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That's just sad. Cars don't belong there. You may as well have static plastic models - they have no need for their powertrains, wheels, suspension, interior... everything that makes them a car is useless to them.
Woo, he drives a handful of them sometimes, for a few hundred yards. Well done - that's what they're made for and that's what all the hundreds of millions of pounds spent in research and development for them went towards. That's what they should all be doing. Stop hoarding them and give them to people who'll use them.
Car mausoleums. Hate them.[/color][/b]
Not sure if trolling or serious - but if serious, do you also think the same for every other thing in a museum somewhere in the world which could be useful for what it was originally made to do?That's just sad. Cars don't belong there.
Car mausoleums. Hate them.
Because it's extremely rare, irreplaceable and thus priceless yet the amount of pieces of Ming porcelain in this world is far higher than the amount of original condition 205 T16 Evo 2's for example.
That's just sad. Cars don't belong there. You may as well have static plastic models - they have no need for their powertrains, wheels, suspension, interior... everything that makes them a car is useless to them.
Woo, he drives a handful of them sometimes, for a few hundred yards. Well done - that's what they're made for and that's what all the hundreds of millions of pounds spent in research and development for them went towards. That's what they should all be doing. Stop hoarding them and give them to people who'll use them.
Car mausoleums. Hate them.
GreycapNot sure if trolling or serious - but if serious, do you also think the same for every other thing in a museum somewhere in the world which could be useful for what it was originally made to do?
Why not keep flowers in a Ming vase on a living room table, it's perfectly good for that for example? Because it's extremely rare, irreplaceable and thus priceless yet the amount of pieces of Ming porcelain in this world is far higher than the amount of original condition 205 T16 Evo 2's for example. Cars like that belong nowhere else than in a museum unless it can be made 100% sure that nothing happens to them while being used and that can't be guaranteed. Having a car like that just sitting on a showroom floor is a lot better than having it crashed - yes, it could be rebuilt from the ground up with newly produced parts but it wouldn't be original anymore, more of a replica.
Not sure if trolling or serious - but if serious, do you also think the same for every other thing in a museum somewhere in the world which could be useful for what it was originally made to do?
Why not keep flowers in a Ming vase on a living room table, it's perfectly good for that for example? Because it's extremely rare, irreplaceable and thus priceless yet the amount of pieces of Ming porcelain in this world is far higher than the amount of original condition 205 T16 Evo 2's for example.
Cars like that belong nowhere else than in a museum unless it can be made 100% sure that nothing happens to them while being used and that can't be guaranteed. Having a car like that just sitting on a showroom floor is a lot better than having it crashed - yes, it could be rebuilt from the ground up with newly produced parts but it wouldn't be original anymore, more of a replica.
I agree with you to an extent, but I think there's a difference between preservation and mothballing. The cars at the Donington Collection is fantastic, and it's an absolute privilage to be able to see such wonderful cars lined up next to one another.
It doesn't say that the cars never get used, just that some are used more than others.
He's only one guy, he has other business and family duties - he can't spend all his waking life thrashing the balls off each and every one of them.
Whilst i usually hate to see cars specifically designed with competition in mind sat doing nothing, the fact that they're old and rare means they can't just be constantly abused in the same way a more modern car can. The rare cars mentioned being used and driven hard at events like the Le Mans Classic will probably spend 363 days a year in a similar air conditioned mausoleum.
Since a majority of the cars have some meaning to Kankkunen's career and still get driven by the man, i can't think of anyone whose hands i'd rather see them in. Not to mention the fact that many have been restored on his request. Had he not done that they may have been lost forever.
Most of those are have already done what they where supposed to do. And that is racing. New cars have come in to their way, and now they are just relics of eras gone by. Sure, they need to be driven, but not the way they ment to do so
if that is what you all want to see, built replicas, and trash those around a gravel pit.
But, as no one of us has such a car collection or the money to build something like it, we just need to be glad there are people who take the time and money to keep the cars in proper condition.
FamineDo you love your car(s)? I love my cars. They couldn't possibly be replaced if they were to be crashed - yes, I could get another one that looked just like them, but they wouldn't be the original any more.
I still drive them because that is what they are supposed to do and most of the enjoyment comes not from just looking at them on my drive but from driving them.
It specifically states that the Celica is "one of the few cars in the collection that's used regularly".
But again, if their only point is to be looked at, plastic replicas would do the job. All they serve to illustrate is that one man can buy a lot of cars and then stop them ever being cars again - making the remaining ones more valuable (by reducing supply of something already fairly scarce) and similarly less likely to be driven as a result, meaning we only ever get to see them hard-parked and not doing what they were made to do.
I'd rather see Rowan Atkinson stacking his McLaren F1 twice a year than one in laboratory conditions, roped off from the world.
All they serve to illustrate is that one man can buy a lot of cars and then stop them ever being cars again - making the remaining ones more valuable (by reducing supply of something already fairly scarce) and similarly less likely to be driven as a result, meaning we only ever get to see them hard-parked and not doing what they were made to do.
Famine, that's your point of view. And it isn't your money going to pieces when a over excited rallydriver gets the chance to trash around in a 450hp car wrap it around some trees. I'm all about older cars, and I get goosebumps when I hear and see them, but raping them they way they used to be raped isn't the way to go. I want my kid(s) to see them too, but in your idea the cars must be used now, so that we can see them, but when they crash, no one will see them as they were.
Famine. Point made. You are the minority as well lack some experience in my opinion. Once you have an understanding for classics and irreplaceable parts. You will get it.
Consider the souls that labored for the machine. These people's hard work lives in with these classics being preserved.
To even attach emotional feeling to a car is silly. Cars don't care is they sit or race.