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Thread: Are cagers too far disconnected?

  1. #16
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    Quote Originally Posted by george formby View Post
    Thing is, when my electrics do fail.....
    TDM's don't break down.

    They simply get abandoned.
    Reactor Online. Sensors Online. Weapons Online. All Systems Nominal.

  2. #17
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    I dunno about that.

    I drive a 2002 Subaru wagon. Auto, AWD, ABS, VDC, etc etc etc. But I still feel like I am driving it. And I always have a fair idea of how fast I am going. I don't find that the mod cons make me any less connected to the fact that I am driving.

    Maybe it's just me, I dunno. Maybe it's because I drove old shit heaps for centuries and have failed to "learn" the modern laziness...
    . “No pleasure is worth giving up for two more years in a rest home.” Kingsley Amis

  3. #18
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    Quote Originally Posted by avgas View Post
    TDM's don't break down.

    They simply get abandoned.
    No ABS on the TDM either, vintage all the way. Admittedly I do need to replace a speedo bulb before I chuck it a ditch.

  4. #19
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    Quote Originally Posted by slofox View Post
    I dunno about that.

    I drive a 2002 Subaru wagon. Auto, AWD, ABS, VDC, etc etc etc. But I still feel like I am driving it. And I always have a fair idea of how fast I am going. I don't find that the mod cons make me any less connected to the fact that I am driving.

    Maybe it's just me, I dunno. Maybe it's because I drove old shit heaps for centuries and have failed to "learn" the modern laziness...
    Subarus are involving but still well appointed. Now a friends 4.0ltr Ford executive something or other is what I call totally detached. It's like driving trifle but less tasty.

  5. #20
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    Yeah I think the point of the thread is of all the BS in cars these days

    -Indy
    Hey, kids! Captain Hero here with Getting Laid Tip 213 - The Backrub Buddy!

    Find a chick who’s just been dumped and comfort her by massaging her shoulders, and soon, she’ll be massaging your prostate.


  6. #21
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    Quote Originally Posted by Big Dave View Post
    't aint the arrow - it's the Indian.
    Now there's a man who can be accurate and succinct all at the same time...

    Quote Originally Posted by slofox View Post
    I dunno about that.

    I drive a 2002 Subaru wagon. Auto, AWD, ABS, VDC, etc etc etc. But I still feel like I am driving it. And I always have a fair idea of how fast I am going. I don't find that the mod cons make me any less connected to the fact that I am driving.

    Maybe it's just me, I dunno. Maybe it's because I drove old shit heaps for centuries and have failed to "learn" the modern laziness...
    You're one of the old style Kiwi's who actually learned how to drive properly and it's still with you. Ther aren't enough acronims to describe everything the Kiszashi has, sufffice to say that to crash it or spin it out, you'd have to be an absolute nutcase on steroids!

    I still feel like I'm connected to the road and in control as I pass or get passed by ignorants who have their mind everywhere else but on what they are doing... Like the Oh, so upperclass gent driving a new M5 Beemer at erratic speed while trying to text surrepticiously this morning on the Southern Motorway in heavy traffic...

    Or the middle-aged lady who tailgated me on the Northern each downhill section only to drop a hundred meters or more back on the slight up-hill sections and must have had to do in excess of 120km/h to catch me up on the next downhill so she could sit a metre or so from my rear bumper again. I had the cruise control on at a steady 104 on the GPS and the Suzuki jusat sat at that speed up or down the gradients. Her speedo must have been varying from 90 - 120+!
    You don't get to be an old dog without learning a few tricks.
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  7. #22
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    Quote Originally Posted by Big Dave View Post
    't aint the arrow - it's the Indian.
    Now there's a man who can be accurate and succinct all at the same time...

    Quote Originally Posted by slofox View Post
    I dunno about that.

    I drive a 2002 Subaru wagon. Auto, AWD, ABS, VDC, etc etc etc. But I still feel like I am driving it. And I always have a fair idea of how fast I am going. I don't find that the mod cons make me any less connected to the fact that I am driving.

