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This looks like the assembly line where Christine was made, or was "born" (or "possessed").
And before anyone jumps on me for this, I know that "Christine" was a 1958 Plymouth Fury. I'm just saying, if I were working on this assembly line, and the radio turned itself on and started playing George Thorogood's "Bad to the Bone," I'd really have to think twice about coming to work the next morning.
Sixty years later, the United States is still the world's number one producer of manufactured goods, if by a lesser margin.
I think the Bar Code comment may be my all-time favourite. I'm bookmarking this page for future amusement.
The sign at the top middle in the far back says "Drive cars in low gear at walk speed in this aisle." The sign that is more in the foreground says something like "Machine Repair Crib"
My dad had a '52 Olds. Geez what a tank! As much as I like these old beasts, I for one am sure glad they don't build 'em like they used to. Modern cars last longer, run better, handle better, and are far safer than anything ever built on a mass scale before. You think any of these old beasts would run 100,000 miles before even needing a tune-up? Not a chance. By 50,000 miles you were looking at a top end overhaul if not a complete engine rebuild. An accident in one of those things at 30 miles and hour would have left you in pretty rough shape, if not done for. Today, you'd likely walk away from the same thing.
It's really a shame.....Greed had taken This Great Company down.
[It was greed on the part of the unions, and a feckless management's capitulation, that did GM in. - Dave]
The paint is shinier and glossier than what you see on most cars nowadays. It's GM's "Fire-Leveled" acrylic lacquer. It was oven baked, causing the paint to re-flow. You can't even use lacquer anymore, because of the volatile solvents in it.
As for all the fluorescent tubes? They may have been in the middle of a mass re-lamping. Back in the '70s, an engineer at Vought Aerospace in Grand Prairie, Texas told me that before then (back in the '60s) they hired college students on summer break, who replaced every single fluorescent tube in the plant, whether they were working or not. That way the tubes were all of uniform brightness and color temperature.
Mr. Dave, Do you by chance have more of these GM Archives pics? After all, this is porn for vintage car lovers.
[I do have a few more but this is by far the most detailed. - Dave]
I'd love one of those cars
Why bother faking a picture like this?
I doubt anyone had the inclination to photoshop such a picture and make such a omission as including fluorescent bulb boxes with barcodes. It is entirely possible the boxes have a sort of shipping or coded label on them, it's not so far fetched.
Not to be a nay sayer but the boxes on the right that appear to be boxes of trim have bar codes on them.
FAKE!
No women.
Drool....I love them.
I bet the amount of metal they used to make cars on this assembly line is the equivalent of today's all car makers combined.
"You couldn't get a dent in one of those!"
Oh, yes you could! I remember something called a "bumper shop" back then, where people would take their cars to have the dents pounded out of the bumpers. They still never looked right, though.
You couldn't get a dent in one of those!
They sure don't make them like they used to.
there's a man with hat walked near the cardboard. he look like a ghost :)
Look at the second car back in the full-size view. I love how the guy's using a block of wood and a ball-peen hammer to adjust, or "finesse" the fender side molding. The headlight bezels haven't been installed yet either. Probably still have to aim the headlamps before the bezel goes on.
And hey...wait a minute! Where are all the robots?
what is that guy doing with the block of wood and a hammer???!!!
That is a large collection of new fluorescent tubes the workman in the background on the right has to install. I suppose they're cheaper by the acre.
Anybody else notice that the Olds in the foreground has "404" written on its windshield? That's kind of prophetic, since the Olds brand is now "File not found."
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