The Difference Between The Soviet and American Car Cultures

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 30 вер 2024
  • A short review of the different Soviet-made cars available for sale in the USSR. How expensive were Soviet cars? The difference between Soviet and American car cultures.
    My book about arriving in America in 1995 is available on Amazon:
    www.amazon.com...
    My site: www.sputnikoff...
    "Ushanka Show" is a collection of stories about life in the USSR.
    SOVIET EDUCATION: • SOVIET EDUCATION
    SOVIET LEADERS: • SOVIET LEADERS
    CHERNOBYL STORIES: • Chernobyl's Dirty Litt...
    SOVIET AUTOMOBILES: • Chernobyl's Dirty Litt...
    SOVIET MUSIC: • Soviet-Era Music and P...
    SOVIET MONEY: • SOVIET MONEY
    SOVIET HUMOR: • Video
    My FB: / sergei.sputnikoff.1
    Twitter: / ushankashow
    Instagram: / ushanka_show
    You can support this project here: / sputnikoff with monthly donations
    Support for this channel via PAYPAL: paypal.me/ushankashow

КОМЕНТАРІ • 498

  • @UshankaShow
    @UshankaShow  4 роки тому +28

    Hello, comrades!
    My name is Sergei. I was born in the USSR in 1971. Since 1999 I have lived in the USA.
    Ushanka Show channel was created to share stories as well as my own memories of everyday life in the USSR.
    My book about arriving in America in 1995 is available on Amazon:
    www.amazon.com/dp/B08DJ7RNTC
    My site: www.sputnikoff.com/
    You can support this project here: www.patreon.com/sputnikoff with monthly donations
    Support for this channel via PAYPAL: paypal.me/ushankashow
    Ushanka Show merchandise:
    teespring.com/stores/ushanka-show-shop
    If you are curious to try some of the Soviet-era candy and other foodstuffs, please use the link below.
    www.russiantable.com/imported-russian-chocolate-mishka-kosolapy__146-14.html?tracking=5a6933a9095f9
    My FB: facebook.com/sergey.sputnikoff
    Twitter: twitter.com/ushankashow
    Instagram: instagram.com/ushanka_show/
    Reddit: www.reddit.com/r/The_Ushanka_Show/

    • @ktmcandog
      @ktmcandog Рік тому

      Yes I started watching your channel before covid and enjoy it very much. I can not imagine what you and your family have gone through since the start of the Special Russo/Nazi terrorist operation on Ukraine. Hope alls well as can be. Slava Ukrania!

  • @laowhy86
    @laowhy86 6 років тому +165

    road head hahaha, nice

    • @KSmithwick1989
      @KSmithwick1989 6 років тому +11

      Surprised to see you posting here. Keep up the good work.

    • @commodoresixfour7478
      @commodoresixfour7478 5 років тому +7

      Nice to see you hear also!

    • @Rangernewb5550
      @Rangernewb5550 5 років тому +7

      Last person I expected to find here

    • @NickThePilotUSA
      @NickThePilotUSA 5 років тому +4

      Also last person I expected to see here lol

    • @1582881
      @1582881 5 років тому +4

      Holy cow, c-milk is a fan!

  • @glennwheeler984
    @glennwheeler984 6 років тому +86

    I'm Canadian, but I learned to drive on my father's imported Lada (you couldn't stop that thing in the snow and the engine ran great, but it handled like a tank and the body rusted out)... later on I joined the Army and was in Germany when the wall came down - I bought a Trabant (my first car!) off an East German who came to the West (US$70 - I thought it was a good deal)... I drove it around for a weekend and ended up getting stuck in the mud just off a forest road somewhere between Amberg and Hohenfels. I left the key in the ignition if you're interested.

    • @mrisvizz
      @mrisvizz Рік тому +5

      I think it's still there. I know a guy from weiden was trying to get it out. Drunk pfc from vilsek slept in there ones. i heard some talks in grafenweiher to just leave it there as a local relic😂😂

    • @msamour
      @msamour Рік тому

      I had a similar story, except it was in the 80's and early 90's. My dad started out with a 1988 Signet, then he bought a 1988 Niva. Then a 1996 Samara, then a 1996 Niva Cossack. I learned to drive the 1988 Niva, and we used to off road, and plow the driveway. It bears saying the plow was a 60" plow for a 3/4 Sierra truck My dad got rid of in the early 90's. We had to put 300 lbs of sand bags in the trunk to balance it out. Over time the cars rusted went to the wreckers. The 1996 Cossack git crushed in a garage collapse accident in 2006, and the 88 Niva finally gave up the ghost in 2008. My dad sold the engine to a guy that put it in a dune buggy. He still drives it to this day. We had a crank to start the 88 Niva. Best feature ever! I miss that little SUV.

