1971, premium was 0.299 per gallon.
Summer 1973, gas had done to .419 for regular and .448 for premium
$ 0.179 for regular gas. West Hartford, CT, about 1963 during a “gas war.” Imagine filling up for 2 bucks or less!
-Skip
1971, premium was 0.299 per gallon.
Summer 1973, gas had done to .419 for regular and .448 for premium
Dad used to buy a gallon of white gas to use in the Colman camping stove. Worked fine and no one died.And even higher for the Amoco premium 'white gas' that we burned in our race bikes.
'65, 30 cents. 80 octane avgas 69 cents.I remember gas as low at $0.69. Circa 1996ish. How low do you remember and roughly what year?
Same here.Back in my day, no one wore headsets. You used a handheld microphone to talk with and there was a crackly speaker to listen over.
Don't forget to calculate that any vehicle back then that got 8 MPG was considered a gas miser...Do the math. He saved 2 cents per gallon. 10 gallons means he saved 20 cents.
20 cents was 0.873 gallons.
I don't think he burned that much in starting and crossing the street.
How many of us as kids thought we would drown if we got in the pool less than 30 minutes after eating? That doesn't even make a bit of sense.
If your doctor is actually doing that, you need to shop around.And for goodness sake's put on clean underwear before you go out in case you are in an accident.!!
I grew up believing the doctors would decide to treat a person or not depending on their underwear...
That's the upside to vacuum-tube radios. They have a working voltage of 100V, vs. 12v in your modern radio. Could get a LOT more volume fed to the earphones....Back in my day, no one wore headsets. You used a handheld microphone to talk with and there was a crackly speaker to listen over.
When I got back into flying after a long hiatus, the young Embry Riddle CFI checking me out asked where my headsets were. Huh? Headsets, what's that?
Heck, check out the early remotes. Had tuned bars in them like a doorbell (only ultrasonic). That's where the remote got the nickname "clicker," back then, when you pressed the "Channel Change" button, it actually clicked as it struck the bar,TVs with no remote.
Channeling our old Zenith console TV/radio/turntable.... and clicker!Heck, check out the early remotes. Had tuned bars in them like a doorbell (only ultrasonic). That's where the remote got the nickname "clicker," back then, when you pressed the "Channel Change" button, it actually clicked as it struck the bar,
Sometimes, you could get the channel to change by rattling your keys.....
Ron Wanttaja
yeah so I used to do this - but my parent's didn't quite understand the concept at the time. So they'd accept the charges, then yell at me for costing them money...Mom and dad would refuse the call so nobody had to pay for the call.
“Eat everything I put on your plate, because there are people starving in China.”
As a 7 year old, I did the right thing and said “In that case then I’ll stop eating and send them this food”. Mom was not impressed.
We had the rotary phone, but it was a party line. I think I was senior in high school before we got a private line. Was always fun to listen in on the neighbors phone callsNever. We had rotary phones and dealt with the operator for collect calls.
Good gawd I remember the sound of that thing in their kitchen...TV antenna rotators. Will never forget the sound of them click clacking to their position or earning the trust of Grandpa when he told you to run into the kitchen and change it.
What can you do with an old antenna rotator? - The Solid Signal Blog
Let's take a look at the options out there.blog.solidsignal.com
Hah. I was the TV antanae rotor. I’d go outside, twist the tower, go back in and check, rinse and repeat.Good gawd I remember the sound of that thing in their kitchen...
...with wasper nests.Outhouses
TVs with no remote.
Hah! Just a year ago I bought a brand new Jeep with hand cranked windows, didn't know that was even possible.I also remember learning about cars WITH window cranks instead of power windows. I thought those were wicked cool.