Copied from the BSA M20 forum, but relevant to any collector/restorer forum.. Thought provoking!
"I was talking to a friend the other day who has been looking for another engine for his old Ford. Acting on a 'tip off' he contacted a local Secondary School who, he was told, were disposing of an engine of the same type.
Sure enough, the Science Dept. were having a 'refit' and were disposing of exactly what he was after.. It had been used as a teaching aid to explain the principles and details of the internal combustion engine and it was being disposed of because the subject was deemed to be 'no longer relevant' in the 'post industrial' world the UK is supposedly now in.
At first I was amazed at that attitude but after a little thought I'm not so sure....
It appears the car (and motorcycle) have now joined a host of other everyday items such as televisions, light bulbs, washing machines, mobile phones etc. etc. that contain a level of technology that the average owner niether understands, is equipped to work with or, arguably, even cares about as long as it is available on demand....
In other words the knowledge required to produce or work on all these things has been passed entirely to a small group of designer/manufacturers or the dwindling number of people who carry out repairs...
Ford has itself been working on a 'sealed for life' disposable engine that is designed to last the lifetime of the vehicle without attention. It is also a fact that it is cheaper to manufacture an engine with all the economies of mass production than it is to overhaul one in a vehicle workshop.
To bring this round to our own particular hobby I would suggest we have lived at the end a 'golden age' of vehicle restoration. By that I mean the vehicles we work on were not produced at a time when the gap between the average persons knowledge and the level of technology applied was too big to be 'bridged', they didn't employ extensive use of materials, such as plastics, that are very hard to refurbish or remanufacture or a level of electronic design that is way beyond the average persons understanding...
Modern vehicles have all these things and more and it appears even the basic principles involved are no longer being taught. I would suggest therefore, they will never be restored...
To take an example, my friends new Triumph has 2 computers, cruise control, ABS brakes, Traction control, Rider 'mode'settings, 'fly by wire throttle', a catalytic converter,fuel injection, more sensors than you can throw a stick at and acres of plastic mouldings, radiators etc etc...Just where would you start if you found that in a barn 20 years from now?...Is it the end of vehicle restoration?...Ian "
"I was talking to a friend the other day who has been looking for another engine for his old Ford. Acting on a 'tip off' he contacted a local Secondary School who, he was told, were disposing of an engine of the same type.
Sure enough, the Science Dept. were having a 'refit' and were disposing of exactly what he was after.. It had been used as a teaching aid to explain the principles and details of the internal combustion engine and it was being disposed of because the subject was deemed to be 'no longer relevant' in the 'post industrial' world the UK is supposedly now in.
At first I was amazed at that attitude but after a little thought I'm not so sure....
It appears the car (and motorcycle) have now joined a host of other everyday items such as televisions, light bulbs, washing machines, mobile phones etc. etc. that contain a level of technology that the average owner niether understands, is equipped to work with or, arguably, even cares about as long as it is available on demand....
In other words the knowledge required to produce or work on all these things has been passed entirely to a small group of designer/manufacturers or the dwindling number of people who carry out repairs...
Ford has itself been working on a 'sealed for life' disposable engine that is designed to last the lifetime of the vehicle without attention. It is also a fact that it is cheaper to manufacture an engine with all the economies of mass production than it is to overhaul one in a vehicle workshop.
To bring this round to our own particular hobby I would suggest we have lived at the end a 'golden age' of vehicle restoration. By that I mean the vehicles we work on were not produced at a time when the gap between the average persons knowledge and the level of technology applied was too big to be 'bridged', they didn't employ extensive use of materials, such as plastics, that are very hard to refurbish or remanufacture or a level of electronic design that is way beyond the average persons understanding...
Modern vehicles have all these things and more and it appears even the basic principles involved are no longer being taught. I would suggest therefore, they will never be restored...
To take an example, my friends new Triumph has 2 computers, cruise control, ABS brakes, Traction control, Rider 'mode'settings, 'fly by wire throttle', a catalytic converter,fuel injection, more sensors than you can throw a stick at and acres of plastic mouldings, radiators etc etc...Just where would you start if you found that in a barn 20 years from now?...Is it the end of vehicle restoration?...Ian "






























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