PA Traveler
Service Attendant
Well, I think my name should be obvious. I live in PA and we live to travel, and we do rather a lot. Heading down under soon. Back to Amtrak in June, though.
Well, I, too, am from Tennessee, (actually Chattanooga) and now live in Atlanta. I went to school at UT Knoxville 1962-3 and remember the former passenger trains well. If you have any questions from the past,location of stations,etc let me know.Well, I am from TN, (though I now reside just south, in Huntsville, AL) and I am an architect, so.... tnrkitect.
I don't mind anyone knowing my real name. Labeelady is my login ID. Most login id's are limited to one word.So why did you pick your screen name as "Pat Harper"?(BTW - If you want to change it, send a PM [Private Message] to AlanB!)
AKA --not also known as.--Any Navy people out there? It was a ship designation. Lets see if anyone can come up with the answer. My first user name was APA. Got lost in a misfire in the forum some how. Same deal, a ship designation.My member number would be lower if I had not lost the APA. I thought some one might pick up on the letters and make the connection. I guess my shipmates are not train people. or none of you guys where my shipmates. You will have to go back a few years to find the APA AKA desingnation. If anyone does find the answer, be kind about my age. Hint Viet Nam
My parents has a Buick Rivera, 83 it was, and loved it as well! But it blew apart :-( (GM using gas block on Diesel)How it all started.
I was 3 years old and my Grandmother had one of these in a diesel. It was my job to tell her when the "Wait to Start" light went out so she could start the car. I loved the sound of the diesel and how smooth the car was...
Ok, I did not know that.. I just recall my uncle saying that. When they replaced it, mom got rid of it fast! Wish she didn't but as you said the reputation was ruined.It wasn't a gas block. It was heads that were the problem. There weren't enough head bolts and with the high compression that diesels have, the bolts would actually stretch over time eventually causing gasket leaks and failure. The early diesels also didn't have a water separator for the fuel. Water in diesel fuel is an especially bad thing (and I guess for reasons beyond my understanding, happens more often). GM added a water separator in 1980 or 81 I think.
GM did actually manage to fix the problem by about 1984 with something called the DX block that had more head bolts, but by that point the damage to diesel's reputation was done and the Oldsmobile diesel was out of production by 1986.
I love rolling in my Toronado. I take the bus to work so I don't really worry about gas prices. I only get about 18mpg highway, but it's worth it.
Yes. We have a Honda also that my partner drives. It does it's job but it's about as interesting as a a mayo on white bread sandwich. Honda has really lost their way on styling lately... but they still start every morning. GM and Ford have made such strides in their quality recently that they've closed the gap between themselves and the imports. Buick has been considered equal to Honda in reliability for a few years now.I, too, had an Olds Cutlass Supreme... brand new 1968, first purchase out of college. I put over 150,000 on that car and it was still in great shape BUT the number of kids outgrew the car, so I opted for a station wagon. And now I'm in a Honda. Do you think I'm improving my life in the wrong direction?
Well if we did have that topic, I would lie and say I drive a "G"I apologize to the mods for dragging this so far off topic. Perhaps we need a "What you drive?" thread.
And now you go on the train - and have a "PICNIC with 238" other passengers, right?PICNIC42...
My wife and I are always enjoying our "picnic for two"...
But you can get to St Louis and St Paul!Airport codes for 2 of my favorite places that you can't get to by Amtrak....
St Thomas and St Maarten
LOLOL.....But you can get to St Louis and St Paul!Airport codes for 2 of my favorite places that you can't get to by Amtrak....
St Thomas and St MaartenIs that close enough?
In St. Louis, you can go to a restaurant called De Palm Tree. http://stlouis.metromix.com/restaurants/caribbean/de-palm-tree-jamaican-university-city/412398/contentWell, they're both on the Mississippi River, so they have beaches (not that you may want to swim in them), and the bars do have frozen adult beverages (and in the case of St Paul - just step outside in the winter, and it will become frozen). They only problem is the palm trees - although you could probably find some fake ones!
Enter your email address to join: