| dmeadow@juno.com wrote:
> Pat has some very good reasons for going with a RBB, most of which have
> to do with the fact that they are all younger cars.  He does not mention
> the drawbacks, however, which are mainly 1) lower horsepower and
> increased complexity due to emissions controls, and 2) crappy handling
> due to increased ride height (originally done to conform to US bumper
> height restrictions).  As long as you can live with the former, the
> latter is relatively easily fixed.
> 
> Am I missing something, or aren't those really the only issues?
        Well, as a rubber baby MG bumpered fan, I think that one big bonus is 
the 
extra crash safety provided by the rubber bumpers.  When I wiped my '77 out 
(One year 
ago yesterday 8-(), I slid head-on into a telephone pole at about 35mph.  The 
car was 
totaled, but my passenger and I survived with the worst being my cracked 
ribs...I 
attribute our general physical well-being to those big bumpers that sucked up 
the 
impact and effectively redistributed it to the frame and other parts of the 
car.  With 
chrome bumpers, (which I now own), I feel that the pole would have split the 
car in 
half and continued towards the passenger compartment...However, that's just my 
opinion...  
-- 
Michael S. Lishego
St. Andrews Presbyterian College
Elementary Education Major,
English Minor, Class of 1999
R.A. of Winston-Salem Hall
 |