    • @SonOfTheDawn515
      @SonOfTheDawn515 Рік тому

      ​@@mrisvizzGrafenwoehr*

  • @Larkinchance
    @Larkinchance 5 років тому +42

    The CCCP was like a country run by the Department Motor Vehicles

    • @Bialy_1
      @Bialy_1 5 років тому +7

      More like country run by ex bank robers...

    • @MalcolmBrenner
      @MalcolmBrenner 4 роки тому +5

      Yes, with that sloth from "Zootopia" behind the counter...

    • @jurisprudens
      @jurisprudens 3 роки тому

      @@Bialy_1 Which was true, though. ;)

  • @IsraelLuisGeerRivera-ff4cg
    @IsraelLuisGeerRivera-ff4cg 5 років тому +40

    If you've seen Russian cam videos you know why the Soviets were so stingy on giving out cars.

    • @ultraloyalservant2felineov41
      @ultraloyalservant2felineov41 5 років тому +2

      Actually, after Soviet Union collapsed, immigrants moved to USA & learned to sue insurances. That's why cameras are required in all cars now to prevent fraudulent lawsuits. Capitalism lol😹

    • @gordonlumbert9861
      @gordonlumbert9861 5 років тому +1

      The USA is famous world wide for lawsuits.

    • @ultraloyalservant2felineov41
      @ultraloyalservant2felineov41 5 років тому

      There's a lot of insurance fraud and fraudulent lawsuits. My insurance payments went up because there are many lawsuits in my County.
      I don't believe in these schemes. It brings bad luck and negative Karma

  • @82dorrin
    @82dorrin 5 років тому +45

    Russian car culture in Soviet Era: "Wow. That person has a car. They must be pretty damn important. I wish *I* had a car..."
    Russian car culture today: "I have a car. Whoop-dee-doo! Where the f*^k do I park the damn thing???"

    • @michaelsquires6255
      @michaelsquires6255 5 років тому +9

      Onyx1916 If you've ever seen car cam footage of them driving parking is the least of their problems.

    • @ultraloyalservant2felineov41
      @ultraloyalservant2felineov41 5 років тому +3

      Most Russian car dealers buy their cars in United States and send them back to the Russian dealerships for their wealthy customers. Most popular cars are German and Japanese luxury cars

    • @anishkumbhar6205
      @anishkumbhar6205 4 роки тому +1

      @@ultraloyalservant2felineov41 before the fall of Soviet Union Same thing was happening in India.... not only cars but also for watches which are produced by HMT(Hindustan machine Tools which was government company which produce tractors and watches in back those days )people get their watches within 2 to 5 years after placing the orders..

    • @MalcolmBrenner
      @MalcolmBrenner 4 роки тому +1

      Perhaps it is time for the vertically-parked car, that settles upright on it's back bumper, nose pointed skyward? Surely, if Elon Musk can invent spaceships that land on their legs, Detroit can invent the vertically-parked car (VPC) and sell the idea to the Russian car manufacturers for big rubles? Oh wait. There's a fly in the ointment. We can only make a profit for Detroit if we sell plans for currency that is WORTH SOMETHING on the international market! And rubles, as most everybody will tell you, don't qualify. Damn. Well, the engineering was good, but the economics looked bad. You will just have to blow down some of those dreary, concrete Soviet apartment buildings and put up some nice, modern, multi-level car parks in their place. Problem solved!

    • @jakekaywell5972
      @jakekaywell5972 3 роки тому

      @@MalcolmBrenner Yeah no. The Russian ruble has been an internationally-recognized currency since the fall of the Union and those Khrushchovka apartment buildings were both a good idea and built to last. Stow your bias elsewhere.

  • @jeffking4176
    @jeffking4176 7 років тому +53

    I saw a Chaika in St.Louis when I was a teen. Being a car nut since the beginning , I was the only one of our group who knew what it was. (As we approached two of us were debating . One said Cadillac , the other, a Lincoln. I told them it was Russian.--- They thought I bumped my head... Until we saw the Russian writing on it.
    Ever since, I've had a fascination with "Iron Curtain" cars.
    I find this very interesting . Thanks!🙂👍

  • @panzerfaust5046
    @panzerfaust5046 7 років тому +51

    "what was it? Road rash?"
    Oh god don't ever experience that.

