dieselcrawler
Elite Member
Tom has a VERY good point... my superduty trucks are 3x the truck that my '84 k30 is, with regard to safety. Power too.
lol no prob about hijacking, makes the treads interesting when they take on new meanings.
I think i just need spares of all these sensors in my toolbox, so tired of being absolutely stranded, sometimes in remote locations only to find its a $20 piece of plastic junk stamped made in mexico that did it. My old trucks and i have owned all the brands over the years were so simply made that they were all so dependable compared to this thing i drive now. Just feel like im going backwards.
I have to help hijack too! I have 3 of the 7.3's, my buddy has 2, both of us had them since 2007, not one single cam sensor issue. Bet I just jinxed myself...
I think cars in the 60's and 70s were more disposable than current vehicles. My last several vehicles were very dependable.
I hardly ever see cars on the side of the road disabled anymore. 40 years ago there were broken down cars, often over heated on the roadside.
After my wife walked away from a head on collision in her 2014 with little more than a mild concussion and a few visits to the chiropractor, I won't be putting her in a vintage vehicle. Modern cars wrap you in a cocoon in an accident and more people than ever before walk away from collisions that only a short time ago would be deadly.
After my wife walked away from a head on collision in her 2014 with little more than a mild concussion and a few visits to the chiropractor, I won't be putting her in a vintage vehicle. Modern cars wrap you in a cocoon in an accident and more people than ever before walk away from collisions that only a short time ago would be deadly.
What I remember about cars from 40-50 years ago was that some parts were overbuilt and some were underbuilt. So you might have a cast iron engine block that was good for 600,000 miles, but the distributor would fail after 30,000. .
You can have your old cars and update them with newer technologies and have the best of both worlds.
Last old car I had was a 65 Pontiac Tempest wagon, put in a modern 5 speed overdrive transmission, pointless ignition, radial tires, upgraded to newer model disc brakes, upgraded the suspension to a more modern setup, upgraded the power steering to have more feel and quicker ratio. The sky is the limit on what you can do to update an old car with modern tech. I had a 65 GTO that I had updated with fuel injection.
My problem with newer cars is not the technology but the lack of choice on how much you get. The over complication of new cars. My '06 wagon has computer controlled water pump and thermostat. Its gotten to the point that once was a simple mechanical system that cost about $30 in parts has become overly complicated electronically controlled stuff that cost $800 in parts. Not to mention the added cost to replace because you have to disassemble half the engine compartment to get at the parts. Sometimes its worth it sometimes its not.
As far as new cars, they could even be better. I'd love to see more attention go to building reliability over adding features that I don't even want. Hard to buy a new car without all kinds of junk I don't want.
lol no prob about hijacking, makes the treads interesting when they take on new meanings.
I think i just need spares of all these sensors in my toolbox, so tired of being absolutely stranded, sometimes in remote locations only to find its a $20 piece of plastic junk stamped made in mexico that did it. My old trucks and i have owned all the brands over the years were so simply made that they were all so dependable compared to this thing i drive now. Just feel like im going backwards.
I
I hardly ever see cars on the side of the road disabled anymore. 40 years ago there were broken down cars, often over heated on the roadside.
Speaking of parts failure, my 1989 F150 blew the clutch cylinder out in the boonies. I was at a stop sign, herd a bang and no clutch. Shut it down (mistake), Fortunately it started in granny gear. I drove it home, 20 some miles, by shifting without need of clutch. I wonder if any of the new vehicles couild even be driven that way anymore. Probably some sensor gizmo that wouild disable everything.
Harry K
Speaking of overly complicated. I see in hte news that Chrysler Corp has a major problem with the fancy shift stick in the big Jeep and one of the cars. After you shift, the lever returns to a central spot. You can't tell what gear you are in by looking at it. People are having problems tryng to hit park, think it is there, get out and vehicle runs off. Can't shut off engine unless tranny is in park.
What idiot came up with that asininity?
So concerning these sensors, am i the only one that had 4 leave me stranded in the last couple years and on a fairly late model truck?
I have to help hijack too! I have 3 of the 7.3's, my buddy has 2, both of us had them since 2007, not one single cam sensor issue. Bet I just jinxed myself...
I have a '66 mustang that I've restored and dropped a 1990 5.0 HO and an AOD transmission into it. I get the best of both worlds, fuel injection and overdrive transmission with a vintage mustang...lol. Runs like a scalded cat with EFI.
My Grandfather died from injuries sustained to his chest from the steering column in his 1956 Ford. He was going 20mph in thick fog, crossed a T intersection and hit the opposing road bank head on. With a new radiator and some front suspension repair the car was still driveable.It wasn't all that many decades ago that steering-column design was killing people.