Coming over the crest, I saw the road gyrating gratuitously into the distance. At this time in the morning, there’d be no traffic. Even the sheep were too bleary-eyed to pay attention to the blue car that had just appeared on their horizon.
Third should do it, I thought with a smile, pushing the lever forward, instinctively nudging the throttle as I did. There was no doubting that cry of approval from under the sloping bonnet. Down went the pedal again, but this time it stayed there, splitting carpet fibres as surely as the car’s nose was renting asunder any air reckless enough to resist our progress.
The corner at the far end was long and fast, arcing away uphill and to the right. But it had a secret, and a nasty one at that. At the turn-in point, the road rose imperceptibly to the naked eye, but enough to unsettle the suspension at the very instant you needed it most. This was a foe I knew of old, but that hardly helped. Time was running out and I knew it. The bend looked like it should be taken flat, but how many others had thought as much and found to the contrary and their cost?
But something had passed between this man and that machine in all those miles together, something that was unsaid but could not be mistaken. It was telling me it would be all right: it had my back. We would survive this thing together. So my mind stayed strong and my foot stayed down. Flat out it would be.
And flat out it was. I guided the nose in, and instantly felt it go light. I saw my hands add another few degrees of lock in response. I thought hard about lifting, but, no, it was already too late for that. We were committed. But I could see the trajectory we were describing and, in that wondrous moment, I knew we would prevail. The car exited the curve with a few inches to spare. As I changed joyously up to fourth and rammed the pedal home once more, I looked down in time to see the early morning sun glinting off the speedometer needle. The Dacia Sandero was doing 53mph.
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I remember that number plate,
I remember that number plate, B16 ONE, seems to have gone down in the world. I saw it many years ago and two or three times, on a black Marcos, I think it was a Mantara. Saw it my home city of Wells in Somerset.
slow/fast
Given the limits of traffic etc., it has always been more fun to drive a slow car fast than it is to drive a fast car slowly on public roads. I had a 36hp VW many years ago, and 40 mph was about 8/10ths and silly fun. I've owned many iconic cars over the years, most recent being an M-B 190E 2.3-16. Fabulous driver's car, yet easily outpowered by contemporary midsize sedans from Japan or South Korea. Classic cars that were the most desirable in their day were so due to their performance within the standards of that time period. They remain fun due to their balance and overall character, not neccesarily their content. A new BMW 3-series can be a fun car, but I know a 2002 will be.
The simple things
For me a good gearbox makes or breaks a car. Short throw, relatively light weight, mechanical feel but still smooth. A flick of the wrist to change gear is all you need and you can enjoy it at 10mph or 100mph. In fact the less power you have, the more you have to work the gears but a good gearbox makes that a pleasure not a chore.