Sign In Join 



Project Cars--You Get to Vote on "Hold 'em or Fold 'em"

19440 messages,  Last post on Dec 09, 2009 at 9:10 AM

You are in the Classic Cars Forum. Your Host is mr_shiftright

What is this discussion about? Classic Cars


Messages Page 1919 of 1945
1
...
1916
1917
1918
1919
1920
1921
1922
...
1945
Prev
Next
Last
Go To Msg #
Search This Discussion

#19173 of 19440
Re: Dallas Craigs Winter projects <strike>Toys</strike> cars [lokki] by texases
Nov 03, 2009 (6:08 pm)
Reply

Replying to: lokki (Nov 03, 2009 1:26 pm)

Re-that Z, were the '73s much of a drop from the '72s? I don't like the bumpers, but did the engine's suffer much? That engine compartment is the nicest, cleanest looking one I've seen in a Z (maybe I'm thinking of the rat's nest in some 280Zs).
#19174 of 19440
Re: Dallas Craigs Winter projects <strike>Toys</strike> cars [texases] by oregonboy
Nov 03, 2009 (7:04 pm)
Reply

Replying to: texases (Nov 03, 2009 6:08 pm)

The big change in Z-car bumpers came in 1974 with the introduction of the 260Z. The 1973 car in the advertisement has some kind of add-on bumper over-ride protector bars that detract from the clean lines of the car.
#19175 of 19440
Re: Dallas Craigs Winter projects <strike>Toys</strike> cars [oregonboy] by Mr_Shiftright HOST
Nov 03, 2009 (8:34 pm)
Reply

Replying to: oregonboy (Nov 03, 2009 7:04 pm)

The 260Z had all kinds of nasty fuel delivery problems, and was consequently short-lived.
#19176 of 19440
Re: Dallas Craigs Winter projects <strike>Toys</strike> cars [Mr_Shiftright] by oregonboy
Nov 03, 2009 (10:05 pm)
Reply

Replying to: Mr_Shiftright (Nov 03, 2009 8:34 pm)

Yep, one year only... then came the 280Z; unloved for it's clunky bumpers and emission control issues. That, and the original 240Z was a tough act to follow.
#19177 of 19440
About that Philco Record Player by lokki
Nov 04, 2009 (7:06 am)
Reply
ghulet -
 
"... I always thought Chrysler was first to offer a record player as an option..."
 
I'd always thought so too, and so I decided to do a little research (if googling something count's as 'research').
 
I don't think this guy knows what he's talking about - I think he's off by a decade.
The Philco wasn't around (if I'm reading this right) until the mid 60's.
http://cultureandcommunication.org/deadmedia/index.php/Hip_Pocket_Records
 
And then there's this site which is interesting reading, with its old advertisements and magazine articles about the players:
 
http://ookworld.com/hiwayhifi.html
 
Chrysler made this dream[playing records in cars] a reality with two generations of in-car phonographs. The original Highway Hi-Fi hit the streets in Autumn of 1955, for model year 1956 -- a factory option in the full Chrysler Corporation line of vehicles: Chrysler, Dodge, Plymouth, DeSoto and Imperial
#19178 of 19440
Re: About that Philco Record Player [lokki] by tjc78
Nov 04, 2009 (7:45 am)
Reply

Replying to: lokki (Nov 04, 2009 7:06 am)

OK... I am only 31 but remember vinyl fairly well and have a lot of older albums. If you walk too hard across the floor the turntable could skip. How in the heck did it work in the car? I guess you could increase the pressure the stylus puts on the record, however, that would kill the records over time.
#19179 of 19440
Re: About that Philco Record Player [tjc78] by texases
Nov 04, 2009 (7:54 am)
Reply

Replying to: tjc78 (Nov 04, 2009 7:45 am)

"I guess you could increase the pressure the stylus puts on the record, however, that would kill the records over time. "
 
You got it. They couldn't care less about wearing out the grooves, just having it in the car was the point. Of couse, their rarity shows how unsuccessful an idea it was...
#19180 of 19440
Re: About that Philco Record Player [tjc78] by lokki
Nov 04, 2009 (7:58 am)
Reply

Replying to: tjc78 (Nov 04, 2009 7:45 am)

The article explains that they made the player with a tone arm that would only move horizontally and that the arm was also made so that its pivot point was the center of mass so as to avoid lateral-acceleration induced skipping during turns.
 
The tracking force was 2 grams! Essentially the things came from factory with a penny already glued to the tone arm
#19181 of 19440
Re: About that Philco Record Player [tjc78] by Mr_Shiftright HOST
Nov 04, 2009 (7:59 am)
Reply

Replying to: tjc78 (Nov 04, 2009 7:45 am)

They skipped---that's how they worked.
 
Note well how quickly they disappeared as an accessory.
 
I think the idea is that you would park with your honey and put on a romantic tune or two. Given how fast a 45 rpm record played (ever notice how short the songs were in the 1950s?---I guess this was before those long drug-induced solos of the 60s )--seems like you'd be rudely interrupted 25 times an hour.
#19182 of 19440
Re: About that Philco Record Player [lokki] by tjc78
Nov 04, 2009 (9:05 am)
Reply

Replying to: lokki (Nov 04, 2009 7:58 am)

Essentially the things came from factory with a penny already glued to the tone arm
 
Thats what I figured. I didn't have a chance to read the article yet. I guess we have a come along way in car audio! Thanks for the explanation.

Messages Page 1919 of 1945
1
...
1916
1917
1918
1919
1920
1921
1922
...
1945
Prev
Next
Last
Go To Msg #
Search This Discussion
To POST a message, please Sign In.

New? Join Now!

Forum Tools

Please sign in.
Email Address:

Password:

Forgot Password?

Search Forums

Enter Keyword(s)

Advanced Search

Browse by Vehicle



View All Vehicles
Advertisement
Ask the Community
See What People Are Asking

Browse by Board

Browse by Topic


View All Topics

Today's Chats

Advertisement