Originally posted by eighthobstruction
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The Family Car
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amateur51
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amateur51
Originally posted by anotherbob View PostAlways good to encounter another Integrale owner. This was mine on a trip over the Brecon Beacons about 10 years ago. No matter what BMW say about their "driving machines" this was the best IMHO.
(But maybe we have strayed fom the "Family cars" in the thread title?)
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amateur51
Originally posted by Caliban View Post...whereas I've been able to react the other way including a couple of classic Citroëns (inc a 1973 DS23, another of my dream cars from the 70s and the first car I bought!), a Lancia Integrale and an Audi RS6....
Everything evens out in the end!
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Ooooyes my real proper first car was a Triumph Vitesse Estate, really nippy for day and you could control it in corners by toe and heeling....did spend a lot of time reclosing bonnet when it came open when driving along....It was in that car my false memory ref Sunsets occurred ....
Caliban....my dad always craved Cit DS19....those 1940's ones that looked a bit like a Riley were a great shape....bong ching
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Originally posted by amateur51 View PostIs that a quote from Gurdjieff, Caliban?
Originally posted by anotherbob View PostAlways good to encounter another Integrale owner. This was mine on a trip over the Brecon Beacons about 10 years ago. No matter what BMW say about their "driving machines" this was the best IMHO.
(But maybe we have strayed fom the "Family cars" in the thread title?)
I didn't know you had one as well! Absolute cracker wasn't it! I loved that car.
Here's mine parked in rather cavalier fashion by the steps of Perugia Cathedral ...and more conventionally in Gubbio.
"...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
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Originally posted by eighthobstruction View PostCaliban....my dad always craved Cit DS19...
Unlike the early DS19 with single frog-eye headlights, the later ones had the party-trick inner headlights which turned with the steering.
Originally posted by eighthobstruction View PostOoooyes my real proper first car was a Triumph Vitesse Estate, really nippy for day and you could control it in corners by toe and heeling
Originally posted by eighthobstruction View Postdid spend a lot of time reclosing bonnet when it came open when driving along....It was in that car my false memory ref Sunsets occurred ....
"...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
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In the exact copy of this car http://farm3.staticflickr.com/2180/2...0d68f626_o.jpg
....I did the opposite of you (one of the stupidest things i have ever done)....getting off the Santander Ferry I forgot to give time for the suspension to rise, drove off ripping my exhaust system off...
....in usual circumstances really good acceleration, and road holding, lovely floaty smooth feeling too....bong ching
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Originally posted by mangerton View PostHere are two of the family busily washing the two family cars while the third supervised from on high with a camera.
Great picture, Mangerton ... but change was just around the corner!
Last edited by Stillhomewardbound; 18-09-13, 12:09.
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Richard Tarleton
My great aunt (the doctor, extreme right in the 1922 wedding photo) with her car and dog outside her flat at no 46, Redcliffe Road, SW10, in 1946. I'd be grateful if anyone could tell me what make the car is.
For a while her upstairs neighbours included two flat-sharing Conservative MPs, one of whom was the late Humphrey Berkeley, the other of whom is still very much with us . She had the entry level and basement, and used to sublet a basement room. One of her tenants was Robert Rowland, Panorama producer 1962-9 and editor 1972-3.
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Originally posted by Richard Tarleton View PostMy great aunt (the doctor, extreme right in the 1922 wedding photo) with her car and dog outside her flat at no 46, Redcliffe Road, SW10, in 1946. I'd be grateful if anyone could tell me what make the car is.
For a while her upstairs neighbours included two flat-sharing Conservative MPs, one of whom was the late Humphrey Berkeley, the other of whom is still very much with us . She had the entry level and basement, and used to sublet a basement room. One of her tenants was Robert Rowland, Panorama producer 1962-9 and editor 1972-3.
We lived just around the corner until 1958!
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Richard Tarleton
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