Ram Fury
Member
LocuMob --
Right on! At times, this whole safety business approaches the ridiculous. I'm reminded of the Detroit wheel who responded to Ralphie Nader with, "We do currently manufacture vehicles that meet Mr. Nader's standards; they're called Patton tanks." I also subscribe to Teddy Roosevelt's, "Far better it is to dare mighty things, to win glorious triumphs, even though checkered by failure, than to rank with those poor spirits who neither enjoy much nor suffer much, because they live in the gray twilight that knows neither nor defeat." I've done some spanking (as well as getting spanked) at drag strips as well at a stop light Grand Prix or two, but one of my fondest memories is blowing away a '65 Goat (that's a Pontiac GTO to Ayilar) the night I took delivery of my first '65 Sport Fury on 11-21-1965; I was indicating about 85 as we passed the court house in my old home town and he was in my rear view mirror.
Joe Godec
'57 Chrysler 300C, '60 Fury SonoRamic, '65 Vette Fuelie, '65 Sport Fury 426S/4-speed
Right on! At times, this whole safety business approaches the ridiculous. I'm reminded of the Detroit wheel who responded to Ralphie Nader with, "We do currently manufacture vehicles that meet Mr. Nader's standards; they're called Patton tanks." I also subscribe to Teddy Roosevelt's, "Far better it is to dare mighty things, to win glorious triumphs, even though checkered by failure, than to rank with those poor spirits who neither enjoy much nor suffer much, because they live in the gray twilight that knows neither nor defeat." I've done some spanking (as well as getting spanked) at drag strips as well at a stop light Grand Prix or two, but one of my fondest memories is blowing away a '65 Goat (that's a Pontiac GTO to Ayilar) the night I took delivery of my first '65 Sport Fury on 11-21-1965; I was indicating about 85 as we passed the court house in my old home town and he was in my rear view mirror.
Joe Godec
'57 Chrysler 300C, '60 Fury SonoRamic, '65 Vette Fuelie, '65 Sport Fury 426S/4-speed