Yearly Archives: 2012

Dominos Creates “Engine Noise” For Electric Pizza Delivery Scooters


Fast Tube by Casper

In The Netherlands, electric vehicles are required to emit a sound for pedestrian safety. Dominos came up with a cleverly obnoxious alternative to standard chirps, beeps, and hums.

It alternates between idle and acceleration sounds, exclaiming “Dominos!” with each simulated gear change.

NOT Driven: 1975 Fiat 124 Spider

A friend in Nebraska asked me to examine a Fiat listed on Craigslist here in St Louis for $2750. He’d been looking all over the country but they sold before he could finalize a deal.

I intended to take it for a test drive and check for leaks, electrical issues, differential noises, and transmission problems, but the car’s inability to start (and stay running) was a buzzkill.

The only other 124 Spider I’ve seen in person was at a local junkyard. Most of the front half of the body was burned. Anything that wasn’t destroyed by fire was stripped, leaving behind the floor pan, windshield, and rear quarter. That wasn’t encouraging.

This is what a properly restored 124 is supposed to look like:

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It’s endearingly round upright headlights, long hood, and short rear deck draw inspiration from British roadsters like the MGB (released in 1962, four years before the Fiat Spider). The egg crate grille, bulging rear quarter, and double-domed hood are distinctly Italian. The Fiat 124 Spider was personally designed by Sergio Pininfarina who in turn oversaw the designs of the Ferrari 410, Ferrari F40, Bentley Azure, Cadillac Allante, and Ferrari Enzo as well as several Volvos, Fiats, Alfas, and Peugeots.

Those are lofty names, but this is a $2700 car with faded paint, a well-worn interior, and an engine that refused to stay running for more than a few seconds at a time.

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Non-exotic Italian cars endure a difficult life in America, subjected to harsh winters and brutal summers as well as cheap, neglectful owners. Fortunately, despite nearly four decades of wear and tear, this 124 looked much better than I imagined.

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The floor pans were in tact and no significant rust was found. I walked around the body and knocked around looking for spots where filler may have been used, but it appeared to be solid metal all around. I checked under the carpeting in the trunk for signs of a previous rear-ending but nothing looked repainted or wrinkled.

The driver’s door bowed out a quarter inch at the bottom, possibly because it was closed on a seat belt at some point.

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The red paint has seen better days.

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The original wheel covers were in excellent condition, but they look silly, like wire covers from a 1983 Buick Century. The tires are about a year old.

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Most surprisingly, the soft top was tight and free of rips or tears. The plastic rear window has seen better days, but at least it was in tact.

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All of the original tonneau covers and accessories were included. The metal hardtop was stored in the garage.

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The Weber-carbureted DOHC I-4 engine was good for 93hp, enough to move 2350lbs from 0-60 in just over 10 seconds, a number well within reason for 1975. By comparison, the 1975 Chevy Camaro with a 350 V8 took 11 seconds.

The owners claimed that the engine was bored from 1.8 to 2.0L, which would produce 102hp and drop 0-60 times to just under 10 seconds. Though it isn’t particularly fast, the low seating position, open roof, and 5-speed manual transmission enhance the sensation of speed.

Unfortunately, I never got a chance to drive it. They drove the car from the garage to this parking space the day before and it had been regularly driven. The carburetor was rebuilt within the last year but leaving the car in the garage for so long (since fall 2011) had gummed up the fuel system.

Here’s a first attempt at starting it:


Fast Tube by Casper

After a few minutes (and discovering that one of the jumper leads had fallen off), we finally got it going:


Fast Tube by Casper

Unfortunately, as soon as I touched the throttle it died.

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The motor looked well cared for with fresh belts and no apparent leaks or funny odors.

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Inside, the wood paneling had some cracks and imperfections. The gauges and lights appeared to work fine.

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I didn’t realize until I looked closely that the 124 is a four-seat 2+2, though the back appears to be suitable only for grocery bags and small dogs.

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This Pioneer stereo looks like it dates back to 1987 (I looked it up). It features a digital clock, 3.2 watts of chest-thumping power, a digital tuner, and six presets. In the 1987 Crutchfield catalog it was $160.

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Unfortunately, as nice as sheepskin seat covers are, they tend to mask upholstery problems. The seats will have to be refinished.

