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A thought provoking thought

To: british-cars@Alliant.COM
Subject: A thought provoking thought
From: Kirk Buecher <mit-eddie!hpgrla.hp.com!kirkb@EDDIE.MIT.EDU>
Date: Fri, 16 Feb 90 09:19:42 mst

   I read this a few nights ago and it has bugged me ever since. This was
   taken from "Ken Purdry's Book of Automobiles" in a chapter titled
   "The German's are coming".  This was written in 1970.

        ..... To come to a big German production line direct from a
        major British, French, or Italian factory is to see a fairly
        startling change. The difference in cleanliness, efficiency
        both mechanical and human and, most of all, intensity of
        effort, is striking. When I remarked on the generally sloppy
        and lackadaisical image being projected by the workers on the
        final assembly line of a first-rank British car, an official
        conceded the point and said there was nothing that could be
        done about it. "We try to make up for it," he said, "by very
        stiff inspection, and I think we do, but of course that's
        time-consuming and expensive. If we go on about it too much,
        we'll have a strike. Remember, we deal with thirteen separate
        unions."

   Then, a little later in the same chapter.....

        ....Intensive research is another weapon in the German
        armorarium. British, French, and Italian research tends to
        be empirical. If something new works fairly well, try making
        it thicher, thinner, lighter, or slightly differently cast.
        The German is a science lover. The archetypal German engineer
        won't believe today is Tuesday unless you show him the
        calendar; after he has convinced himself that the calendar
        isn't, perchance, a forgery, he is inclined to check it out
        to be sure it's Gregorian and not Mayan or whatever. He
        sleeps with his slide rule.  .......

   This line of thought continues on and on about how great German
   engineering is and how they build such great cars.

   I think what bugs me is that I'm not sure if this really *should* bug me.
   Sure, questionable quality of our beloved British cars is something that
   most of us on this list think about from time to time. But then again
   maybe a relaxed "lackadaisical" production line might mean *better* built
   cars.  Furthermore, what's wrong with "empirical" research? Find what
   works and make it better. That's just good common sense.

   This is where any of you that have an interest in the above can help me
   out. Were there some fundamental flaws in the way the British built our
   cars or did the British and the Germans just use two differant means to
   achive the same ends, the production of good automobiles?

   The thought provoking thought for the day........

   Kirk         kirkb@hpgrla.hp.com          Greeley, Colorado



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