  • @TheMoni700
    @TheMoni700 7 років тому +55

    LAUGHED AT THE ROAD HEAD PART HAHA!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

    • @ethanthereenactorguy4829
      @ethanthereenactorguy4829 5 років тому +3

      I am American, and have no idea what the fuck road head is!

    • @米空軍パイロット
      @米空軍パイロット 5 років тому +1

      @@ethanthereenactorguy4829 Head is a blow job. Road head is head while driving.

    • @varaneckas1994
      @varaneckas1994 5 років тому +1

      How many % of guys experience road head in USA?

    • @OhPhuckYou
      @OhPhuckYou 5 років тому +1

      @@ethanthereenactorguy4829 How? That's so common over here too.

    • @Whammytap
      @Whammytap 4 роки тому +1

      I've lived in the same state in America for 36 years and I am *still* learning English slang, figures of speech, and sexual metaphors. We are each sheltered in our own way. ;)

  • @MetaSynForYourSoul
    @MetaSynForYourSoul 5 років тому +17

    😂😂I'm pretty sure the wife will be even more mad if you figure out what "Road Head" is without her! 😂😂

    • @Dr_Will_Tarr
      @Dr_Will_Tarr 3 роки тому +1

      I brought it up with my American Wife also... frozen hotdogs in the sink now for three days..SAD.

  • @shelby3822
    @shelby3822 6 років тому +21

    road head + manual transmission = ultimate American culture. I thought you were gonna say road rage for a minute! Only heard of Lada because of Top Gear/Grand Tour.

  • @ultraloyalservant2felineov41
    @ultraloyalservant2felineov41 5 років тому +14

    When I was only 3 or 4 years old, while my grandmother was babysitting me, I snuck out, took the "traleybus" bus to where my father worked!
    In USA, no bus driver would ever let a little kid on the bus alone! LOL of course I took a few years off my grandmother's life, but was complimented for being able 2 use the bus successfully all by myself!

    • @yakacm
      @yakacm Рік тому +1

      When I was 6 or 7 years old, I got separated from my mother while out Christmas shopping in Liverpool city centre. I was a bit upset for 10 minutes or so, then decided to walk home, as I didn't know what bus to take, as we always drove to town. I walked the 5 or 6 miles home on my own, lol.

  • @sarjim4381
    @sarjim4381 7 років тому +20

    We can't forget about the Zil/ZiS line of classic Soviet limousines. The first models were directly reversed engineered from the 1940 Packard line because Stalin though that Packard's (he had three of them) were the best engineered cars in the world. He wanted the first truer Soviet limo to show the world they could build a Packard, and build they did. Even thoough the line stopped taking design and engineering features from the Packard bu 1960, they continued to lean on American car designs like the 60's Cadillac Fleetwoods and Mercuries. By 1980, big American cars were passe, so ZiL started to copy the look and engineering of the Mercedes. Due to the low production numbers and revocation of state subsidies in 1990, the ZiL started to cost more than a "real" Mercedes. It was the beginning of the end for ZiL. Just like Packard, they have now gone out of business, and the great era of Soviet built limos is gone forever.

  • @worldofjerrytravis393
    @worldofjerrytravis393 5 років тому +20

    Answer to your Question: LADA.

    • @steve1978ger
      @steve1978ger 5 років тому +3

      I owned a LADA as a student in Germany, 2003-ish. I rather liked it. Not a great car, but not terrible either, and reasonably priced. I've had worse (I'm looking at you Renault). Great heater. Sometimes knobs and buttons fell off, I glued them back in place. Didn't like the mid summer heat though, the radiator had a tendency to boil over.

    • @worldofjerrytravis393
      @worldofjerrytravis393 5 років тому +4

      @@steve1978ger I had a lady friend who owned a white LADA station wagon (Tourer) here in New Zealand in 1993. Our Country began importing them from Russia in the late 1980's. I remember the TV advert quite well - The Salesman raps his knuckles on the bodywork proclaiming 'Built Like a Russian Tank!'. No power steering, a normal feature back then but the car was indeed solid and I kind of liked it too. I wouldn't mind finding a tidy example now to restore, they're a rarity to see on our roads nowadays. Cheers from NZ.

    • @MalcolmBrenner
      @MalcolmBrenner 4 роки тому +2

      They don't exactly spring off your lips, do they, like Ford, Chevy and (Fiat-)Chrysler? But I did manage to think of LADA, perhaps because of some confusing link to Fiat? Like they stole the design or something?

