Author |
Message |
Robert Noel Reddington
Grand Master Username: bob_uk
Post Number: 810 Registered: 5-2015
| Posted on Tuesday, 22 December, 2015 - 06:54: | |
5 guys in an Audi Quattro got stopped by the police because the car is a Quattro and therefore 5 people is illegal. The Quattro driver asks to see the inspector the copper replies he just having a word with 2 guys in a Fiat Uno |
Jan Forrest
Grand Master Username: got_one
Post Number: 901 Registered: 1-2008
| Posted on Wednesday, 23 December, 2015 - 00:04: | |
Audi Quattro. That takes me back. Back to a TV series that starred one and was set in the decade before the damn thing was first manufactured. |
Robert Noel Reddington
Grand Master Username: bob_uk
Post Number: 813 Registered: 5-2015
| Posted on Sunday, 27 December, 2015 - 06:19: | |
I like the Quattro and the TT. Except they are 2 door coupes. I like 4 doors. The TT is not a particular fast car and is for your licence sake a better car than the Quattro. The performance of my Jeep is slightly faster than my Shadow. Both cars have enough go to get ones collar felt. 70 mph in a Spirit is the same as 70 mph in a Turbo R. I often see tv bloopers to do with cars like in Ice Cold in Alex. The prisoner is being driven away by the MPs at the end of the film. This film was set before the Battle of El Alamien. 1940. In the back ground is a Land Rover. Introduced in 1948. Another one is every old Rolls-Royce is a Silver Cloud or Ghost. |
Nigel Johnson
Prolific User Username: nigel_johnson
Post Number: 150 Registered: 12-2008
| Posted on Monday, 28 December, 2015 - 07:32: | |
Ha ha Bob, I saw the Land Rover to. That was the first time I have ever watched the film all the way through and I'm 61! Glad you have finally been diagnosed. Regards, Nigel. |
Jan Forrest
Grand Master Username: got_one
Post Number: 905 Registered: 1-2008
| Posted on Monday, 28 December, 2015 - 10:54: | |
Nigel you are to be ashamed of yourself. 61 and seen Ice Cold In Alex only one time? I'm not much older (65) and lost count of the number of times I've seen it. That film, and many others, come around on British TV every significant anniversary of WWII. "This was our finest hour". Sir Winston Churchill. Now it's ... "Bomb the crap out of innocent Syrian civilians". David Cameron. |
David Gore
Moderator Username: david_gore
Post Number: 1866 Registered: 4-2003
| Posted on Monday, 28 December, 2015 - 15:20: | |
I am nearly 68 with a strong interest in the history of WW1 and WW2 and have never heard even a whisper about this film let alone seen it screened either in a theatre or on TV in Australia. Surprising as the siege of Tobruk and the "Scrap Iron Flotilla" of ships that kept supplies up to the troops trapped there had a significant involvement of Australian Army personnel and Royal Australian Navy ships. In fact, Australian casualties and wounded during the siege and eventual relief of Tobruk were greater than all other forces as documented in the link below: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Siege_of_Tobruk The experience of the crews on the 5 Australian destroyers that were named the Scrap Iron Flotilla on the "Tobruk Ferry" may be read on the following link which is part of a longer tribute to these ships and the role they played in WW2: http://www.gunplot.net/matapan/scrapironflott12.html The 70th Infantry Division of the British Army fought during the Western Desert Campaign of the Second World War. On 10 October 1941, the division was created when the 6th Infantry Division was renamed in an attempt to deceive Axis intelligence on the strength of the British military in the Middle East. The Royal Navy transported the division to Tobruk from 19 September to 25 October, in a politically controversial move to relieve the mainly Australian garrison which had been defending the port for almost seven months, since the beginning of the Siege of Tobruk. The official war histories of Britain and Australia document the Siege of Tobruk in considerable detail as it was a significant turning point in the war in the Middle-East and was the first major defeat inflicted on the Axis forces in WW2 which was then followed by the three Battles of El Alamein in 1942 which forced Rommel and the Axis forces into a full-scale retreat and eventual complete withdrawal from Africa. https://www.awm.gov.au/encyclopedia/el_alamein/reading/ Bob Reddington, you may have a special interest in this brief summary - if my memory is correct, your father was a participant in the El Alamein battles. |
Richard Treacy
Grand Master Username: richard_treacy
Post Number: 3242 Registered: 4-2003
| Posted on Monday, 28 December, 2015 - 20:22: | |
quote:TT is not a particular fast car
Not exactly slow in top-spec. My brother and sister have both just this month taken delivery if a new TT convertible. The TT cabis have been off the Australian market for three years and have just been released again. The new roof mechanism is very impressive, and my brother compares the car favourably to his six month old 911. At last the DCT does an really fine job unlike earlier version like on the sad S4 I had a few years ago. Mind you the tacky Quattro badge on the TT dashboard spoils the style completely. Ahses to Ashes cemented the Quattro brand, but the TT is really an amazing motor car/ |
Richard Treacy
Grand Master Username: richard_treacy
Post Number: 3243 Registered: 4-2003
| Posted on Monday, 28 December, 2015 - 21:16: | |
PS pity Wild Oats retiring ignominiously from the Sydney-Hobart race with its Audi mainsail ripped. My brother can carry the Audi flag with number plates 0000.
|