Author Topic: Miles Per Gallon  (Read 5374 times)

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Offline GROWLER

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Re: Miles Per Gallon
« Reply #15 on: April 19, 2008, 08:01:14 AM »
Do you remember when petrol reached 50p a gallon and all the news programmes were predicting that nobody would ever drive again?

All these years later, petrol ten times more expensive, roads ten times more crowded and people are still driving.

Why?

Cos public transport is still shite that’s why!  cussing:


Halcyon days.  cloud9:
Fuel prices that is, NOT public transport. Mind you, even that was slightly more tolerable than todays 'apology'. evil:

Offline Barman

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Re: Miles Per Gallon
« Reply #16 on: April 19, 2008, 08:30:45 AM »
Just filled up... diesel €1.106 per litre!  cussing:

Red is just €0.76 per litre  Banghead
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Offline GROWLER

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Re: Miles Per Gallon
« Reply #17 on: April 19, 2008, 08:48:27 AM »
Just filled up... diesel €1.106 per litre!  cussing:

Red is just €0.76 per litre  Banghead

That's about 82/3 ish a liter, in shite money?
No idea what 'red ' is over here, but I wouldn't risk it anyway. They confiscate and destroy your car apparently.  eeek: Nice ey, this near Nazi state that we live in. Banghead

Offline Barman

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Re: Miles Per Gallon
« Reply #18 on: April 19, 2008, 08:59:57 AM »
Do you remember when petrol reached 50p a gallon and all the news programmes were predicting that nobody would ever drive again?

All these years later, petrol ten times more expensive, roads ten times more crowded and people are still driving.

Why?

Cos public transport is still shite that’s why!  cussing:


Halcyon days.  cloud9:
Fuel prices that is, NOT public transport. Mind you, even that was slightly more tolerable than todays 'apology'. evil:
When I was a kid there were three bus stops within 250m of my house… You could get a bus into Heathrow Airport or any of the local towns and two main-line railway stations.

If you caught the red bus (Routemaster) to Staines you could get a ‘Green Line bus’ to just about anywhere else in the country.

What went wrong?  rubschin:

Oh yes, they ‘privatised’ it to make it better.  Banghead

We lost all the busses and ended up with a privately run clapped-out coach that passed on certain days of the week and only went to one town and railway station.

Much better.  noooo:
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Offline GROWLER

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Re: Miles Per Gallon
« Reply #19 on: April 19, 2008, 09:15:06 AM »
Same here. Green (Crosville) or  blue (local council run) all with numbers on the front that you could understand, accompanied with an easy timetable and route.
Now, it's just a total utter shambles. I wouldn't have a clue what goes where, or when.
Most of the buses around here are ancient with black smoke (unburnt diesel) belching out of the back.
We have a game taking the Growler's jnr to school now....we HAVE to get in front of the 'stinky bus'.
One of the wonderful Arriva fleet that runs the kids to school.
'A' reg. i.e. 25 years ancient, with an unbelievable amount of fumes belching out of the exhaust.
Get stuck behind it, and you're going to be choking if you don't put the heater onto re-circulation mode. Bloody disgrace. Probably emits more fumes than all the cars put together that are running their little cherubs to school. ::)

Offline Barman

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Re: Miles Per Gallon
« Reply #20 on: April 19, 2008, 09:20:47 AM »
Same here. Green (Crosville) or  blue (local council run) all with numbers on the front that you could understand, accompanied with an easy timetable and route.
Now, it's just a total utter shambles. I wouldn't have a clue what goes where, or when.
Most of the buses around here are ancient with black smoke (unburnt diesel) belching out of the back.
We have a game taking the Growler's jnr to school now....we HAVE to get in front of the 'stinky bus'.
One of the wonderful Arriva fleet that runs the kids to school.
'A' reg. i.e. 25 years ancient, with an unbelievable amount of fumes belching out of the exhaust.
Get stuck behind it, and you're going to be choking if you don't put the heater onto re-circulation mode. Bloody disgrace. Probably emits more fumes than all the cars put together that are running their little cherubs to school. ::)
Where did all the money go?  rubschin:
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Offline GROWLER

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Re: Miles Per Gallon
« Reply #21 on: April 19, 2008, 04:39:27 PM »
Well here to finally see our cup of overwhelming joy completely spill over:

A planned strike by workers at a giant oil refinery will lead to fuel shortages from next Friday and could cripple supplies for a month, its owners have warned.

Up to 1,200 workers at the Grangemouth site in Scotland will walk out on April 27 and 28 in a row over pensions.

The site's owner, Ineos, said that the industrial action could mean no fuel supplies in Scotland and the North of England for at least a month, although the Unite union has warned that the whole of the UK would be hit.


So the message from government agencies and their associated arse wipes will be..."DON'T PANIC!!!"

I'm going straight down to fill the fleet up before the rest of the population get wind of this.
Panic panic panic, NOW!

Offline Barman

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Re: Miles Per Gallon
« Reply #22 on: April 19, 2008, 05:08:18 PM »
Well here to finally see our cup of overwhelming joy completely spill over:

A planned strike by workers at a giant oil refinery will lead to fuel shortages from next Friday and could cripple supplies for a month, its owners have warned.

Up to 1,200 workers at the Grangemouth site in Scotland will walk out on April 27 and 28 in a row over pensions.

The site's owner, Ineos, said that the industrial action could mean no fuel supplies in Scotland and the North of England for at least a month, although the Unite union has warned that the whole of the UK would be hit.


So the message from government agencies and their associated arse wipes will be..."DON'T PANIC!!!"

