How long do you think they will last? Cars as classics or vintage vehicles and… then what? Antiques? This week, I read that the Boeing B-52 Stratofortress, the US Air Force heavy bomber, will receive upgrades that will keep it in service until the 2050s, by which time it will be a century old. It first flew in 1952 and Boeing hasn’t made any since 1962.
The Douglas DC-3, still flying as a commercial aircraft with an airframe so unstressed and over-engineered that it’s practically immortal (it doesn’t fly pressurised), will beat it to that milestone.
And while you can’t paddle the world’s oldest boat (the Pesse canoe, which is about 10,000 years old and on display in the Netherlands), the USS Constitution, a three-masted, wooden-hulled warship, is still seaworthy at the age of 224.
Cars have the advantage over planes and boats in that if they break down, they won’t plummet or sink.
This does mean that they haven’t needed to be quite so thoroughly engineered in the first place, because most breakdowns are consequence free. But still, I’m quite hopeful that our descendants will find them sufficiently well built that they will be tooling around in old cars for centuries to come.
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I think we have more chance of the "vehicles" outgrowing the roads than people outgrowing the vehicles. "Vehicles" are steadily getting larger and have been since I've been reading up on them to the point where new models have to be introduced to fill the gap left by models up the range getting too large for their original market sector or the smaller vehicle occuoying the space their bigger brthers once had. But point taken all the same.
Stockpile Evoras. You can be 6 feet 8 and fit comfortably.
Weare much more likely to be too fat to get into old cars than too tall. Will be terrible for their power to weight ratio too.