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vor 3 Minuten schrieb Rona!d:

Driver possibly ruined the left front-wheel ;-( Thanks to this photo they can substract the possible costs from his salary 🤨

This may explain his look (in the second crop) 😉

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vor 7 Stunden schrieb a.j.z:

Btw: I am always impressed that the drivers of the black cabs find their way without navigation system in this huge city (in particular as in the old parts the street numbers are not in the right order).

Cab driver tests in cities like in NY, London etc. require years of studies with many test drives and learning procedures. Saw a TV reportage about that and thought it must be a complete nightmare even for locals grown up there.

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The problem is that often the over-officious traffic wardens will give you a ticket if you are not near enough to the kerb and have a wheel on the outside line. A lot of UK parking spaces are only 6 foot 6 inches or at best 6 foot 8 inches wide. This is just not wide enough for modern cars. My rear track is 1998mm or 6 foot 6.8 inches, so for on street parking, I get the choice of curbing my alloy wheels or getting a parking ticket. The wardens are still usually on a bonus scheme for the number of tickets they hand out, although this was supposed to have been stopped some years ago. 

Wilson

 

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vor 31 Minuten schrieb wlaidlaw:

The problem is that often the over-officious traffic wardens will give you a ticket if you are not near enough to the kerb and have a wheel on the outside line. A lot of UK parking spaces are only 6 foot 6 inches or at best 6 foot 8 inches wide. This is just not wide enough for modern cars. My rear track is 1998mm or 6 foot 6.8 inches, so for on street parking, I get the choice of curbing my alloy wheels or getting a parking ticket. The wardens are still usually on a bonus scheme for the number of tickets they hand out, although this was supposed to have been stopped some years ago. 

Wilson

 

Parking spaces are made for Austin 7, Peal P 50 or Mini in the UK 😉

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I've given up second guessing whether things are hard or not 😳...so try this one.

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34 PSI front 32 PSI rear.:)

Most vintage race cars nowadays tend to use somewhat wider wheels and tyres than they did in period. The original size tyre F&R for a Bugatti type 35 is the same 4.00 x 19" that I use on the front of my Morgan Three wheeler (Coker Excelsior Competition H Three stud - a modern reissue of the period Englebert racing tyres). You can see how narrow they are below. Most Bugatti 35's will now use 4.50 or 5.00" on the front and 5.50/6.00" on the rear. With their stiffer carcass, Dunlop work better as race tyres than Blockley or Excelsior but are exceedingly noisy and uncomfortable as road tyres, due to the rigid carcass and even tread block spacing, which resonates and screams. I drove an ex-Brooklands Speed Six Bentley on Dunlop Racers from London to Monaco. I was deaf for a week afterwards. 

Wilson

 

 

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