  • @daylightbigboy
    @daylightbigboy 5 років тому +8

    Hey Uskanka Show, I have a video request. What were some popular hobbies in the Soviet Union? In the United States there were thousands of companies focused towards different hobbies such as model building, model trains, slot cars, model airplanes, etc all trying to make a profit but I would imagine in the USSR the government would have to basically invent all the hobbies as they owned every company.

  • @pamelajaye
    @pamelajaye Рік тому +3

    My family had a car but nobody carried me into the house that I can recall. They wake you up and tell her to go in the house after leaving uncle's house at 2:00 in the morning and driving for 8 hours. We never had a new car except once. It was a Volkswagen and the father had to go to Canada to get it. I did not want to get on a plane. I think I was six. So he went by himself. My mother said it was the worst car we had. I don't know. My father knew how to fix all the cars we had. And last one that we had was a valiant. And it lasted forever until the bottom rotted out I think. Everybody said they lasted forever. My husband had a horrible car. To keep it running cost for $4,000 and is only worth $400. And finally the transmission gave out and we cheered as they towed it away and then we bought a valiant. Could have been a better one.
    I did not have a car of my own until I was 40 years old. I still couldn't afford to buy one but at least I could afford to pay for the insurance. Thankfully I did not have to pay to park it. Well actually, by then, my landlady made me pay for the garage. She never made my husband pay for the garage. But then again she never raised the rent for 13 years so I can't complain. It was a really inexpensive apartment and it was heated. So extra $35 I can't remember if it was $35 a week or $35 a month. It's been 20 years now. It wasn't that bad. Probably if it was $35 a week it would have been Not so great. The budget was tight. Always. Almost always. But I lived on the North shore of Boston and the buses didn't go everywhere that I needed to go in order to get a job. So 5 months after my 40th birthday I finally got a car.
    I almost didn't learn how to drive. My mother never learned how to drive. My father used to be a driving teacher but he was also good at yelling. So someone else taught me how to drive when I was 21.

  • @majamaja1509
    @majamaja1509 5 років тому +7

    You can still see some Ladas in the streets of Bosnia, even today. Their owners are usually old people who take good care of them ☺

  • @milankoj
    @milankoj 5 років тому +7

    :) I grew up in Hungary in the 80s, and still had these cars back then.
    My favourite scenes in (Hungarian) films / TV shows made in the 70-80s are the car chases with them.
    Yes, they are freakin' hilarious :D

  • @rossbryan6102
    @rossbryan6102 5 років тому +2

    ENJOYING YOUR VIDEOS!
    I AM GUESSING IN THE EARLIER AUTOMOTIVE DAYS THAT THERE WERE MANY TRUCKS BUILT IN THE SOVIET UNION TO MEET MILITARY, AGRICULTURAL, AND INDUSTRIAL NEEDS, ALONG WITH BUSSES FOR PUBLIC TRANSPORT!
    WAS THERE ANY SORT OF A TRUCK FAN CULTURE AMONG PEOPLE WHO HAD NO CAR BUT DID LIKE TO FOLLOW THE WORLD OF TRUCKS?
    HERE IN THE USA WE HAVE 2 SEPARATE CULTURES, ONE FOR AUTOMOBILES AND ANOTHER FOR TRUCKS, ESPECIALLY THE
    LARGE OVER THE ROAD TRUCKS!
    A GOOD WAY TO LEARN OF THE TRUCK CULTURE IS TO GOOGLE UP THE ATHS (AMERICAN TRUCK
    HISTORICAL SOCIETY) BASED IN
    KANSAS CITY MISSOURI!
    THIS IS A SOURCE OF EARLY TRUCK HISTORY, AND THE STORIES OF THE PEOPLE OF TRUCKING AS WELL!
    KEEP THEM ROLLING BROTHERS!
    👍👍

  • @rns011
    @rns011 7 років тому +10

    The Soviets has and has incredible public transport always. They didn't need cars. If they needed ""road head" , they bought out the whole coupe on the Red Arrow Moscow-St. Pete.

  • @knutholt3486
    @knutholt3486 6 років тому +10

    In Norway Lada was very popular , because they were cheap, but , yet solid and trustful. Some people that could afford two cars, could have a Mercedes or BMW for finer and sporty use and a Lada for work and bumpy roads.

    • @NeblogaiLT
      @NeblogaiLT 5 років тому +1

      Lada was a FIAT design that IIRC won car of the year in Europe when it was presented. Factory to build them was imported to USSR. It was also chosen because Italy was ~red at the time, but also because it was a reliable design for bad roads. So no wonder it was a decent car at that time.

