Chrysler: Time is Ripe for Ruskie-Chrysler Car
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Time is Ripe for Ruskie-Chrysler Car
Time is Ripe for Ruskie-Chrysler Car
Times have changed. Russia and America now enjoy peaceful relations, just
like they did before the '17 revolution, and the time is ripe for a joint
car venture. Decades ago, the Soviets tried the American market and found
it wanting. Its a new ball game now.
Russian engineering gets respect by the public and plenty of it. Just look
at the Proton and Soyuz rockets. What rockets! Dependable, safe, and you
know there good just by looking at their exhaust plume - a nice clean
flame, just like an O'Keefe & Merritt cooker. No smoke belching like the
Space Shuttle. For patriotic sake, you guys make still tout the Shuttle,
but not a single one of your would-be spacemen would take NASA up on a free
ticket. Someday NASA will shake off its "Need Another Seven Astronauts"and
"Not Another Shuttle Accident" image (even the Ford Explorer and Bronco II
are safer), but for now as we all know, they are completely and totally
dependent on the better-than-world-class Russian rocketships and I am sure
NASA pays plenty of bucks for the privilege.
I am convinced that Russia can help us out with our car problems too. They
know how to design cheap and rugged machines of all kinds. Under the
Soviets, car companies took the back seat of the bus, so had no opportunity
to strut their stuff. But that was then and this is now. I would not
hesitate to buy a finely Russian designed, Chrysler-Russian jointly built
car, sold through Chrysler dealerships.
Just maybe that Tamaraw FX-like $10,000 diesel utility vehicle can be
designed and brought to market in the States through such a consortium. I
see no reason why the U.S. Govenment could not sponsor such a worthwhile
project, since neither the Russian government nor Chrysler Corp. have the
seed money to do it right. I think it could be done for 1/85th of this
year's Iraqi war budget. That's a real bargain to recapture the low end
vehicle market from the Asians. We're talking about a million units a year
and all the jobs that go along with supplying materials, labor, sales and
servicing.
This is a serious post. I have copywrited it to be sure everything so
stated here is the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth and
irrevocably correct in its entirety, now and in perpeturity.
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Re: Time is Ripe for Ruskie-Chrysler Car
"Nomen Nescio" <com> wrote in message
news:com...
| Time is Ripe for Ruskie-Chrysler Car
|
| Times have changed. Russia and America now enjoy peaceful relations, just
| like they did before the '17 revolution, and the time is ripe for a joint
| car venture. Decades ago, the Soviets tried the American market and found
| it wanting. Its a new ball game now.
|
| Russian engineering gets respect by the public and plenty of it. Just
look
| at the Proton and Soyuz rockets. What rockets! Dependable, safe, and you
| know there good just by looking at their exhaust plume - a nice clean
| flame, just like an O'Keefe & Merritt cooker. No smoke belching like the
| Space Shuttle. For patriotic sake, you guys make still tout the Shuttle,
| but not a single one of your would-be spacemen would take NASA up on a
free
| ticket. Someday NASA will shake off its "Need Another Seven
Astronauts"and
| "Not Another Shuttle Accident" image (even the Ford Explorer and Bronco II
| are safer), but for now as we all know, they are completely and totally
| dependent on the better-than-world-class Russian rocketships and I am sure
| NASA pays plenty of bucks for the privilege.
|
| I am convinced that Russia can help us out with our car problems too.
They
| know how to design cheap and rugged machines of all kinds. Under the
| Soviets, car companies took the back seat of the bus, so had no
opportunity
| to strut their stuff. But that was then and this is now. I would not
| hesitate to buy a finely Russian designed, Chrysler-Russian jointly built
| car, sold through Chrysler dealerships.
|
| Just maybe that Tamaraw FX-like $10,000 diesel utility vehicle can be
| designed and brought to market in the States through such a consortium. I
| see no reason why the U.S. Govenment could not sponsor such a worthwhile
| project, since neither the Russian government nor Chrysler Corp. have the
| seed money to do it right. I think it could be done for 1/85th of this
| year's Iraqi war budget. That's a real bargain to recapture the low end
| vehicle market from the Asians. We're talking about a million units a
year
| and all the jobs that go along with supplying materials, labor, sales and
| servicing.
|
| This is a serious post. I have copywrited it to be sure everything so
| stated here is the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth and
| irrevocably correct in its entirety, now and in perpeturity.
|
My guess is that a Russian vehicle would require $20,000 worth of work to
meet all the federal crash, safety and emissions standards...now your
$10,000 vehicle will cost $30,000 and it will still be a Russian POS when
all is done.
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Re: Time is Ripe for Ruskie-Chrysler Car
Nomen Nescio com wrote
You lose. Where do I go pick that ticket up?
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Re: Time is Ripe for Ruskie-Chrysler Car
"Nomen Nescio" <com> wrote
Terminal seriousness, or a troll? Get a life, loser.
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Re: Time is Ripe for Ruskie-Chrysler Car
"Nomen Nescio" <com> wrote in message
news:com...
Doofus, the top-selling car in Russia is the Lada, and
AvtoVAZ production facilities cannot even keep up
with the demand. VAZ is not interested in export
until they have saturation in the Russian domestic
maker. None of this is any big secret.
Ted
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Re: Time is Ripe for Ruskie-Chrysler Car
Nomen Nescio wrote:
Serious, you may be, knowledgeable, you are not.
In non-legal definitions, "Copyright" effectively means that you "own" the
rights to the work as published and that others cannot publish the work (a
copy) without acknowledging your rights (often in the form of a royalty
payment).
For example, works of fact or fiction may be copyright.
--
Rickety
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Re: Time is Ripe for Ruskie-Chrysler Car
"Ted Mittelstaedt" <placo.com> wrote in message
news:newscache$jxg5nh$1bv1$ipinc.net...
The LADA and the NIVA(small 4x4) were imported into Canada from early 80s
until mid 90s, though the sales fell off alot in the mid 80s.
The Lada was ok, tractor like engine, but body was prone to rust. The NIVA
was tough. There are NIVA clubs still in Toronto area - they share old parts
to keep them on the road.
James Linn
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Re: Time is Ripe for Ruskie-Chrysler Car
James Linn wrote:
Wasn't Lada the car where, if you put it in reverse, the speedometer would
run backwards?
--
Email: com
"If, at first, you don't succeed, try again. Then, quit; no use being a
damned fool about it." - W. C. Fields
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Re: Time is Ripe for Ruskie-Chrysler Car
Tony Muscarella wrote:
I'm also not sure that the Lada owed anything to Russian engineering or
design. iirc They bought the plant, dies, and complete production capability
from Fiat to build the Fiat 124 locally.
--
Rickety
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Re: Time is Ripe for Ruskie-Chrysler Car
"Tony Muscarella" <com> wrote in message
news:QaHlb.107443$..
80s
NIVA
The speedometer ran backwards in the K-car. Once while spinning the wheels
while trying to get out of a snow bank I saw it go counter-clockwise to
90km/h. When the person tried drive it went all the way around, past 140,
past the odometer, back over to 40 km/h
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