I'm going straight down to fill the fleet up before the rest of the population get wind of this.
Panic panic panic, NOW!

Lucky I filled up this morning then...  rubschin:
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Offline Uncle Mort

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Re: Miles Per Gallon
« Reply #23 on: April 21, 2008, 07:48:28 AM »
Scaremongering by both sides of the dispute. The 'Great British Public' will of course run around like headless chickens panic buying and causing the shortage to happen. If everyone just carried on buying petrol as per normal there would be no shortage.


Offline Pastis

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Re: Miles Per Gallon
« Reply #24 on: May 24, 2008, 04:24:10 PM »
I heard a comment today on Any Answers or something about petrol prices, having filled up this morning at £1.14 per litre  eeek:

Why? the gentleman enquired, do HMG tax fuel on the cost and yet tax beer by the pint? I haven't thought this through in my current frail state but feel it has some merit. Seems to me yet another area where they need to sharpen their pencils  evil:
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Offline Snoopy

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Re: Miles Per Gallon
« Reply #25 on: May 25, 2008, 06:58:37 AM »
If they set a tax rate at pence per litre/gallon/pint/thimblefull then it would be a lot cheaper. Setting the tax as a % means that every increase caused by shortage of supply/slacking arabs/speculators using oil as their latest toy brings in additional revenue to HM Government. It is, therefore, in Gordo's interest to keep things as they are in the hope that the motorists will help buy him out of trouble again. As ever what annoys me most about this is not so much the cost of the fuel (which is annoying enough) but the fact that Gordo & Co have so little respect for my intelligence that they think I don't know.
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Offline The Moan Ranger

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Re: Miles Per Gallon
« Reply #26 on: June 03, 2008, 02:15:06 PM »
From the wonderful Mr Clarkson...

"It’s hard to understand why so many people watch Top Gear. Some say it’s the cinematography. Some reckon there’s a chemistry between the three presenters. Most think it’s because there’s nothing else on at that time on a Sunday evening.

I think, however, that its main appeal is this: when something goes wrong for one of us, the others don’t rush over with furrowed brows, concerned tones and a silver post-car-crash blanket. Instead, we point and laugh. “Ha ha ha. Look. James’s head has exploded.” And that makes a refreshing change in a world full of counsellors and sobbing footballers.

Of course, you might imagine that this is all done for the cameras; and that after they’ve all been turned off we put our arms round one another and behave like women. ’Fraid not. In fact, when the cameras are turned off, we’re even worse.

Just last week, the three of us were waiting for a delayed plane in Belgium. Or it could have been Holland. Or Japan. Whatever, we found a copy of what is basically Asian Babes for petrolheads. It’s called Top Marques and is stuffed full of classified ads for cars you can nearly afford.

Naturally, we decided to see what our own cars are fetching in these times of rising fuel prices and eco-mentalism. This turned out to be a rich comedy gold mine because two-year-old, ultra-low-mileage Porsche 911s, just like Richard Hammond’s, are going for 75p.

His little face was destroyed. He sat there working out how many crappy awards ceremonies he’d hosted to buy that car and how it had all been for nothing. He may as well have simply lobbed his money on a bonfire. Christ, it was funny. James May and I laughed that dangerous life-threatening laughter; the sort where your brain starts to run out of oxygen. At one point, I coughed up my own liver.

Eventually, after about two hours, we’d calmed down enough to see how much James’s Boxster might fetch. And this, unbelievably, was even funnier. Not because of the drop, which was mighty, but because most of the enormous depreciation was not as a result of market forces or events beyond James’s control. No. He’d brought the massive hit on himself by being an idiot.

It hurts, I know, to tick all the options boxes when buying a car. But the simple fact of the matter is this: if you don’t, it is going to be worthless when the time comes to sell.

Think about it. A combination of events in the Middle East, sub-prime mortgages in California, Northern Rock and a galactically stupid government has caused all Boxsters to lose half their value in 10 minutes. So the only way you can make a car with wind-down windows and unicycle tyres appeal in the pages of Top Marques is to sell it for even less than the going rate.

And boy did James scrimp. He didn’t even fit satellite navigation and who wants a Porsche with no sat nav? No one. Not unless they deliberately live in a house with an outside bog.

What’s more, James – as we know from his hooped jumpers – likes an unusual colour combination, which is why his steel-wheeled, understudy Porsche, with its gramophone and no guidance system, has a brown roof and a brown interior.

There is simply no call for a car like this. It could only be part-exchanged for some used butter. Plainly, James was very hurt by this. He’d worked hard for his car and now it was worthless. If Richard and I were girls, we’d have put our arms around him and hugged some sympathy into his system. Instead, Richard fell off his chair and my kidneys came out of my nose.

There is a serious message hidden in all of this. When buying an expensive new car, accept, like a man, that it will plummet in value in the manner of a fat man plummeting from the top of a tower block. Accept, too, that unless you spec it up with every conceivable extra there will be nothing to cushion the fall. And most important of all, avoid bonkers colour combinations. You may think that a brown roof makes you look sultry and interesting but in the long term it will make you look more sort of bankrupt."

 ;D


Offline Barman

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Re: Miles Per Gallon
« Reply #27 on: June 03, 2008, 02:21:05 PM »
 lol: lol: lol:

Quote
It could only be part-exchanged for some used butter.

 happ096
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Offline Uncle Mort

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Re: Miles Per Gallon
« Reply #28 on: June 03, 2008, 03:27:22 PM »
I always considered that by the time you're earning enough to afford a Porsche or similar you're probably too old to really be seen in one.