    Maybe it's just me, I dunno. Maybe it's because I drove old shit heaps for centuries and have failed to "learn" the modern laziness...
    You're one of the old style Kiwi's who actually learned how to drive properly and it's still with you. Ther aren't enough acronims to describe everything the Kiszashi has, sufffice to say that to crash it or spin it out, you'd have to be an absolute nutcase on steroids!

    I still feel like I'm connected to the road and in control as I pass or get passed by ignorants who have their mind everywhere else but on what they are doing... Like the Oh, so upperclass gent driving a new M5 Beemer at erratic speed while trying to text surrepticiously this morning on the Southern Motorway in heavy traffic...

    Or the middle-aged lady who tailgated me on the Northern each downhill section only to drop a hundred meters or more back on the slight up-hill sections and must have had to do in excess of 120km/h to catch me up on the next downhill so she could sit a metre or so from my rear bumper again. I had the cruise control on at a steady 104 on the GPS and the Suzuki just sat at that speed up or down the gradients. Her speedo must have been varying from 90 - 120+!
    You don't get to be an old dog without learning a few tricks.
    Shorai Powersports batteries are very trick!

  8. #23
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    Quote Originally Posted by Indiana_Jones View Post
    Yeah I think the point of the thread is of all the BS in cars these days

    -Indy
    Most of which I don't need.

    And even more I'd never use.

    They're freakin' cars - not mobile pleasure palaces.
    Winding up drongos, foil hat wearers and over sensitive KBers for over 14,000 posts...........
    " Life is not a rehearsal, it's as happy or miserable as you want to make it"

  9. #24
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    Drive down the road at 60kph and give the steering wheel a short but sharp turn then let go. Car carries on in straight line. Safety design feature of modernish cars.

    How can something like that be "connected"?

  10. #25
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    Quote Originally Posted by Scuba_Steve View Post
    I (most probably like most of you) enjoy driving/riding I don't do it just to get places, I do it becuase I love it.
    But it's got me thinking are modern cages too far disconnected from the road???
    .
    Yup, nothing like feeling a few rattles, draughts and bumps to make you realise that yes, you ARE driving, not just dreaming it.
    Winding up drongos, foil hat wearers and over sensitive KBers for over 14,000 posts...........
    " Life is not a rehearsal, it's as happy or miserable as you want to make it"

  11. #26
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    Quote Originally Posted by scumdog View Post
    Yup, nothing like feeling a few rattles, draughts and bumps to make you realise that yes, you ARE driving, not just dreaming it.
    That's when we take the MX5 out for a spin, to remnd us how much fun driving can be.
    You don't get to be an old dog without learning a few tricks.
    Shorai Powersports batteries are very trick!

  12. #27
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    Quote Originally Posted by scumdog View Post
    Most of which I don't need.

    And even more I'd never use.

    They're freakin' cars - not mobile pleasure palaces.
    Exactly lol.

    Granted I do have a heater in my car, I just stick on a jacket or jumper if I get cold. Hell it doesn't even have a fag lighter! but has ash trays.

    If I get too hot I wind down the window!

    -Indy
    Hey, kids! Captain Hero here with Getting Laid Tip 213 - The Backrub Buddy!

    Find a chick who’s just been dumped and comfort her by massaging her shoulders, and soon, she’ll be massaging your prostate.


  13. #28
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    Most people only drive one or two cars on a week-to-week basis. Whatever you drive, you quickly get accustomed to it have nothing to reference it against. I always think my subaru is hard sprung and very connected to the road but after a session of go-karting, getting in the subaru feels like i'm piloting a boat (nowhere near Tauranga)

  14. #29
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    Quote Originally Posted by Scuba_Steve View Post
    are modern cages too far disconnected from the road???
    Good question. But I suspect that you mean cagers (the people who drive) rather than the cages they drive around in. Modern cages are extremely well connected to the road, largely thanks to gravity and the profile of their tyres.
    "Standing on your mother's corpse you told me that you'd wait forever." [Bryan Adams: Summer of 69]

  15. #30
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    Firestone have a good profile I see their ad's all over the place.

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