May you have a relaxing and enjoyable retirement Tour Director.
I arrived fairly late in the car industry, in 1994. I too have seen massive changes, but none like those coming in the next 10-15 years. The shift to (presumably) BEVs and autonomous cars will make the changes in the last 30 years seem like nothing.
I have just had a very Holden weekend, and it has made me think about what happened to General Motors-Holden's and where Holden is going.
I went to Adelaide for a wedding, but managed to spend a day researching archived Holden material, some on exports and some on the WB. I simply ran out of time to look at anything else, but what I saw was just incredible.
I then rented a car, was supposed to get a Camry but fitting into the theme of the weekend, was given a VFII SV6. I also had time to look at the (outside) of the Elizabeth plant for the first time. That was pretty sad; I thought about how the car I was driving was built right there, and my own car at home in Sydney was also put together just over the fence from where I was standing. We (Australia) had the ability to do that, and not just in the Adelaide suburb I visited.
Then I had the opportunity to look at a very special car: a 7/71 HQ Premier, bought new by my grandfather in April 1972. I first drove the car in 1973, and it stayed in our family until 2006. The present owner bought it for parts and luckily thought it to good to pull apart and restored it. I can't explain to you what it was like to drive that car again.
Aside from all the memories with that car, what really struck me was the HQ is not far off 50 years old. 50! No wonder parts are getting hard to find.
And yes, I'm with you on Commodore. GM has had a tin ear when it comes to understanding this market ever since Hanenberger left.
Edited by user Monday, 24 September 2018 1:22:41 PM(UTC)
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