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Ok heres one for you.

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old

07-05-2006 21:14:06




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Past present and future. Back in 1974 gas was in January around $0.199 a gallion, soda was less then 2 bits. Now in 2006 gas is $2.779 plus, soda is 5 bits plus. Gas is 15 times higher then in 1974 and soda 5/6 times higher. So now thats about 30 years plus or minus a year or 2. So what is gas and soda going to be like in the next 30 years. $10 a gallion for gas if not more and a soda $3 or 4. I'm just tring to figure out how bad it will be if/when I get as old as my mom and dad which are still alive right now at the age of 82 each.

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MarkB_MI

07-06-2006 04:02:52




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 Re: Ok heres one for you. in reply to old, 07-05-2006 21:14:06  
I remember paying 40 to 50 cents a gallon for gas in the mid-70's; soda was a quarter for 12 oz in the machine. I also recall making two bucks an hour. And I sure wouldn't have paid a buck and a quarter for a little bottle of water!

Remember that in the seventies, you couldn't buy a car that got thirty miles to the gallon.

Prices are mostly a matter of what people are willing to pay. When gas prices jumped up to a buck a gallon in '73 and '79, people quit driving. Nowadays, I don't see people changing their driving habits, even with gas over three bucks a gallon. You can be sure that gas prices will have to get a lot higher before you really see people change their habits.

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jddriver

07-06-2006 14:38:07




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 Re: Ok heres one for you. in reply to MarkB_MI, 07-06-2006 04:02:52  
I had a Subaru that got 28mpgat 75 and over35 at 55.Paid 2256 for it brand new.Steve



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Jak

07-06-2006 14:15:21




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 Re: Ok heres one for you. in reply to MarkB_MI, 07-06-2006 04:02:52  
Hey Mark I have really changed my driving habits,I don't joyride anymore and hang around the house lots more than I ever did.My F250 gets anywhere from 9-12 mph depending on how fast I drive so it gets driven easy and limited.The misses car gets 28 mpg so if there is any trips we go in that but thats cut back too.



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JDknut

07-06-2006 03:39:39




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 Re: Ok heres one for you. in reply to old, 07-05-2006 21:14:06  
You have to look at the gas prices in perspective. I have a scrapbook of a trip to Florida my dad took when he was a kid in 1937, and he saved the gas reciepts. Gas was 15 cents a gallon then, but what some people fail to see is what it cost compared to other things, or compared to the hourly wages for labor. A lot of people got paid 15 cents an hour then, so if you look at it that way, it is like an hours work for a gallon of gas. With the Minimum wage in NY of $6.75 an hour, then gas would have to be 6.75 bucks a gallon to be as cheap as it was in 1937. Now with crude oil at a record price of $75.40 a barrel, the demand for gas is still skyrocketing, people are still driving gas-sucking pigs, every 16 year old has his/her own car and everyone drives everywhere all the time, so it must not be as bad as everyone whines about. Besides, gas is cheaper than water. You buy a pint bottle of water for even a dollar, gas would have to cost $8.00 a gallon to compare.

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Dachshund

07-06-2006 05:22:12




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 Re: Ok heres one for you. in reply to JDknut, 07-06-2006 03:39:39  
That's a pretty tired comparison. Most people don't buy water for $8 a gallon! I get 1500 gallons for $27 and anything over that for $1.50 per 1000 gallons. Sure, if your gonna buy Eavian or Disani at the 7-11 your gonna pay, but that'd be pretty dumb. People may have made .55 an hour in 1937 and gas was about the same, but take two years ago when gas was still around $1.10 (here anyhoo) and people were making the same wages as they are now, when gas is $2.90. It takes a MUCH larger chunk out of the budget.

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Super 55

07-05-2006 22:00:24




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 Re: Ok heres one for you. in reply to old, 07-05-2006 21:14:06  
Man I don't remember gas being 20¢ a gallon. I can remember 29¢. I had a '65 bug in 69 and it cost me about $3 to fill up the 10 gallon tank when I was on vapors. I do rember 5¢ candy bars and cokes. I also remember a McD burger was 12¢. What are they now?



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Jimmy King

07-06-2006 01:20:05




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 Re: Ok heres one for you. in reply to Super 55, 07-05-2006 22:00:24  
Super 55, I am 64 when I was a teenager on hwy 13 north of Springfield, MO there was a gas station that sold gas for 17.9. Springfield was in a constant gas war 21.9 was high.



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Super 55

07-06-2006 08:29:50




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 Re: Ok heres one for you. in reply to Jimmy King, 07-06-2006 01:20:05  
Wow... that's cheap. I live in BC now and it's about $1.12 a litre..... .That's about .264 of a gallon.



