You do have an option today.  Buy a nice looking car
and put an Edelbrock
engine, four-barrel, intakes, etc. in it. 
     Four barrel ???? That would be a step backwards.  I'm currently
running 3x 2 barrels on an Edelbrock designed intake.  (original 1970 Dodge
Challanger RT convertible with 440 six-pack)
      Gas mileage?   What's that?     Actually it's not too bad. I get
about 15-16 MPG on the highway. But you should see what the gas gauge does
when I put my foot to it and the second and third of carbs kick in!
      Joe
 Peace...  Sridhar
On Tue, 31 Jul 2001, R. D. Davis wrote:
  On Tue, 31 Jul 2001, joe wrote:
  and Americans aren't known for frequent car
maintainance. 
 There was a time when frequent car maintenance was easier and more
 convenient for Americans who aren't shade-tree mechanics.  What I'm
 referring to is the scarcity these days of convenient places to get a
 tune-up, grease job and oil change.  Places like Jiffy Lube don't
 count, as they're as likely to damage a car as they are to change the
 oil, etc. properly.  Not so long ago, there was a higher percentage of
 corner gas stations, with more than one mechanic working in them, to
 cars.  One could often just drive up to a service station, pull into a
 bay, and get a car repaired without having to drop it off or make an
 appointment.
 Even finding a mechanic who can perform a tune up is becoming
 difficult; many don't know how to adjust points or carburators, and
 one can forget about having the dwell adjusted or getting a
 distributor curved; one shop that I called about the later had no idea
 as to what I was talking about.  If they'd get all these new cars with
 ridiculously overly complex engines off the road and put carburators
 and distributors with points back in cars, people would have fewer
 problems with maintenance and finding parts 20 years later.  Of
 course, Big Brother wouldn't like that, as the old cars can't be
 stopped by a high-energy blast that makes electronic components in the
 new engines break down.
 --
 Copyright (C) 2001 R. D. Davis The difference between humans & other  
 animals:
  All Rights Reserved            an unnatural
belief that we're above  
 Nature &
  rdd(a)rddavis.net  410-744-4900  her other
creatures, using dogma to  
 justify such
 > 
http://www.rddavis.net         beliefs and to justify much human cruelty.
 >