OT: Vintage words and images.

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Jan 30, 2002
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Fender Skirts


What a great blast from the past! I haven't thought about fender skirts in years. When I was a kid, I considered it such a funny term. Made me think of a car in a dress. Thinking about fender skirts started me thinking about other words that quietly disappear from our language with hardly a notice.

Like "curb feelers" and "steering knobs." Since I'd been thinking of cars, my mind naturally went that direction first. Any kids will probably have to find some elderly person over 50 to explain some of these terms to you.

Remember "Continental kits?" They were rear bumper extenders and spare tire covers that were supposed to make any car as cool as a Lincoln Continental.

When did we quit calling them "emergency brakes?" At some point "parking brake" became the proper term. But I miss the hint of drama that went with "emergency brake."

I'm sad, too, that almost all the old folks are gone who would call the accelerator the "foot feed."

Here's a phrase I heard all the time in my youth but never anymore-"store-bought." Of course, just about everything is store-bought these days. But once it was bragging material to have a store-bought dress or a store-bought bag of candy.

"Coast to coast" is a phrase that once held all sorts of excitement and now means almost nothing. Now we take the term "worldwide" for granted. This floors me.

On a smaller scale, "wall-to-wall" was once a magical term in our homes. In the '50s, everyone covered their hardwood floors with, wow, wall-to-wall carpeting! Today, everyone replaces their wall-to-wall carpeting with hardwood floors. Go figure.

When's the last time you heard the quaint phrase "in a family way?" It's hard to imagine that the word "pregnant" was once considered a little too graphic, a little too clinical for use in polite company. So we had all that talk about stork visits and "being in a family way" or simply expecting."

Apparently "brassiere" is a word no longer in usage. I said it the other day and my daughter cracked up. I guess it's just "bra" now. "Unmentionables" probably wouldn't be understood at all.

Most of these words go back to the '50s, but here's a pure-'60s word I came across the other day - "rat fink." Ooh, what a nasty put-down!

Here's a word I miss - "percolator." That was just a fun word to say. And what was it replaced with? "Coffeemaker." How dull. Mr. Coffee, I blame you for this.

I miss those made-up marketing words that were meant to sound so modern and now sound so retro. Words like "DynaFlow" and "ElectraLuxe." Introducing the 1963 Admiral TV, now with "SpectraVision!"

Food for thought - Was there a telethon that wiped out lumbago? Nobody complains of that anymore. Maybe that's what castor oil cured, because I never hear mothers threatening their kids with castor oil anymore.

Some words aren't gone, but are definitely on the endangered list. The one that grieves me most - "supper." Now everybody says "dinner". Save a great word. Invite someone to "supper". Discuss "fender skirts".

Someone forwarded this to me, and I thought some of us of a "certain age" would remember most of these.



Kis
Enjoy every sandwich
 
Pretty funny when you take a moment to think about it......

We had a 31' Chevrolet Sedan we restored when I was a kid......

"running boards"

foot rest in the rear seat area

rumble seat
(not on the 31')

Miss that car
 
"steering knobs"

You mean necker knobs? The little brown things you could screw on over the wheel and use to turn one handed? Supposedly you could steer with one hand while you where necking with your girlfriend. Gee whiz those were the bees knees! I think theyre illegal now.
 
I'm just suprised when I say something and no one my age (17) has any idea what I just said.

Things like 8-track, we have a non functioning 78 lincoln continental mark V with functioning 8-track in it. I'm thinking I could get some money off of it from a collector. I have had to explain what an 8-track is to people at school.

I usually call it a emergency brake. But I prefer the hand brakes, they just seem so much more accesable. I drive 2 cars. A 92 tempo with a too small engine that has a hand brake and I use it when ever I park. And a '80 scirocco also with a hand brake. Neither of my parents use the E-brakes on their cars.

To "nuke" some thing. My dad always says that and it annoys me. But once in awhile I catch myself saying it.

My dad says to ask about beetle boots.?
 
