Friday, March 5, 2010

Friday Fun Thread: Must-Do's

Today's Top Ten Automotive fun thread is a little different. Today we're going to discuss the cars and trucks that one must drive at least once in their lives - but realistic cars. Oh, sure, a 1912 Rolls Royce Silver Ghost would be a hoot, as would a Lamborghini Gallardo; however precious few of us will ever have the opportunity to drive either of these. I mean cars that you're likely to come across in your daily lives; cars you might actually be able to afford - even if it's just to rent for a weekend.

With that in mind, here goes:

1. Decadent luxury car. For me, it was a 1996 Cadillac Sedan De Ville (in 1996). We rented it for our honeymoon (two weeks in Quebec City and Montreal) as an upgrade to the Ford Escort I'd gotten while my car was getting fixed after the wreck I had four days prior to my wedding. Making the 8 hour drive to Quebec in a luxurious American luxobarge eased the pain significantly.

2. Modest American muscle car. Mustang GT, Camaro SS, Challenger. Something that's within most people's budgets but is too impractical to own. I've driven a few over the years, the most memorable being a buddy of mine's brother's '85 T/A with all the bells and whistles. The brother had lost his license (go figure), and asked if we wanted to take out his T/A to get it running. Cruising down the beach with the T-roofs out and the V8 purring is an experience that comes highly recommended.

3. Large pickup truck. Just to give a feel for what it's like to pilot one of these mammoths around. Biggest I've gotten with any experience is my current rig, the '07 Dodge earthfucker Ram, although there have been a couple 3/4 ton trucks I've piloted in the day. Bonus points for long bed and/or dually; super extra bonus points for crew cab long bed dually...

4. Stripped econobox. For me, it was a 1994 Plymouth Sundance I banged back and forth to the University of New Hampshire. Picked it up as a holdover dirt cheap (it was all I could afford as a grad student) and spent three years absolutely hating it. Ideally should be a standard transmission with no power anything and no air conditioning. Really makes you appreciate the creature comforts.

5. Modest European sports car. BMW 3 series, lower end Porsches. I got to drive a buddy's '86 944S Turbo once up and down Route 1 just north of Boston, and man, what a ride. Peppy, responsive, held the road like a dream - just the kind of car to get killed in or lose one's license. Possibly both.

6. Serious American muscle. Same idea as #5 - only instead of responsive make it "more horsepower than common sense". I've driven a couple that were close - a '72 LeMans with a 400 ci motor that I intended as a project "Le Goat" and a '71 Olds Cutlass S with the Rocket 350 and the Hurst Dualgate shifter that belonged to a buddy of mine that I got up to 120 runnin' up and down I95... Good times, good times...

7. Antique car. Something made back when you needed to choke the engine, when the high beam switch was on the floor and the shifter was on the steering column. There is nothing like old technology to make you realize just how freakin' good we have it now. Closest I've come is helping my uncle move his 1936 Plymouth Business Coupe around the yard - if it had had working brakes at the time, I would have taken it to the prom...

8. Performance car. Not necessarily the fastest car on the road, but something that really digs into the corners and lets you feel every curve of the road. I had a mid-'80s GTI (Golf-based, not Rabbit) that, even with four mis-matched tires, would get the inside rear tire off the ground on a tight offramp at 65+. Pushing limits in a car that will take it is a lot of fun, and even better if you can do it in a sanctioned event like an autocross...

9. Box van/15 passenger van. Along the lines of the large pickup, this is just to give you a feel for the outer end of the "does not perform" spectrum. Big. Slow. Heavy. All the aerodynamics of a brick with the added bonus of 150 billion square feet of wind-catching body for tooling down a highway on a windy day. The ne plus ultra for me was the mid-1960s International box truck we rented to move into our house. 4 speeds, couldn't go above 50 on the highway, and had all the responsiveness of continental drift.

10. Serious performance car. This is the one entry on the list that I have yet to drive, mainly because I still do not trust myself. Everyone should drive, at least once in their lives, a car that is capable of handling situations beyond their driving skills. Ideally this should be in some sort of driving school a la Skip Barber; at the very least it should happen on a wide open highway somewhere that gets little traffic. Everyone should see the speedometer hit north of 150 at least once in their lives...


So there's my list of cars I think everyone should drive at least once. Some are on there for the sheer thrill; some are on there to give you an appreciation for what you're driving right now. All of them should be experienced once; some multiple times; some could even be your daily driver.

What cars do you recommend?

That is all.

15 comments:

Anonymous said...

Fast Honda motorcycles, Jay.

notDilbert said...

Not just an Antique car, but specifically a Ford Model T. Spark advance with a lever on the steering wheel pedals all in the wrong places. Lots of just plain strange raw driving.

A right hand drive car....or failing that a left hand drive in a right hand drive country.

A Jeep or SUV actually "Off road".

A Porsche or a Mercedes on the German Autobahn.

One of those huge Class A Motorhomes. In a crosswind it's like driving a sailboat.

A real race car on a closed track, preferably a open wheel Formula car. There are lots of great schools where you can do this for "reasonable $".

...and there were opportunities to drive true super cars for a day, but I think most of those operations fell victim to the recent downturn

notDilbert said...

