switch... a simple pendulum inside a grounded metal ring... tie pendulum to points. Done deal.) On Mon, 17 Mar 2008, Matt Haas wrote: > Bruce, > > Just remind them that your car was built at the end of the "hose it out, > replace the windshield, and sell it to the next guy" era of safety > standards. You could also make them watch some of the early crash tests > they did in the early days of making cars safer (that or the driver's ed > films I had to watch in the 80's -- at least your car would look like > the ones in the films I had to watch). Seeing a crash dummy's head > removed by the steering column should make them think a little bit. > > Tires squealing around corners isn't always due to speed. Low tire > pressure (or bad tires) or cruddy suspension design (think 80's Chrysler > mini vans) can make for squealy tires. > > I've also noticed that I drive my old cars differently than my truck. > Besides being aware of its limitations (little safety equipment and 4 > wheel drum brakes), you are not isolated from the road like you are with > new cars and I tend to pay more attention to things. Then there's also > the AM radio issue. If it's anything like it is around here, chances are > slim that your kids will be jamming to talk radio or a hell and brim > fire sermon. > > There is also one other thing that makes it harder to drive like an > idiot: slow steering. I know you haven't driven your car much but since > it's like 500 turns lock to lock in the steering, it's likely going to > be more effort to take a quick corner than today's lazy youth is willing > to put forth. > > Matt > > On 3/16/2008 12:55 PM, Bruce Griffis spouted this sage advice: > > I'm a grandpa driving kinda guy, too. Not a grandpa yet, but my kids > > are 22, 18 and 12 - so, ... > > > > Anyway, I'm seriously weighing whether to let the kids drive the > > Rambler at all. We've had discussions about speeds and brakes and > > shifting - but I can hear the tires squeal on the corner when they're > > in the Miata or beating on my Corolla. Think once the Rambler is > > running right, I'll give them the grandpa's version of driver's ed. > > > > (Although their real grandpa drove over 100 in his Windstar with them. > > New minivan, not paying attention to the speed - kinda got carried > > away. But we won't talk about how fast real grandpa's drive.) > > > > On Sun, Mar 16, 2008 at 11:24 AM, Joe Smith <know_ware@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >> I drive mostly like a grandpa. I am not exactly a grandpa yet, but my identical twin has 2 grandchildren and all of our kids call us both dad, so we call me grandpa joe. :-) > >> > >> Regarding the front brake drums: Doug Galvin found 2 that are still within specification in his parts yard. I bought them. I am also getting the alternator bracket from him and then I will purchase an alternator from TOPS Automotive in Santa Ana, CA on the corner of Bushard and Lincoln. > >> > >> http://360.yahoo.com/karl_haart > >> > >> > >> ____________________________________________________________________________________ > >> Be a better friend, newshound, and > >> know-it-all with Yahoo! Mobile. Try it now. http://mobile.yahoo.com/;_ylt=Ahu06i62sR8HDtDypao8Wcj9tAcJ > >> -------------- next part -------------- > >> An HTML attachment was scrubbed... > >> URL: http://splatter.wps.com/pipermail/amc-list/attachments/20080316/a5058d8e/attachment.htm > >> _______________________________________________ > >> Amc-list mailing list > >> Amc-list@xxxxxxxxxxxx > >> http://splatter.wps.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/amc-list > >> > > _______________________________________________ > > Amc-list mailing list > > Amc-list@xxxxxxxxxxxx > > http://splatter.wps.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/amc-list > > > > > > > > _______________________________________________ Amc-list mailing list Amc-list@xxxxxxxxxxxx http://splatter.wps.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/amc-list