Yea, it ain't no Duesy that so many old words and old times are gone. How about Cranker's Thumb, Powerglide, Torpedo Style which became the Fastback.
Outside Hammers is another term befitting guns, "My grandpa has an Double Barreled 20 gauge with Outside Hammers."
How about Vacumn Advance, Throttle, and Handchoke?
Straight Eight used to bring visions of great speed and power. How about V-16, Twin Six and V-12 engines? Crosley, Cord, Dusenburg, Auburn are all great cars that are no longer thought of and how about Henry J and the Henry J model that you could buy from Sears? Don't recall what they called that one.
Remember all the pedals on the old Model T? I remember that my Uncle Jim down in Arkansas bemoaned that his finally died as that's the only car he ever learned to drive, couldn't and never did learn to drive a Stickshift and the Hydramatics and other automatic transmissions were beyond his finances.

Thanks Kis.:D
 
I am a fan of the Tuckers. I think there were 52 made befor the big 3 shut him down.

http://browse.collectorcartraderonline.com/adbrowsemakes/Classic--Antique
I was curious about the Cord, Auburn, and Crosly (I knew what a duesy was).
Out of what is listed at that site I like the Deusenburga, Auburns, and the 31 Cord. The others were kinda meh. I also like the 70s and 80s excaliburs. I have no idea how well they run and I have only seen one in person, but I like how they tried to make a success out of an old design.
 
Ok Yo

You are young enough.

Get yourself a Jaguar XK 140 or 150. Put in a moderate horsepower japanese engine, 5 speed, decent fuel delivery system, and have the suspension modified for independent dampening. Put in a completely new electrical system, with ALL contemporary japanese or american parts. (Lucas electrics=Prince of Darkness)

Have a coach maker re-do the interior to original specs, including the wood on dash and the leather quality seats.

You will not spend as much as Yvsa on his new car, and the entire world will stop to admire you.




Kis
Enjoy every sandwich

Hunter Green lacquer paint.
 
GAH!! Japanese parts!!

If I get a jag then you will be sure that all of the parts falling out will be of the finest english workmanship.

I may be 17 but age is no excuse for bad taste. Scirocco, studebaker, and no car from the '80s with the exclusion of delorean and VW.

AND NO SPEAKER BOX OR NITROUS OXIDE
 
parts falling off...exactly my point. My proposal is for a reliable, beautiful, classic car, with decent lighting and power delivery.

Hell, Harley's are now using japanese electrics, as are BMW motorcycles. At some point, it does not make sense to go original for a driving vehicle.

Of course, your choice.

That's XK 140, sorry. I prefer the salon hardtop.

http://www.classic-british-cars.com/jaguar-xk-140-pictures.html
 
Old words, or just old car words?

How about Icebox, doing the warsh, and even pop.

munk
 
I say soda...

Beetle boots are sort of shoe-like boots, high type heels, came up over the ankle and were zippered.

Heck, I remember when a .38 Special was enough to kill a man...
 
..."emergency brakes"...

When I was a kid, the master cylinder went out on my '50 Plymouth and I didn't have any money to fix it. I drove around for about a week using only the hand brake. I got pretty good at timing the traffic lights so I wouldn't have to stop.

The city dated from colonial days and some of the streets were still paved with cobblestones. Trying to stop on those slippery granite stones with bald tires and no brakes was a heart stopping experience. Every stop was truly an "emergency".
 
Ben Arown-Awile said:
..."emergency brakes"...

When I was a kid, the master cylinder went out on my '50 Plymouth and I didn't have any money to fix it. I drove around for about a week using only the hand brake.
Ben did the '50 model Plymouth still have the emergency brake band that wrapped around the driveshaft right behind the tranny, I can't quite recall. I know my '48 coupe did. That was one emergency brake you damned sure didn't want to forget to release when you moved the car. I can still smell that horrible odor from the couple of times I didn't get it completely released.:barf: :rolleyes: :grumpy:

