Voitures Anciennes

Somewhere for all our lovers and owners of classic vehicles to chat about and discuss classic vehicles in France. Also where members can share their recent adventures in their vehicle in and out of France.
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RobertArthur
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Joined: Sat Jul 17, 2021 3:10 pm
Location: Nièvre

Voitures Anciennes

#511 Post by RobertArthur »

@ PE, good question. A real classic car, modified, near vintage, copy-cat engineering, retro, let's go back to the 50's and 60's, life was so much easier then (?). Answer: many shades of grey.

Let's have a look at this example. Retro or modern? The MGB reinvented? A Japanese two-seater with inspiration from the past, a Mazda. Without hidden trunk hinge.

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curtis
Posts: 547
Joined: Fri Jul 23, 2021 1:36 pm
Location: Charente Maritime

Voitures Anciennes

#512 Post by curtis »

Polarengineer wrote: Sat Jan 06, 2024 10:57 am Does retro count as near vintage?
https://newatlas.com/automotive/vandere ... amper-van/
To be clear:-
https://nationalmotormuseum.org.uk/ufaq ... t-vintage/

Polarengineer
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Location: 23 la Creuse

Voitures Anciennes

#513 Post by Polarengineer »

RA, I would guess they are canopy clamps and not boot hinges.

curtis
Posts: 547
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Location: Charente Maritime

Voitures Anciennes

#514 Post by curtis »


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Hotrodder
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Voitures Anciennes

#515 Post by Hotrodder »

My mrs. will kill for an MX5. Used to have one and loved it. Plus point: Japanese reliability. Minus point: Japanese rustproofing. :lol: :lol:
On my headstone it will say: Please switch off mobile phones. I'm trying to get some sleep.

curtis
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Location: Charente Maritime

Voitures Anciennes

#516 Post by curtis »

ImageMCH 2019 j by john curtis, sur Flickr
ImageMCH2019h by john curtis, sur Flickr

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RobertArthur
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Voitures Anciennes

#517 Post by RobertArthur »

Not moving at all, no snow. The Scania of my father-in-law, long before I met his eldest daughter.

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curtis
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Location: Charente Maritime

Voitures Anciennes

#518 Post by curtis »

Looks like a useful piece of kit. Presumably a flatbed with the crane for loading?

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RobertArthur
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Voitures Anciennes

#519 Post by RobertArthur »

@ Curtis, yes, flatbed and a HIAB crane. In the years after WW II, many buildings destroyed, incredible fierce fighting during the five-week offensive around the river Scheldt, inondations, an almost forgotten war, he began his business with an old US army truck, perhaps this one. Demolition of what could not be renovated. Dangerous: land mines everywhere. And as a follow-up: transport of construction materials. His Scania: second choice, he would have preferred to buy a Volvo, but much too expensive in those days.

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Blaze
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Voitures Anciennes

#520 Post by Blaze »

I'm not particularly a car fan, just a set 'o' wheels ... even if some are nicer than others.
A trip to Saint-Malo this afternoon and the underground car park was virtually empty except for these fellows. I know the second one isn't "ancienne" but we were parking in rich man's corner !
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