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1962 Renault ad
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1962 Renault ad
"Paddy's Pig" > wrote in message
... When I met my wife-to-be in 1960 she owned a '58 version of this car. I used to stomp the throttle to the floor and it sounded like it turned at least a gazillion RPM's and I'd look out the window and realize I was only going 12 MPH. Naturally we preferred my new '61 Corvair Monza coupe. -- Pat Durkin |
#3
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1962 Renault ad
On Wed, 31 Dec 2008 12:01:29 -0800, "Paddy's Pig"
> wrote: >"Paddy's Pig" > wrote in message m... > > >When I met my wife-to-be in 1960 she owned a '58 version of this car. > >I used to stomp the throttle to the floor and it sounded like it turned at >least a gazillion RPM's and I'd look out the window and realize I was only >going 12 MPH. Naturally we preferred my new '61 Corvair Monza coupe. My parents bought a brand-spanking new Dauphine in 1960. By 1965, my dad had pop riveted the second floor into it, and by 1968, despite a new paint job a year prior, there wasn't much of the body left that hadn't been riddled with rust. The engine still ran pretty strong, tho. Finally, one day as my dad traversed a railway crossing in our home town, the front clip of the vehicle shifted to the right, while everything from the firewall rearward shifted to the left. He got rid of it that afternoon. |
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1962 Renault ad
"Square Wheels" > wrote in message
newsan.2008.12.31.21.53.08.356824@flashinthepan. pan... > I can only assume you always had good taste and class.... Well I sure had good taste in the woman. -- Pat Durkin |
#5
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1962 Renault ad
There's a little more to the name than just Dolphin. The heir to the French
throne, analogous to the British Prince of Wales, was called the Dauphin, after the Dauphine region (that's supposed to have an accent on the last e but I can't do that on my Mac at the moment). So, the feminine, Dauphine, has all sorts of connotations that would add thoughts of elegance and class to an otherwise pretty pedestrian vehicle. The French were no slouches when it came to naming cars: the Citroen DS sounds just like two letters to most people but in French that combination sounds like the word for goddess. max On 31/12/08 1:53 PM, in article , "Square Wheels" > wrote: > On Wed, 31 Dec 2008 12:01:29 -0800, Paddy's Pig wrote: > >> "Paddy's Pig" > wrote in message >> ... >> >> >> When I met my wife-to-be in 1960 she owned a '58 version of this car. >> >> I used to stomp the throttle to the floor and it sounded like it turned at >> least a gazillion RPM's and I'd look out the window and realize I was only >> going 12 MPH. > > Dauphin (no 'e') means dolphin. Did anything ever look less like a sleek, > agile dolphin that that? > > >> Naturally we preferred my new '61 Corvair Monza coupe. > > One of the most fun-to-drive cars /ever/, IMS-HO !! > > I can only assume you always had good taste and class.... > > > SW > |
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1962 Renault ad
Ask your wife if it was a used one she bought ?
It might have been mine, the 1958, as I turned mine in for a new 1960 model in Los Angeles. Was it Black ? Was it the French version, slightly different than the American version ? Did it have turn signals on the side ? |
#7
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1962 Renault ad
> wrote in message
... > Ask your wife if it was a used one she bought ? Yeah it was used. > It might have been mine, the 1958, as I turned mine in for a new 1960 > model in Los Angeles. > Was it Black ? Yeah. > Was it the French version, slightly different than the American version ? I couldn't say. I don't know the differences. > Did it have turn signals on the side ? I believe it did have semaphore signals. I think they were mounted in the B Pillars. It would be a heck of a coincidence if it turned out to be yours wouldn't it? There's almost certainly no way we could verify that but we lived in Southern California so the geography was right. It's possible I guess. -- Pat Durkin |
#8
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1962 Renault ad - "1957 Renault Dauphine.jpg" 80.9 KBytes
I was wrong on the year, I looked in my old photos, mine was a 1957 model.
A couple of pictures enclosed. I brought mine in France while in the military. Bought it new and picked it up in Paris, cost was $1045. Should have bought a VW as they were only $980, would have lasted a lot longer. Renault Dauphines seemed to last only 3 years with one engine overhaul in that time. Traded it in for a new one, Los Angeles in 1960, which cost a lot more. It lasted to 1963 and only one engine overhaul. |
#9
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1962 Renault ad - "1957 Renault Dauphine in France.jpg" 64.2 KBytes
I was wrong on the year, I looked in my old photos, mine was a 1957 model.
A couple of pictures enclosed. I brought mine in France while in the military. Bought it new and picked it up in Paris, cost was $1045. Should have bought a VW as they were only $980, would have lasted a lot longer. Renault Dauphines seemed to last only 3 years with one engine overhaul in that time. Traded it in for a new one, Los Angeles in 1960, which cost a lot more. It lasted to 1963 and only one engine overhaul. |
#10
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1962 Renault ad - "1957 Renault Dauphine turn signal.jpg" 33.5 KBytes
I was wrong on the year, I looked in my old photos, mine was a 1957 model.
A couple of pictures enclosed. I brought mine in France while in the military. Bought it new and picked it up in Paris, cost was $1045. Should have bought a VW as they were only $980, would have lasted a lot longer. Renault Dauphines seemed to last only 3 years with one engine overhaul in that time. Traded it in for a new one, Los Angeles in 1960, which cost a lot more. It lasted to 1963 and only one engine overhaul. |
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