...And everyone should drive a full size farm tractor, one with sperate brakes for each rear wheel .....and some sort of large earth moving construction eqiptment.....Backhoe....Skidsteer....scoop loader....tracked Dozer...

Skip said...

I drive a Ford Super Duty, wife a Towncar Cartier.
Just got rid of a '62 'Vette which had maxed the 160mph speedo many times.
Put many high school miles in a '30 Model A.
Have owned a '32 3 window coupe, '55 Nomad w/400hp and 4speed, F-150 Baja prerunner with the engine set back 6" and 12" of travel, BSA 440 Victor, and a '57 Bel Air that could carry the front end [with wrinkle tires].
Have driven and sometimes still do all manner of heavy equiptment.
All fun.

agg79 said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
agg79 said...

For me it was an M1 Abrams tank.

A serious off road vehicle.

An open top car (preferable older vintage).

A Model A (1930s vintage). Got one. Definitely not made for tall people.

Old NFO said...

Gotta agree with notDilbert! And I'd add a '57 Suicide Mack (where you had to take BOTH hands off the wheel to shift)...

Brandon said...

I gotta go with a '67 Ford Mustang and 1980 Pontiac Firebird. I put a 350 Chevy and TH tranny in the Pontiac. It would get up and go, fuh sho!

Jim said...

First, I wanna hear more about that "Suicide Mack" (!!!!) Seriously, that's a guest-post in the making.

I owned a surplus "Postal Jeep" in right hand drive, when I was doing commercial caulking and waterproofing, back in the early '80s. Power nothing, damn little heat, no air and visibility in all the wrong angles.

I've had a Kawasaki ZX-11 up over 160, then chickened out, well below it's 190+ potential.

On the other end of the spectrum, I've piloted a 26' box Penske rental truck over the 2 mile Galveston Causeway in a 40 mph crosswind.

The ZX-11 was less stresful.

'71 VW Super Beetle as my first car? Interesting, to say the least.

Most fun car I've owned? Forget the four BMWs in the history. My 1st wife's '77 Pontiac Sunbird, Iron-Duke four speed manual....but with great tires, awesome shocks and breathed-on induction and exhaust. Still anemic by today's standards, but the combination was well balanced, tossable and audibly very pleasant.

Pity she was so damned accident prone. The ex, not the car. But both, once.

The car I'd most like to drive?

Crown Vic, with Mercury Maurader internals.

I love sleepers.


Jim
Sunk New Dawn
Galveston, TX

ZerCool said...

1: Mercedes E-class, fully loaded with Every. Damn. Option. Available. Srsly. Massage seats with hot and cold air?

2: Only a V6 'stang thus far... will work on. Test-drove a C5 'vette once though.

3: F-350, and some of the commercial-chassis Chevy/GMC products.

4: Civic DX coupe, no air, no cruise, 5-spd. Six years!

5: Audi A4. Sold 'em for a year and a half.

6: Something to work on...

7: 1972 Jag XKE straight-six. Manual choke and the hood was about a mile long.

8: Audi S4. See #5.

9: Does a firetruck count? Big 60-series Detroit Diesel punching 58,000lb of iron and water down the road...

10: I think I best go to Europe for this one.

BillH said...

Any open top Brit sportscar from the 50's or 60's... top of my list is the Austin Healey, then the Triumph, then the MG. Check off the MG but not the others. Also check off open top 60's Porsche, 61 Vette, 73 Fiat Spyder... Jay you need a ragtop list.

notDilbert, we're saving up for the tractor ;-)

Jay G said...

OOOOOOOH...

Top Ten Ragtops... I like that...

AngryPatriot said...

You want to go north of 150?

Hmmmm.....I can feel a Northeast Blogger Meet, maybe at Pocono Downs, for the NASCAR Experience?

They bring out a real honest to goodness NASCAR machine, strap you in the passenger seat while an instructor takes you around a few laps so you get used to cruising at speed, then he gets into the passenger side and instructs *you* on where the right lines are, when to hit the binders, when to mash the throttle...

Then he gets into a pace car...you're driving solo with two other folks (its a group of 4 cars) and as long as you're drafting the pace car, he keeps speeding up to let you have your fun.

You get 4 solo laps...almost 15 total laps with all the instruction laps...and you're easily clocking well north of 150 in a monster piece of engineering that will bite you in t he arse only if you do something stupid like try to turn right going into a left-hander...

Maureen said...

Angry Patriot, I would venture forth from Lurkdom for that event.

Black Ice said...

I had the econobox. '89 Horizon with the 1.7(complete with clogged carb jets) and 4-speed. The rear passenger door was gouged in another accident, and the hole was filled with insulation and duct-taped. In a MN winter, the doors would freeze solid, and I got in through the hatchback.

Amazingly, I miss that car. There's something liberating about driving a car you don't have to care about. Something visceral about a vehicle that can lose its brakes unexpectedly, that may or may not start, that rattles and squeaks and shudders and leaks. I'd likely still have it if some vermin hadn't destroyed it.

Jay, if you want to go north of 150, go ride a Hayabusa, ZZ-R 1200 or Blackbird. They can make triple digits seem boring on the right roads.