Jump to content
Server Move In Progress - Read More ×
Create New...

A Thread For One Of The Most Biggest Sh!tlumps..


Guest YellowJacket894

Recommended Posts

Guest YellowJacket894

Posted Image

Posted Image

The first time I put my eyes on that car in Car & Driver, my eyes began to bleed. It looked like a beached whale, and it had a face that could blow off a manhole cover.

Not only that but Renault wanted that to be a poor man's Porsche 928. Pffft... Yeah, sure. Whatever you say, Renault.

Reliability sucked, styling sucked, the engine sucked, interior... Could the Renault Fuego be the biggest $h!box under the Yugo and Pacer? I would think so.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I think the Fuego was early 80's wasnt it ? Not much to look at thats for sure. It seems to me they were making quite a fuss about it at the time, I really dont remember much.that was 20+ years ago. My friend still has his R 17 Gordini, that too had a problematic engine and is the reason the car is still around because it never ran for long. He had a head or head gasket problem but back then we didnt know much and he knew less :lol: and had even less ambition so didnt bother trying to figure out the problem and cure it. It simply pumped the coolant out the overflow, now I know that was headgasket, back then we thought it was overheating and boiling it out, even though the gauge read normal, we didnt know :rolleyes: The car got passed around to a few friends and never made to run, then it came back and has since sat and most likely the undercarraige is shot. We liked it at the time, it was pretty quick for the times and was in near perfect condition but that darn engine just wouldnt keep coolant. Seems funny that by early 80's turbo Renault V6's were blowin the doors off most other engines in open wheel formulas. I think this R17 Gordini was the car that preceded the Fuego. It too is not much to look at, it was kinda interesting at the time from certain angles but.....

Posted Image

Posted Image

Link to comment
Share on other sites

This thread is in the twillight zone! :huh:

Yesterday I saw a Renault Gordini for the first time in my life...

It as at the junkyard next to a 60s Jaguar. I was laughing about the cool/dorky hardtop design combined wiht the webasto sunnroof. XP715 broke a vent window on it beacause he said it made him "angry just looking at it".

It was the topic of conversstion off and on for the rest of the day. Hours later we were driving around in the Datsun and he's just like WTF is up wiht that Gordini. Jeeezus!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Damn, Croc...wish I was there to see that.

As far as that Gordini, 68, your boy XP wasn't right to break that window. Lookswise, however, makes me think of a Plymouth Arrow and an early Skyline having a kid. As many cars as I know about, I've never seen that car a day in my entire life.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I thought the Fuego was pretty sharp-looking, for the time anyway.

The car I couldn't stand was the early Datsun 200 SX that looked like this:

Posted Image

The F10 and B210 weren't too hot-looking either.

And for some reason, the Honda del Sol (sp?) really pisses me off when I see it as well. It's a completely irrational response on my part but that car just really gets to me.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest YellowJacket894

Damn, that Datsun you posted Neon looks like a molested '88 Dodge Daytona.

Hang on, let me post another car I consider to borderline on "$h!lump".

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest YellowJacket894

Sorry for the double post, but this next car is a part of my childhood that sort of scares me.

My mom owned a white 1985 Nissan Pulsar until late '93 or early '94, when we traded it off to a '93 Cavalier RS in maroon.

Posted Image

The car above is an '85 Pulsar and a rather ugly car at that. Don't get me wrong, Nissan is one of the very, very few Japanese car makers I like and want to see selling cars for a good, long time. But this is one car that is a styling catastrophy. And, as I recollect, it would always quit in traffic at redlights at random. (It was a manual, but, still I've been in countless manual-transmission cars and trucks that hardly ever quit at redlights whenever it felt like it.)

Posted Image

One hideous focal point of the Pulsar was that damnable grille and whole front fascia. Makes me think Nissan cut, copied and pasted the front of a certain car onto the Pulsar...

Posted Image

(Yes, Virgina, that's a 1980 Porsche 924 Turbo.)

Thankfully, Nissan got it right eventually. (What? It looks better than that $h!lump.)

Posted Image

Link to comment
Share on other sites

All those Datsun/Nissans were pitiful, see they ran out of great European & American cars to riplicate so they went off on their own and the true colors came shinin through.

That Scamp on the other hand was a perfect car. Nicely styled with no overstatement and no weak proportions to screw it up. A perfect car for the people and sell it did. The rear window is a fine piece of art.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

XP is his own man... I thought it was funny that he would grab the first piece of some rusted metal nearby.... (control arm off a 60s International Harvester probably) and break in a piece of glass on it while yelling at he car for being so ugly. :lol:

Mind you the American classics get nothing but love and respect from him.