    • @joeleonard9965
      @joeleonard9965 Рік тому

      It's funny I use a Honda for the daily grind and my BMW for fun driving. A two car solution is truly the way to go if you can afford it.

  • @tomservo5347
    @tomservo5347 6 років тому +2

    It used to be if you had any mechanical skill you could turn a wrench on your American car and keep it going yourself. Pretty much all companies today have figured that by using electronics with limited life (and patented software that runs it) they can guarantee future parts/service sales. What once used to be done mechanically and was quite robust and fail resistant is now done electronically and will fail. Add to this paying the union workers high wages for unskilled labor and the cost of the vehicle has risen exponentially within the last 30 years, yet the car has become more 'disposable'. Even farm machinery companies have resorted to this and many farmers have looked to Chinese/Indian tractors that have a minimum of electronics and will still be running in 50 years.

  • @Md2802
    @Md2802 5 років тому +16

    Thank you for sharing your memories with us. A lot of what you read about the Soviet Union concerns big events, cultural movements, or geopolitics - so it's fascinating to hear about the idiosyncrasies of every-day life for the average person. And I love the nostalgic way you describe everything. It paints a very vivid picture of how you experienced that world :)

  • @Otokichi786
    @Otokichi786 5 років тому +5

    "Russian car names?" Volga, Zhiguli, Zil and Lada come to mind. With an effective public/mass transit system, who needs an automobile? (Especially in large cities.) As for "car culture," it's not a big deal; you have more interesting memories from your youth.

  • @brianlaeser
    @brianlaeser 6 років тому +13

    I'm a Canadian, living in greater Vancouver BC, & I immediately remembered the Lada Niva which was sold during the 1980s' & '90s in Canada (but oddly, not in the US).

    • @brentrayner65
      @brentrayner65 5 років тому +1

      My local ski hill on Vancouver Island had a fleet of Niva's for their company vehicles. Was neat to see

    • @Tonyx.yt.
      @Tonyx.yt. 4 роки тому +1

      of course was not sold in the US.
      believe or not but lada niva still sold in the 2020 in western europe too

    • @ljones121
      @ljones121 3 роки тому

      Ladas for some reason, have never been able to meet the US DOT safety requirements for importation into the United States, so there's effectively an unofficial ban on Ladas here. I know this because I've always wanted a Lada SUV

    • @lilcam-qk9mp
      @lilcam-qk9mp 2 роки тому

      I remember them selling some UAZ trucks and vans here in the U.S

  • @marguskiis7711
    @marguskiis7711 7 років тому +37

    Cmoon, Lada was world-famous and massively exported. Ladas were exported even up to 2000s. Niva is still a legend.
    Moskvitch was exported as Elite and ZAZ was exported as Yalta or Eliette. Moskvitch 408 and 412 were very advanced ones in 1960s but they were not developed much later so they became funny anachronisms during the years.

    • @dirkbonesteel
      @dirkbonesteel 5 років тому +1

      Exported to other Soviet countries doesn't really count. Saw a guy from Finland say good things about Lada, but no one ever figured out why

    • @Bialy_1
      @Bialy_1 5 років тому +2

      @@dirkbonesteel He was a soviet spy that's why... :P And Lada was nothing more than obsolete Fiat 125... In Poland it was produced as Fiat 125p.

    • @dirkbonesteel
      @dirkbonesteel 5 років тому

      @@Bialy_1 Serious question. My understanding is that while copied from the Fiat a goodish reliable cheap car, but nothing amazing. The Soviet copies were mostly downgraded hard to get but inferior. Is that true or do I have to much Trabant on the brain? There aren't any to look at in 3-D over here, just a few old Fiats.

    • @dcan911
      @dcan911 5 років тому +2

      @@dirkbonesteel Lada's were expoted outside the USSR. My dad had 2 of things in the UK in the 80s/90s. Contrary to most cars, they would be really eager to start on freezing cold mornings, but would sometimes be a bit reluctant when it was even modestly warm out.

    • @dirkbonesteel
      @dirkbonesteel 5 років тому

      @@dcan911 Were they cheap like the Yugo? I know Volga tried to sell cars in Canada but were very basic and cost as much as a Cadillac. Didn't go well. As long as they are cheap I get it

  • @wiilkasanadka10
    @wiilkasanadka10 7 років тому +11

    I have watched quiet a few videos of yours and they are very interesting.

