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Sabtu, 23 Juni 2012

A few photos from the Leipzig Automobile History and Technology UD Summer Program



Hi folks -- thanks to Sean Falkowski for these photos.  I hope to post more in the next few days.  As you can see we learned more than anyone can imagine while at Leipzig and on our field trips. Top photo from VW museum in Wolfsburg -- a chassis used to train mechanics.  The second a group photo at BMW, where we spent a week on a very unique program.  The thidd a group shot at the VW museum.

Good Bye Leipzig, Going Home (Maybe) on what is now the worst airline -- Delta!

Hi folks  -- appropriately, perhaps, stuck in Motown overnight. Delta Airlines a tragic comedy yesterday.  After 7 hours of confusion at the airport, maybe a labor slowdown or wildcat strike, a night at the Best Western in Romulus, MI. From now on DRIVE!

Selasa, 19 Juni 2012

: The Relationship between a love affair with an automobile and repressed and unsatisfied sexuality


It seems so  simple: The Relationship between a love affair with an automobile and repressed and unsatisfied sexuality
It has been a crazy five weeks here in Germany teaching automobile history.  Today was a particularly stressful day involving an eight hour back and forth from Leipzig to Ingolstadt train ride.  So I h ad some time to catch up with reading downloaded at one time or another on my hard drive, and also time to think as  well. One essay I re-read with more care than before was Hyman Weiland, “The Psychological Significance of Hot Rods and Driving on Adolescent Males,” in Psychiatric Quarterly, supplement,  31, part 2 (1957), 161ff. Concurrently I had been lecturing on America’s Love Affair with the Automobile during the 1950s with an eye towards why the love affair emerged during the 1950s and withered after the 1960s.  It is a question that remains with us today, as the auto industry attempts to attract youthful buyers who seem more interested in Ipods than IROCs.
Anyway, Weiland’s article really connected with me.  Is the love affair with a car – washing, waxing, desiring, obsessing, fantasizing, nothing more than males with unresolved psychological conflicts and sexual inadequacies sublimating unfulfilled sex into thoughts and actions focused on a metal and plastic thing? Can one generalize that idea to extend to some other material goods?
The upshot of all of this is that one may argue that beginning in the 1960s, as American males became far more free sexually, they became less fixated on cars. Put another way, loving another person was preferred to the washing, waxing, and working on a car. And that is the dilemma facing auto makers today.

Jumat, 15 Juni 2012

Some Photos from the Nurburgring -- Vintage Racing Cars


Thanks to Tyler Chambers!  More photos next few days!  Can you identify?









 
Looks like a Bentley?

Kamis, 14 Juni 2012

Stealing Gas

Hans Hartwig,  one of my summer students here in Leipzig, submitted a short piece on stealing gas out of a tank as an unsolicited attempt to gain extra credit as an addition to the mid-term test grade.
He wrote:
"So just this past week, my sister was driving back from Washington DC to Wisconsin. Of course Dayton is exactly in between my hometown and where she lives in DC. So a stop in Dayton overnight and a visit to the Pine Club was necessary.
Unfortunately, while she slept at the Marriott, someone siphoned her gas and she lost almost all of her tank. I wanted to do a little research about how to protect my car from gas thieves when I return to Dayton in August.
Here are a few I came up with.

1) Buy a lock -- most of them cost between $10 - 20.
2) A company called Tiss makes fuel tank safeguards that allow for refueling w/o a lock and key system.  Effective on almost any fuel tnak. company based in UK.
3) avoid the use of gas altogether. use public transit, a bike, or an electric car to get around.
4) Have a button installed that locks the tank and can only  be opened on the inside of the car.