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Yeah I noticed that too.Interesting. Right hand shifter in a RHD car.
Hadn't seen that before.
Not all that weird. The early, 1933, Rolls-Royce ("20-25") had a shift at your knees between the seat and A-pillar. [a friend has one]Yeah I noticed that too.
What like the gt40 !!!!????Interesting. Right hand shifter in a RHD car.
Hadn't seen that before.
Actually, very common for that period in prototype sports cars and F1.Interesting. Right hand shifter in a RHD car.
Hadn't seen that before.
working in an area of employment that is somewhat ummm 'tradition bound' it always amazes me how many decisions in so many areas of life are made 'because we've always done it that way.R-R / Bentley had the shifter on the driver's right all the way through the R-Type (1955). I believe the only reason it went away was that they stopped offering a manual gearbox.
It always puzzled me that RHD racecars had the shifter on the right. Because British drivers can adapt more easily than the Americans on the team??
Or more likely because during that era it would have been much easier to run the shift linkage around the side of the mid-mounted engine and gearbox than to try to go over, under, or through it. (OTOH that doesn't explain why mid-engine LHD cars didn't put the shifter on the left side...?)
I was just watching Emergency! the other night and asked that very question! I realize they're in L.A., but surely it rains there occasionally??(I recall a number of years ago someone wanting to get to the bottom of why Fire Trucks had open cabs for so much longer than any other truck and, yup..... you know the answer.)
I suspect that it even goes back to when the original horse and buggy days (Oh and always loved Emergancy!)I was just watching Emergency! the other night and asked that very question! I realize they're in L.A., but surely it rains there occasionally??
My best guess was that it allows people to admire the firefighters as they race to the scene. I'm not sure if that's a dumber idea than "institutional inertia".
I always assumed there was some level of actual training for them and the guy who played the captain of the station, as well as the 2-3 other speaking guys, if for no other reason than so during the action sequences they didn't injure themselves.Randolph Mantooth and Kevin Tighe both went through the actual paramedic training program for the show. Mantooth especially went on to be a very vocal promoter of paramedics after the show. (When asked if he could handle a real emergency, he said "I can call 911 with the best of them.")
The suspense is killing me. Also wondering if this is going to be moved to the Groaners thread..."What's the difference between a fire truck and a fire engine?"
One goes "Woooooooooooooooooooooo" and the other goes "Clang clang clang""What's the difference between a fire truck and a fire engine?"
A fire truck carries the ladders and a fire engine has the water pump. Sorry, no groaner.The suspense is killing me. Also wondering if this is going to be moved to the Groaners thread...