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The driver’s seat back is also crooked, the same problem my Saab had when I bought it two years ago. Hopefully it only needs readjustment at the base rather than total replacement for a bent seat frame.

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You can see here that the door is slightly misaligned. The Pininfarina badge is still in tact.

The remarkably original and rust-free condition of the car can be attributed to most of its life being spent in California. It wasn’t moved to Missouri until 13 years ago when the original owner died. His daughter took possession and has been enjoying it ever since, storing it in the winter.

Though it was sad to see her parting with a piece of her father’s legacy, my friend Charles will be getting an excellent start to restoring an Italian classic. He’s sending a trailer to deliver it to Omaha.

If I ever make it to Nebraska, I’ll take it for a drive and write a proper review.

More details:
http://www.hemmings.com/hsx/stories/2006/08/01/hmn_buyers_guide1.html

More photos:
http://www.q45.org/gallery/gallery3/index.php/Fiat-for-Charlie

Dodge Charger Lives Up To Its Name

http://www.kens5.com/news/Car-crashes-into-northside-eatery-145837395.html

“SAN ANTONIO — Diners at the EZ’s on De Zavala Road were surprised around 4:30 Monday afternoon when a car crashed into the building.”

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A Dodge “Ram” would have also worked.

http://www.kens5.com/news/Car-crashes-into-northside-eatery-145837395.html

New Jersey: Hundreds of Brand New Saabs Rotting Away at Port

More Photos: http://www.foundourownroad.com/viewtopic.php?f=7&t=562

“So, after some de-stressing at a Staten Island Tiki Bar Thursday night, PaulH and I decided to go look for the building housing the New Jersey contingent of the roughly 900 new Saabs held in limbo due to SCNA being forced into bankruptcy.

“I thought we were just going to locate building 263 at the car port facility and be left only wondering what cars were parked inside. That’s not what we found. At least 100-200 cars are parked outside. It was so startling and saddening that we had to go back for a better look with DeLorean this evening.

“It seemed like they are parked in clusters, with bunches of 9-3s together and the two visible sport combis tossed in.”

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The fate of these vehicles is unknown — Saab Cars North America has been forced into bankruptcy. The parent company in Sweden remains in limbo as bankruptcy administrators look for suitors to buy all or parts of the production, design, and engineering facilities in Trollhattan.

More Photos: http://www.foundourownroad.com/viewtopic.php?f=7&t=562

Detail Job From Hell: A Hoarder’s Mercedes-Benz

Original story:
http://www.autopia.org/forum/click-brag/140112-mercedes-benz-hoarder-stink-even-flies-flew-away.html

A 2002 Mercedes-Benz C-class was ruined in the hands of a careless hoarder. An expert detailer in hazmat gear restored the vehicle to like-new condition.

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Inside, it looks like a crime scene. The seats and carpets were removed from the vehicle and had to be redyed (see link).

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The finished job.

Collinsville IL Police Harass and Detain Tourist


Fast Tube by Casper

Summary:
A tourist from Ohio drove to St Louis to visit the Star Trek exhibit at the St Louis Science Center. He was pulled over while driving home on I-70. The officer accused him of weaving out of his lane then asked to search the vehicle for drugs. Officer Reichert then coerced a drug-sniffing dog into giving a false positive off camera to gain probable cause and search the vehicle.

The search came up empty. To cover himself, Officer Reichert claimed that the dog must have detected some “shake.”

Officer Michael Reichert has a criminal history for lying in a federal drug case and for selling knockoff sunglasses. He was previously fired and then rehired.

Madison County has a history of using asset forfeiture on I-70 to generate revenue.

Additional details:
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/03/31/drug-search-trekies-stopped-searched-illinois_n_1364087.html

http://www.kmov.com/home/Man-says-Collinsville-police-officer-violated-his-rights-during-traffic-stop-142697395.html

Share your feedback with the city of Collinsville:
http://www2.collinsvilleil.org/

Prius Owners: Technologically Challenged?


Pictured above is a factory stereo pulled from a 2011 Toyota Prius. The yellow warning sticker reads, “CAUTION: Insert only one CD into the slot at a time.”

Single-slot CD changers have been around for decades and their functionality is clear to anyone with a three-digit IQ.

