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Re: abingdon pillow

To: MG List <mgs@Autox.Team.Net>
Subject: Re: abingdon pillow
From: Don Malling <dmallin@attglobal.net>
Date: Sun, 06 Feb 2005 14:43:48 -0500
Hi David,

The answer to your question is  "yes".

Just kidding -- Sorry, but I couldn't resist. :-)

I'm going to put a metal dash with large gauges in my 68-74 BMH MGB body shell. 
Low seats too -- no 
headrest. I have the seats, dash, gauges, European speaker console, firewall 
steering hub, dash 
mounting shroud from a 66 and a John Esposito rebuilt 4 syncro LH. Just need to 
finish my TR250 first.

It's going to be a 68 Canadian or European spec car. Metal dash -- 4 syncro 
with LH, and backup lights.

I also have a 73 with a pillow -- it's OK. I don't loose any sleep over it. 
Just not the same as a 
metal dash. I just can't bring myself to put a pillow and high back seats in a 
brand new body shell.

I like vanilla and I don't like chocolate. What can I say?

Don Malling



David Breneman wrote:
> --- Max Heim <mvheim@studiolimage.com> wrote:
> 
> 
>>I fail to see how you can consider a style of dashboard padding
>>that was
>>never seen before 1968 in any type of vehicle to be somehow "more
>>in keeping
>>with the aesthetics of a 1960s car" (especially one introduced in
>>1962) --
>>it's simply beyond logic. 
> 
> 
> Here's an execrise in logic.  If today Chevrolet introduced a new
> Camaro with a vinyl top, one could rationally state that such a
> car contained a styling anachronism that was more appropriate to
> cars of an earlier age.  Simpy the fact that the car was introduced
> in 2005 would not make that observation illogical; in fact it
> would demonstrate the anachronism that the observation is
> meant to reflect.  A styling faus pas does not make its
> own correction non sequitir, it requires the very correction
> itself.  The fact that a US government regulation lead to the
> reconsideration of the design is only marginally relevant.
> Could the design have been better?  Sure.  Am I an irrational
> idiot for believing that the design is better than the
> 1950s-style dashboard that it replaced?  I'll leave that an
> an exercise for the student.  :-)
> 
> 
> =====
> David Breneman         david_breneman@yahoo.com




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