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Jimmy King

07-06-2006 08:52:32




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 Re: Ok heres one for you. in reply to Super 55, 07-06-2006 08:29:50  
Cheep gas here is at Walmart now Wed morn I paid $2.76, and we are cheeper than a lot of the US.



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earlschieb

07-05-2006 21:35:30




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 Re: Ok heres one for you. in reply to old, 07-05-2006 21:14:06  
In 1972, and 1973, I was buying gasoline for 0.099 a gallon, a Coke Cola was a Nickel, a Candy Bar was also a Nickel, useta take a buck with me to town on Saturday Night, get 5 gallons of gas, and all of the Coke Colas and Candy Bars I wanted. When Gas was 0.169 a gallon, we thought it was hiway robbery.



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IaGary

07-05-2006 21:55:45




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 Re: Ok heres one for you. in reply to earlschieb, 07-05-2006 21:35:30  
In '73 here gas was 32cents and went to $0.54 in '74.

I bought a new Pontiac Lemans in '75 for $5800.
It had ac, cruise control, am/fm cassette,radial tires,400V8, 4barrel, automatic trans, electric windows,locks,and seat.

And it got 21 mile to the gallon if you kept your foot out of it.

Car same size and equipment today would be at least $26,000 and might get 28 mile to the gal.

woopee

Just out of High School and was making $5.00 an hour as a cook.

It took 1160 hours to pay for the car.

Are there any people just out of high school making $22 an hour to pay for that $26000 car.

Gary

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Hugh MacKay

07-06-2006 02:43:52




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 Re: Ok heres one for you. in reply to IaGary, 07-05-2006 21:55:45  
Gary: Interesting the comparison you make on a young lad starting out his working life and buying a car. I can remember a new Chevy sedan being just over $3,000., that being the cheaper model. I learned to drive and got my licence on my dad's 57 Chevy. Cant remember exactly what we paid for gas, but do remember if I bought $5.00 of gas in an evening it took you a long ways. Far enough that dad was growling about the miles going on the Chevy.

A couple of years later I bought my own car, a full size Pontiac, and it was roughly same price as my earnings for the year. I have not seen my children experience the same. Yes, 10 years out of high school but not 2 years out.

Another interesting aspect, and I'm talking Imperial gallons, roughly 5 of your qts. My dad's 6 cylinder Chevy gave 26 mpg. Today I drive a 6 cylinder Buick LeSabre and get 26 mpg. If I remove the catalitic converter from the Buick, it will give me about 33 mpg. Of course the experts tell us these emission control items are important, and beneficial to the air we breath. No sure about that bunk, man and other species have adapted very well to harmful chemicals.

What man has and is not going to adapt very well to is lack of oxygen. I expect it takes the same amoung of oxygen to burn a gallon of gasoline as it did in 1957. I don't remember blue and yellow fog in 1957, thus the emissions are worse than ever, and we are using more oxygen per mile of driving. You want to see a scientest stammer, put that one to him.

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Dave in Missouri

07-06-2006 08:57:47




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 Re: Ok heres one for you. in reply to Hugh MacKay, 07-06-2006 02:43:52  
My '71 3/4 ton Chevy with the 350 engine three- on-the-tree got 10 miles per, if you were judicious!



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Ken Macfarlane

07-06-2006 05:43:11




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 Re: Ok heres one for you. in reply to Hugh MacKay, 07-06-2006 02:43:52  
I think you may all be a little rosy in your memories of gas mileage. Remember too y'all were burning sunoco super 104 octane in a muscle car with 10:1 compression and spewing lead out all over. That is a huge change to what we can burn now.

A mid 70's 4wd pickup with a say stock truck type 350 in it and a 4 barrel and no emissions gets about 12 miles to the gallon, maybe as high as 15 if you are super gentle.

A current 4wd pickup with similar power as the 350 gets at least 20 mpg and maybe as good as 23 all while polluting about 10 times less.

Pollution isn't a made up thing, ask californians and removing a catylitic convertor off a modern car will not improve gas mileage unless it is clogged up near solid.

I hate trouble shooting old cars with broken emissions stuff too but it does a job. Drive behind someone with out a cat and you smell it immediately, that stuff ain't good for noone.

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dhermesc

07-06-2006 07:26:09




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 Re: Mielage? in reply to Ken Macfarlane, 07-06-2006 05:43:11  
I like to see the new 4X4 with a V8 thats getting 20 MPG in the real world. My brother has a 2004 Ford F150 with the 4.6 and 4X4 that's averaging 13 MPG and the Ford "Techs" claim that is within the "acceptable" mileage and refuse to touch it under warranty. We have 17 1/2 ton Chevy 2WDs with the 4.3 V6 that average right at 20 MPG and consider our selves lucky for the experience.