Are Prius owners having trouble understanding how a CD slot works?

60 Minutes: Sergio Marchionne and Chrysler’s Comeback

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Click to play.

The clip runs about 14 minutes and includes an interview with CEO Sergio Marchionne and designer/SRT chief Ralph Gilles. There’s also exclusive footage of Chrysler’s manufacturing facilities as well as Chrysler’s headquarters in Auburn Hills. Marchionne says he moved out of the isolated top-floor “chairman’s tower” and into an office among engineers.

Marchionne, surrounded by Italian state security, then takes an Alfa Romeo 8C around the company’s rooftop test track in Turin.

Stuck in the 80s: I still use CDs.

The compact disc is a stage-5 clinger, refusing to accept its place in history alongside the compact cassette. As consumers go, I’ve become a laggard, hanging on to equipment well past its expiration.


Fast Tube by Casper

I wasn’t always this way. In high school (the 90s) I carried a portable Mindisc player, an Apple Newton, and an IBM Thinkpad, none of which got me laid by the way. Before wireless data was a big deal, I had a Novatel CDPD cellular data modem, good for about 14.4kbps if I was really lucky. Unlimited data service from GoAmerica (through AT&T) back in 2000 was about $65 per month, a high price for limited urban coverage.

Some people get tattoos to assert their edginess. Nerds buy gadgets they don’t need.

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At auto shows, DVDs and CDs only recently emerged in place of glossy paper brochures — the auto industry tends to lag when it comes to the adoption of consumer technology (Lexus offered a tape player in the SC430 until 2010). Now, auto manufacturers are handing out thumb drives filled with videos and clever presentations.

Software publishers, among the last to abandon optical media, are transitioning away from DVDs to write-protected USB thumb drives. Apple offers Mac OS X on a flash drive while Windows 7 is available for legal download. Microsoft offers a free utility to install the Windows 7 ISO to a USB drive, no configuration files or FDISKing necessary.

I use CD-RWs for MP3 playback in my Saab convertible (2010 JVC stereo) where leaving an iPod in the car or using my phone for music playback is cumbersome and impractical. The only nuisance is having to erase the disc and re-record it (at low speed to avoid read errors) whenever I update the playlist. 700MB is enough for 6-8 hours of music, plenty for a week of driving.

Now, all-digital head units without CD mechanisms are available for well under $100. Due to the absence of moving parts they promise greater reliability and larger buttons, displays, and knobs. The CD’s last holdout, the automobile, may finally be disappearing.

As for DVDs, if not for the limited selection of streaming movies on Amazon Prime and Netflix, I’d never watch them again.

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It seems that optical media, despite its ubiquity and nearly three decades of dominance, is finally fading away.

Do you still use it?

Review: 2011 Chevrolet Express – “We’re out of trucks. Is a van okay?”

I’ll take it!

I needed a new (used) hood for my old Saab and the local PickNPull finally had a car in inventory, a silver 1989 naturally aspirated 900 sedan. The problem was, I needed some way of carrying it home.

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A nice day for junking.

Sure, I could have driven my car into the city and installed the replacement hood in the junkyard parking lot, but what if a bolt refused to come loose or what if started raining? I figured the best option would be to rent a full size pickup, bring the hood home, clean up the small rust spots, and have it painted and installed later.

Once again, I booked with Enterprise where I was promised a Ram, Silverado, or F-150. Unfortunately, they called me the following morning to tell me they were out of half ton trucks and offered a Chevy Colorado as an alternative. I measured the Saab’s hood and due to the wraparound clamshell shape, it was too large to fit into the bed of a midsize truck, so they offered a full size cargo van instead.

Again, there was the dilemma of whether it would fit through the van’s doors, so I brought some measuring tape to the Enterprise location to see for myself. It was going to be a tight fit.

$58 got me a day and 150 miles with a white Chevy Express panel van, GM’s dependable workhorse for plumbers, electricians, traveling bands, and cake shops.

I’ve done a lot of vanning in my time (yes, that’s a verb), finding myself behind the wheel of a couple Econolines, a Rally Vandura, and a Mazda MPV. The MPV wasn’t much of a utility van but it did offer three rows of seating and rear wheel drive, used primarily to haul musical instruments and equipment.