Edited by Sixty8panther
Link to comment
Share on other sites

I stick by my decision. These botched abortions are another engineering triumph by the French, the people that brought you New Orleans! Leave it to the French to build a city twenty feet below sea level; we all see how well that turned out. All you Renault owners out there should be fearful of your lives if the French are twice as good at building cars as they are with city planning.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Love the Japanese Foghat album over.... pretty amusing! SO that's how you spell "foghat" in Nipponese.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I love Lady Liberty, and I think the Eiffel Tower is pretty neat too. Kinda sad that they were more advanced in the 1800's than they are now. Remember, this is the country where 85% of their 14,802 heat wave deaths can be attributed to the fact that nobody owns an air conditioner; not even most hospitals have them! Kind of ironic for a country that loves to toot its own horn about how f@#king sophisticated they are. Makes me want to rush right out and buy a Citroen... almost. :P

Link to comment
Share on other sites

There's THREE Citroens in that Junkyard, remember? Or was. They were piled high as if ready to get crushed last time... who knows what fate awaited them. :(

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I highyl doubt an entire counrtry refuses to buy ACs just fior energy conservation reasons. Their socialist gorernment probably will not allow them or some other dumb thing.

Edited by Sixty8panther
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Working for Ontario Power Generation, I understand a bit more about energy production and consumption now, and why really hot days are really hard on the system and the designers.

Since our power grid is connected across most of North America, we have a huge capacitance from all the transmission lines. Put simply, the lines themselves can hold a bit of power. If production outstrips consumption on a given day, the lines just increase their capacitance slightly, and obviously the same is true in reverse. This does not constitute a "battery" however, as there is no simple or compact way to store that much power. Power is (basically) generated and consumed at the same time.

You can compare of large-scale energy production and consumption to a car's electrical system. Your altenator, in a real car with a battery, just has to charge the battery. Imagine if there was no battery and your altenator had to be ready to deal with you cranking up the radio, a/c, and headlights at the same time. That altenator would have to be much beefier, and output much more power all the time. This would make the whole system inefficient.

Same goes for large-scale power generation. It is hard to justify upping the generation capacity just for those few days a year when everyone decides they NEED the inside of their house to be 20c/70f. I'm not talking unreasonable amounts of adjustment here, but if everybody would just be OK with 75 or 80, and turned their a/c off or down when they weren't home, we wouldn't have as many problems as we do. California especially - that state has to get some more generating capacity or they're going to be in serious trouble soon.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I stick by my decision. These botched abortions are another engineering triumph by the French, the people that brought you New Orleans! Leave it to the French to build a city twenty feet below sea level; we all see how well that turned out. All you Renault owners out there should be fearful of your lives if the French are twice as good at building cars as they are with city planning.

That's just ignorant thinking.

As far as power generation goes, France is snarter than us at one thing. They have an amazing nuclear grid.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

air conditioning is for lame blatting pussys. Deaths are good for socioty, if we did not have air conditioning survival of the fittest would once again apply and the world would be rid of these whimpy assed pussys. We have energy concernes and these lame ducks have more lights running up their driveways than the average person has in their house and they are on from dusk till dawn.

So my question is are the wimps scared of the dark or are they ignorantly arrogant ? ............BOTH ! Arrogant whimps afraid of the dark and outside elements who dont give a damn about anything, unless its necessary during conversation.

Edited by razoredge
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Deaths are good for socioty, if we did not have air conditioning survival of the fittest would once again apply

If deaths are good for society, could we raise society's collective I.Q. by cleansing it from you? Just a thought :AH-HA_wink:

One can take any "survival of the fittest" argument and turn it around. Razor, why don't you show some compassion for someone other than blue-collar UAW workers for a change?

Edited by Croc
Link to comment
Share on other sites

If deaths are good for society, could we raise society's collective I.Q. by cleansing it from you?  Just a thought :AH-HA_wink:

ROFL... I nearly choked on my middle-class-organic-chai-tea-with-vitamin-water-ice-cubes-on-greenie-recycled-napkin after reading that.

Best. Quote. Ever.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.



×
×
  • Create New...

Hey there, we noticed you're using an ad-blocker. We're a small site that is supported by ads or subscriptions. We rely on these to pay for server costs and vehicle reviews.  Please consider whitelisting us in your ad-blocker, or if you really like what you see, you can pick up one of our subscriptions for just $1.75 a month or $15 a year. It may not seem like a lot, but it goes a long way to help support real, honest content, that isn't generated by an AI bot.

See you out there.

Drew
Editor-in-Chief

Write what you are looking for and press enter or click the search icon to begin your search

Change privacy settings