Maker Pro
Maker Pro

are Volkswagens off-topic?

R

Rich Grise

Jan 1, 1970
0
There are lots of 10 and 15% grade streets around here, and one 24%
nearby, but it's one-way downhill. First couple of winter rains,
you're guaranteed to slide through the stopsign at the end of the
block.

This ain't it:

Kind of disappointing, actually - it's about as steep at the hill at the
south end of San Pedro. ;-)

And it's nothing like the ones we used to ride our bikes down back in
Glen Lake, MN. ;-)

As a matter of fact, there's one on the road that goes inland from
Oceanside to I-15 that has a very prominent warning sign about a 20%
or something really ridiculous.

Thanks!
Rich
 
R

Rich Grise

Jan 1, 1970
0
Heh heh !!
I was waiting for 'Dirty Harry' to come over a crest trailing car parts
:)

Or Bullitt, or any number of Kar chase Kops. ;-)

Cheers!
RIch
 
P

PN2222A

Jan 1, 1970
0
62K??? My Q45 has 133K on it and can still outrun about everything
around.

Buy a Nissan product with automatic tranny.

I will _NEVER_ own another Datsun.

PN2222A
 
J

Jim Thompson

Jan 1, 1970
0
I will _NEVER_ own another Datsun.

PN2222A

I've owned nothing but since 1977...

1 280Z
1 280ZX
1 Maxima
2 Sentra's (for the daughters when they went off to college)

and presently...

1 Frontier (5 years old, 22K miles)
1 Q45 (10 years old, 133K miles)

...Jim Thompson
 
J

John Larkin

Jan 1, 1970
0
Well, my 93 Golf finally refused to transport me, for the first time.
I was about to come to a stop at a stop sign on a downhill (I *do*
stop at stop signs) on Diamond at 29th, and it felt like I'd run into
a boulder... it absolutely jammed. The engine and clutch worked, it
shifted, but it moved like it was welded to the Earth, ie, not a mm.

So I called the tow truck. Luckily, the location is high and green,
breezy, with a nice view of downtown, so the wait was pleasant, even
though the car was in the middle of the street. I got a few dirty
looks and 5 offers of help, a pretty good ratio.

The tow-truck driver asked to try it himself before he towed it away.
It was still locked solid, but he put it in reverse and it backed
right up! Going forward, it locked again in a couple of feet; backed
once more, and it was fixed. Smart guy! I drove it to my repair guys,
they pulled the tranny pan, and of course they found a gear tooth.

This car has 62K miles on it, and I drive mostly on hills, and I must
shift 20 times per mile, so that's a million or two shifts so far, so
I guess I can't bitch too much. The synchronizers had been getting
soft lately, so the gears have taken a beating.

So,

1) Should I keep driving it for a week or so, until I get a new car?
There's no audible nastiness, so I must have just knocked off the top
of a tooth.

2) Should I get another VW? The 5-cylinder 2.5l looks interesting.

3) Manual or automatic? Shifting keeps me amused and feels macho, and
an automatic would make me feel like a little old lady, but these
hills are hell on clutches and manual gearboxes.

And why did they call them Rabbits in the first place, then call them
Golfs, and now call them Rabbits again?

John

Some numbers:

Assume a 6-cyl, 4-valve car that averages 20 mph/krpm and averages 40
mph. After 120k miles, we have

3000 operating hours
360e6 total crank revolutions
180e6 ignition firings/cylinder
1.08e9 total ignitions
4.32e9 valve operations
1e5 to 2e6 shifts, depending on driving environment
3e3 to 3e4 starts, ditto
6e3 gallons of fuel consumed, worth $19K.

at 5000 rpm, one crank revolution takes 12 milliseconds, and a valve
is open for a few milliseconds.

Given routine maintanance and preventive replacement of expected
wearout parts (battery, water pump, belts, plugs) the engine is likely
to have zero unexpected failures.

John
 
R

Rich Grise

Jan 1, 1970
0
Around here, you literally see blocks of parked grey, silver, and the
occasional black car. Most of the cars are the same color and albedo
as asphalt, and basically camoflage themselves against the roadway. I
tried to get the flaming red Rabbit, but they couldn't find one, so I
had to settle for the blue, 4-door. Maybe I'll see how much Julio
would want to paint it red.

Just get a roller and some barn paint...

;-)
 
J

joseph2k

Jan 1, 1970
0
Rich said:
Kind of disappointing, actually - it's about as steep at the hill at the
south end of San Pedro. ;-)

And it's nothing like the ones we used to ride our bikes down back in
Glen Lake, MN. ;-)

As a matter of fact, there's one on the road that goes inland from
Oceanside to I-15 that has a very prominent warning sign about a 20%
or something really ridiculous.

Thanks!
Rich

Still the one that impressed me for steepness was in SF; it did not have a
sidewalk, it has stairs.
 
Top