I once drove a GMC van 300 miles to a car meet in Indianapolis, deboarding through the back door on a hydraulic wheelchair lift like some kind of low-end royalty.

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On another occasion I rode in the back of a red Econoline in nothing but a plastic lawn chair, holding on to whatever I could as it leaned like a wine glass around corners. Additionally, I personally know the guy who owns the original “Free Candy” van — it was seen on Leno a couple years back.

I guess you could say that vanning is my “thing,” so when Enterprise offered one as a pickup truck alternative, I was naturally pleased.

Most would spurn the venerable cargo van for its lack of charisma, suspicious demeanor, and its lowly status as a somewhat of a social pariah. They’ve been associated with everything from working-class heroes to failures at life who use them as temporary residences.


Fast Tube by Casper

But that’s what makes them so darn great. If you’re down on your luck, you can grab a box of clothes, toss in a mattress, and move right in. If you happen to have a panel van with no side windows, the police and the neighborhood watch won’t know you’re living inside, stealing wifi and eating food cooked on a 12-volt hot plate. And when life finally turns around, it doubles as a handy utility vehicle.

To heck with society, a big panel van is all a man needs.

I will admit, while I was driving the Express around my quiet suburban neighborhood at night to run errands or go to dinner, long after regular daylight business hours, I felt as if the local police were watching me with extra care. A brown guy in a white van could only mean trouble, right?

Let’s talk about the 2011 Chevy Express.

It’s huge. I overestimated my measurements and we (my roommate and my friend Marvin) were able to load it through the back door at an angle with plenty of space to rest it on the rubber floor.

The van I received from Enterprise looked like this:
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Yep, that’s a van. I could have taken my own exterior photos but staging it with some pretty scenery in the background would have been a bit silly.

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2011 Chevrolet Express, 16620 miles

Express 2500 vans come with a 4.8L Vortec V8 with 280hp and 295 lb-ft of torque (6.0L 324hp V8 optional), mated to a smooth six-speed automatic transmission.

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My base-model van included a rubber utility floor covering, two vinyl bucket seats, air conditioning, rear wheel drive, manual locks, manual mirrors, and manual windows. The only added features were a crummy sounding but easy to use AM/FM radio with no tape, CD, or aux input and… well that’s it. Front air conditioning is standard. Rear AC is optional.

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GM gives retail customers the option to save $240 by deleting the spare tire. I didn’t check underneath to see if it was present but I’m hoping Enterprise didn’t cheap out by omitting it. For a retail buyer, the price would have come to $26,590, a reasonable deal for a vehicle with limitless configuration options, but for anyone who doesn’t need a large covered cargo area, a shortbed Dodge Ram can be had for under $20,000.

Bonus: The Chevy Express and GMC Savanna are built here in St Louis.

Driving the Express was more car-like than I expected.

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The six-speed transmission shifted smoothly and throttle tip-in was slow and easy to modulate, important to keep my cargo load of books and car parts from sliding around. The easy shifts kept the cabin from jostling around with each gear change, important in a vehicle that could be carrying sensitive items like glass antiques or a tall wedding cake.

There’s a manual mode on the column shifter for selecting your own gear, handy for towing and climbing or takeoffs in the snow, and a there was a button on the dash with a trailer icon.

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The gauges are nicely laid out with a digital display that can show the tachometer, fuel economy information, distance to empty, oil life status, trip computers, tire pressure, and more. When you start the truck the digital text display does a nifty sweeping animation.

The 70s-inspired loosey-goosey steering, awful ergonomics, hilarious handling, and freight train braking typical of GM vans are long gone. All good things to lose, but because of these modernizations, the era of vanning as a motoring novelty is over. Sadly, the ultra-comfy, throne-like front seats of the old GM vans are gone as well, and the old Delco radios sounded a little nicer.

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Around town, the Chevy Express drives like a tall Impala, emulating the big sedan’s average steering, average handling, average braking, and average feedback. I could spin around the parkway without worrying about tipping over on my side and I could brake without having to plan ahead by marking it on my calendar for next week.

Unfortunately, after a day and more than 100 miles on the road my back was aching a bit. Yes, the seating position is much improved over GM’s long-discontinued Vandura and G20 vans, allowing more space for the left foot by moving the wheel arch away from the driver’s seat. Climate and radio controls are closer to the driver as well but the seats lack the depth, support, and long-distance comfort of the old van.