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massey333

07-06-2006 07:07:29




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 Re: Ok heres one for you. in reply to Ken Macfarlane, 07-06-2006 05:43:11  
I may not be SCHOOL SMART,but I know what works in real life.You said equal to a 350 is not the same as a 350.The CARB.350s-400s-454s-390s-460s-360s-440s of the 70s-80s didn't get the Mileage the new Engines get but THEY GOT ABOUT THE SAME MPG Loaded or empty PLUS PULLED THE LOAD which the new engines won't do,PLUS THEY LOSE HALF OR BETTER THEIR MPG.A good example is some of the Tractors of the Pre mid 70s,you could tell where they were by the smoke and Burnt maybe 5-6 Gal.per hour,The new tractors don't smoke but BURN 10-13 Gal.Per Hour,so where is the Sense in this?The New 2007 Truck engines are said to lose up to 10-15% of the 2006 Engines MPG.So where is the Benefit??Lastly IT does take HP. to sustain a CAT.Con.and as far as SMELL You can be around a Non Cat.engine all day and not come away with burning EYES but 5 mins. of a CAT.engine and YOU can't see or breathe,so something is NOT Right here.

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Hugh MacKay

07-06-2006 06:25:21




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 Re: Ok heres one for you. in reply to Ken Macfarlane, 07-06-2006 05:43:11  
Ken: No damn rosieness about it, my family have always kept precise fuel milage records. I rather doubt a 1957 Chevy 6 cylinder was ever considered a mussel car. We are getting no better fuel milage today than we were 50 years ago to move the same weight. The rosieness if any falls in that new 350 today getting 20 to 23 mpg. Bear in mind we may be talking 2 different gallons yet the same miles. Remember and Imperial gallon is 5 American quarts.

Now, about my Buick it was about no Catilitic converter then adding a new one from GM. In my opinion every damn modern day gasoline powered car you follow down the road today stinks like hell. It used to be the diesels were the stinking engines, not any more.

About CA and other large North American cities, I've been there and it's lack of OXYGEN not emissions doing you in. I have experienced noticable lack of oxygen 4 times in my life, once in a silo, once in a manure pit, once in Detroit rush hour and once in Toronto rush hour. Let me assure you, one never forgets the feeling. Truth is 99% of folks, experience it not realizing the cause.

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Ken Macfarlane

07-06-2006 07:28:41




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 Re: Ok heres one for you. in reply to Hugh MacKay, 07-06-2006 06:25:21  
Hugh I know what you are feeling when you have a lack of air but there are a whole slew of things that make you feel like no air.

Breathing CO2 or NOx will make you feel like you can't get air. NOx is what triggers ahsama (sp?) attack, the irritants get into those little sacks in your lungs.

Breathing CO long enough is different, it takes awhile as it saturates your blood so you can't carry oxygen.

CO2 will make your body breathe faster to get more air.

Unburned fuel is another irritant but I don't know what its effects are on people.

On a grand scale, soot, unburned fuel and NOx are what cause huge smog clouds to hang over areas and cause breathing problems.

Engines with high compression and no emissions controls produce lots of NOx. No way around it mechanically speaking without reducing the peak temps in the engine which reduces the power output so you may as well of had lower compression to start with.

We have made progress, we squeeze many percent more energy out of each drop of gas than we did back then with our engines all while reducing our emissions. Any losses in mileage are from the trend of uppowering cars.

Look at our 0-60 times in the last 50 years. Family sedans now have 240 hp engines and would knock the early supercars on their butts.

Another thing to consider is a typical car is now driven to 200k km with out issue, it may have what 3-4 major tunes up in that time? Rarely does the gas mileage change more than a few percent. My old carb'd no anything fancy truck can go from 28 mpg to 17 mpg between oil changes if the carb gets upset and the plugs get a bit fouled.

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TGIN

07-06-2006 01:40:44




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 Re: Ok heres one for you. in reply to IaGary, 07-05-2006 21:55:45  
Dont ya wish ya still had that car !!



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old

07-05-2006 21:49:05




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 Re: Ok heres one for you. in reply to earlschieb, 07-05-2006 21:35:30  
Yep. heres one for you. Back in 1973 or 74 I was working at a gas station and a car load of girls would come in for a $1 worth of gas then an hour later do the same thing and that happened all night. Back then I guess I was to young/dumb to jump on the band wagon and have the fun they wanted LOL.
So back to what I was saying when I'm 82 I hope gas isn't like $10-20 a gallion or I will need to walk, oh I forgot with my bad back and knees I will be in trouble, LOL

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