That's pretty cool, didn't know cars where shipped like that. What was that guy doing hanging through that car window?
Would you agree to debris acceptance? 2003 Vibe GTMods installed GM Top and Mid-Gate Spoilers, Cosmo CAI, TWM Short Shifter with Desert Eagle weighted shift knob, TWM Bronzoil Shifter Cable Bushings, Magnaflow Cat Back Exhaust, Unichip, Injen Billet Aluminum Engine/Sparkplug covers and oil cap, Optima RedTop Battery, Lineage Ground Wire KitAwaiting install: Energy Suspension Motor Mounts, DC Sports Header
Quote, originally posted by Herb »What was that guy doing hanging through that car window?putting the car on the ramp! he hangs out the window to get a visual of where the wheel needs to stop.
Vibe is gone and will be missed as I've gone country style
When I was a young lad my boyscout troop went to the Vega assembly plant in Lordstown Ohio. We watched the Vegas being loaded in the train cars. The Vegas were produced with special batteries that kept them from leaking when the cars were turned up on their nose. I miss my '73 Vega GT.
"Don't look to the government to solve your problems, the government is the problem." Ronald Reagan"They who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety, deserve neither liberty nor safety." Ben Franklin.
Yep, when the Vega came out, GM was pretty proud of how they had designed to to be shipped like that! I had forgotten that little piece of automotive history! Thanks for posting it up.My Dad bought one, it really was a poor attempt at an economy car! Huge center tunnel, poor performance and really not all the dependable. It was an early death knell for GM on their long long long slide to failure!Sad.Dave
Quote, originally posted by djkeev » it really was a poor attempt at an economy car! Huge center tunnel, poor performance and really not all the dependable.kind of like ALL the "economy" cars of the 70's