For people who spend all day in these vehicles for their livelihood, that slight bit of discomfort is kind of a big deal. The Econoline has the edge here.

Ride quality is a positive with some of the bounciness of past GM vans smoothed out. A series of surface undulations will eventually get the van rocking fore and aft, but it recovers quickly. Of course, the ride is noticeably more stable with cargo in the rear.

In the end, with combined city and highway driving, I averaged 17.0 mpg. The following day I stopped at the BP station and filled the tank to 3/8, which is where it was when I picked it up from Enterprise the day before. I noticed a Flexfuel label on the filler cap and selected E85 at $3.59 per gallon. It only saved me about four bucks over regular unleaded — Missouri doesn’t subsidize the cost as aggressively as some others states. The next driver might notice some extra power but lose 10-30% of his fuel economy. Not my problem.

Next time, I’d like to rent Nissan’s new NV, a monster van with Nissan’s torquey VK56 V8.

For now, a silver Saab hood sits in my guest room. I’ll need to go over it with some POR-15 to eat the surface rust and then take it over to my preferred body shop for prepping and painting.

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RATINGS:

Powertrain: 8/10 — At first, I was going to criticize the transmission for being mushy and the throttle for having a slow tip-in until I realized how important it was for cargo stability. Takeoffs were smooth and gear changes were pleasingly lazy, keeping my car ports from slamming against the bare walls of the van. Acceleration with the 4.8L Vortec V8 is adequate.

Braking: 8/10 — Pedal action is easy enough to modulate with surprisingly good stopping power as I approached traffic jams on the interstate. It feels like being behind the wheel of a large sedan.

Steering/Handling: 7/10 – For a van, it corners sufficiently and offers a modest level of feedback. There’s nothing sporty going on here and perhaps there shouldn’t be. It tracks down the road straight and true and goes around street corners without feeling like a motor home. You could even push it just a little bit.
The ride is fairly smooth and with a cargo load in the back it’s reasonably steady.

Audio/Accessories: 6/10 — The manumatic shifting feature is handy for towing and climbing. Air conditioning worked exceptionally well, as expected in GM products.
Clear analog gauges display oil pressure, coolant temperature, fuel level, speed, and voltage. A transmission temperature gauge would be a nice addition. A tachometer, fuel computer, trip computer, oil info, and tire pressure are all within the two-line digital display, accessible with four small but confusing buttons located to the left of the gauge cluster.
The basic AM/FM head unit had two speakers, no CD player, no cassette, no satellite radio, and no auxiliary input. How GM charges an additional $150 for this garbage is beyond me.

If I was to rate the Express on options, I’d give it 10/10. The possible configurations of engines, doors, interiors, seats, and side panels is endless. GM smartly recognizes its full size van as a multifunction tool, a means to an end. The more ways to use it, the better.

Interior: 3/10 — When I climbed in the first thing I noticed was the nasty creaking of the door handle. Instead of using a single, solid piece of plastic, it’s two pieces poorly sandwiched together around what I assume is a solid door handle underneath. The layout of the controls is logical and ergonomically reasonable… for a van. Some of the climate controls were a little bit of a reach. Hard, drab plastics cover the rest.
There is, however, plenty of storage for personal items and three large cup holders in the middle.

Comfort: 5/10 – There’s a nice fold-down arm rest and tall seat backs. Cushioning feels perfectly adequate but the seats lack the long-distance depth and width of GM’s older vans. My lower back was just a little bit sore after 100 or so miles.

Quality/Reliability: 8/10 — They’re built to last and they typically do. The only wildcard is the six-speed auto.

Overall Value: 7.8/10 — It’s a handy multifunction tool with a history of good dependability, but it’s long overdue for a major update. These GM vans date back to 1996, before I was old enough to drive. With Nissan now competing in the cargo van market, it may be time for GM to come forward with additional improvements.

VERDICT:
GM’s Express and Savanna offer superior fuel economy and a plethora of options and customizations, but check out the Ford Econoline for its comfort and value and the Nissan NV for its V8 engine and tall roof.

More on vans:
http://jesda.com/2011/08/05/the-joy-of-vanning-full-sizers-compared/