Munk speaking of icebox... How about the iceman and the ice card, the one that went in the window and depending on how it was turned depended on how much ice you wanted. Our iceman still drove a wagon with a team of horses when I was a kid.
How about wash tub compared to bath tub. Very few people had the bath tubs and most folks bathed in a Number 3 as it was just barely big enough to hold an adult so so.
I was lucky, I always got the first water since I was the youngest and therefore the smallest.:D
How 'bout cellar and root cellar? Mason jars and canning lids? Pectin and Certa, still around ya know.:)
And some things only the name is the same, like toaster. The first one we had set over the flame on a coal oil stove and would hold 4 slices of bread at time, toasting one side at a time. If you weren't careful one side would be almost burnt while the other could be perfect.
How about Flat Iron and Iron Heater used to heat one with?
Door Stop is another that you seldom hear anymore as well.
Most of my old car words in my first post was because that's what my early years revolved around. When I was around 5-6 years old I could name every car on the road and what model it was!!!! They look too much alike today for a kid to do that anymore I think.:(
 
In one of his books Ian Fleming had Felix Leiter pick up 007 in a Studillac? A Studebaker Hawk with a Cadillac engine in it - a forerunner of the AC Garage's body mated with a Ford 289 in it called the Shelby Cobra.

And the Avanti, another Studebaker product.

My parents used the word store bought.
 
Jebadiah_Smith said:
"steering knobs" You mean necker knobs? The little brown things you could screw on over the wheel and use to turn one handed? Supposedly you could steer with one hand while you where necking with your girlfriend. Gee whiz those were the bees knees! I think theyre illegal now.

Ahh yes, you're referring to "Suicide Knobs", as they were known in New York, which are definitely illegal now! I remember my first car when I was in college, a Jaguar XKE... :eek:
 
Suicide lane = median
swim suit = barely legal in public
Horror movie = cheap suprises and making people jump
Speed limit = suggestion
pop=soda (its just regional)
Warsh=wash (regional)
tar=tire (regional)
oral=oil (regional)
ustacould (sp?) pronounced you-sta-could "My truck ustacould run" (regional)
The cooler = regrigerator or ice chest (regional?)



Are those guys with flashlight cones still at the theaters? I haven't seen one, ever.

As for the japanese parts thing. I have a problem with japanese cars. They are ugly to me. And there are way too many on the road (especially around my school). I don't care if they are reliable (the japanese cars I grew up seeing are aptly dubbed "rice grinders"). That is why I plan on going to wyotech. So that I can fix my own "problems".

I do plan on dropping whatever v6 I can scrounge up into my scirocco however. There is plenty of room, the only problem is that I will need custom mounting brackets and an adapter to the tranny. And ther would probably be custom fuel systems involved and all the other fine things that come with transplanting something that isn't type 0+.

If I were to really get a nice car and put new engine and electronics in it I would get a chevy muscle car, or a 40s vintige sedan.

If I wanted a DD that will run forever that I can take anywhere I would buy a pinzgauer.
 
yoippari said:
If I wanted a DD that will run forever that I can take anywhere I would buy a pinzgauer.


If I wanted a DD that will run forever that I can take anywhere I would hope for a blond... :D
 
Yvsa said:
Ben did the '50 model Plymouth still have the emergency brake band that wrapped around the driveshaft right behind the tranny, I can't quite recall. I know my '48 coupe did. That was one emergency brake you damned sure didn't want to forget to release when you moved the car. I can still smell that horrible odor from the couple of times I didn't get it completely released
Yes it did. I haven't thought of that for about 50 years, but when you mentioned it, I can smell it as if it was right here next to me.
 
Did anybody mention "blinkers?" The add on turn signals you bought at the parts store. Interesting how so many of these old gadgets became standard items.
 
Yvsa said:
...Our iceman still drove a wagon with a team of horses...

Mason jars and canning lids?
When the ice man came, all the kids in the neighborhood would follow him around to get the chips from when he cut up the big blocks.

The "Rag Man" also had had a horse and wagon. We had a burlap sack hanging on the cellar stairs where we saved worn out clothes for him. When were bad, my grandmother threatened to give us to the "Rag Man".

Remember the milk man delivering milk in round glass bottles with cream that rose to the top?

Or the bread man who came around delivering your regular loaves of bread as well as a big tray full of cakes, cookies, and other goodies to choose from. My grandmother always made us go outside when the "Cushman Bakery" man came so we wouldn't beg her to buy stuff.

Mason Jars and Canning Lids are a part of our regular kitchen equipment. We haven't canned for years, but we always use them to store left over food in the refrigerator instead of those nasty plastic containers.
 
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