  • @ericgoingoverseas5064
    @ericgoingoverseas5064 5 років тому +22

    Who ever your friend was who told you about " Road Head" knew your situation and took advantage of it.😉
    My great grandfather immigrated from Russia and was told about " A black cat with a white stripe" his friend wanted.
    One Sunday morning on the way to church he saw one. The man bought him a new Sunday suit over that.
    No skunks in Russia I guess.😉

  • @tarstarkusz
    @tarstarkusz 6 років тому +2

    7:19 There are buses like this right now in America. They are very common in my city.

  • @MalcolmBrenner
    @MalcolmBrenner 4 роки тому +3

    Greetings, Comrade Sputnikoff! Since I am a writer of weird literature, I was both blindsided and delighted when an unexpected fan in Nikel told me he'd spent a year translating one of my books into Russian! He liked it so much, he wanted his family and friends to read it. Since I am also a photographer, I have always wondered about Soviet color films and photography and cameras. My father, for instance, had a Zorki copy of an old Leica III that he bought in the Pentagon camera store! I always thought if that camera could talk, it would have tales to tell! And making good color film consistently is quite difficult. Only a few companies in the Western world could do it right, Kodak, Fuji and Agfa (sort of; one stock photographer I knew referred to Agfa as "Snotchrome"). Did the Soviets ever manufacture their own color film, or were they happy to let their lap dog East German chemists do it for them? Finally, the famous Kiev Arsenal cameras, including the Hassleblad knock-off which, when you wound the film to the next exposure, sounded like walnuts being crushed. Nevertheless I want one, because the lenses are so good and so cheap! Have a wonderful day, and remember Fearless Leader in your prayers!

  • @lancelessard2491
    @lancelessard2491 5 років тому +2

    I remember meeting a Soviet woman who came to visit our Russian class and we got to ask her questions, one of which was, "Do you have a driver's license?" I thought her answer was strange and funny. She said, "I have a son. I can't just go driving." Apparently, she thought that driving was an indulgent luxury that only people with lots of free time should be doing. Responsible people don't have time for driving. We got a good laugh out of that, but it was just because of the difference in life style between Soviet people and the West, not that she was any different than most people in her country.

  • @LisaNH934
    @LisaNH934 Рік тому +1

    Lol 😂😂😂 "road-head" omg 😂😂
    No No No 😉😂😜 I cannot stop laughing!!!! (You need to hug & apologize to your wife!!!) 😂😂😂

  • @viktorivanov117
    @viktorivanov117 5 років тому +4

    You can build your own car in 9 years

    • @danubiosalas4231
      @danubiosalas4231 5 років тому

      Viktor Ivanov not in Russia

    • @justaguy9224
      @justaguy9224 4 роки тому

      Danubio Salas I heard about a guy in Belarus, that in the Soviet times he wanted to get a Zhiguli, but he was dissatisfied with the long waiting time, so he built his car at his home before he got his Zhiguli.

  • @HC-cb4yp
    @HC-cb4yp 6 років тому +30

    In Russia, car owns you!

    • @MalcolmBrenner
      @MalcolmBrenner 4 роки тому +1

      No, comrade, in Russia, car DRIVES you! Bank owns car.

  • @h6502
    @h6502 Рік тому +1

    here in Iceland if seemed that every other farmer had the UAZ-452 and/or a Lada Niva. you could see other soviet cars if you paid attention, off road capable cars were always very popular. lada 1200 and 1500 were popular as well.
    it was kind of left-right political.
    you could see what people voted by watching what car they drove.
    someone in a Land-Rover was probably not going to vote for the social democrats.

  • @penskepc2374
    @penskepc2374 Рік тому +1

    American cars were at their peak in the 60s. Muscle cars reigned while the Corvette was the fastest production car on earth and Cadillac and Lincoln built the most luxurious and most expensive cars on earth, but after the gas crisis Detroit realized they could get away with selling mostly crap and flourish simply off the US market size. It also seems that when a newer flashier industry comes out(in this case computer tech) Americas best and brightest instantly move on to the next thing.

  • @deadmanriding1118
    @deadmanriding1118 Рік тому +1

    Difference was in America you had to have a nice car 🚗💃 to get the girls attention, while in Soviet Union you just had to have a car🚜🏃‍♀️

  • @KIEV7385
    @KIEV7385 7 років тому +2

    Had a few experiences with Cars in Soviet Union....As you know it was quite common to have private cars stop and offer you a ride for a fee if they were going your direction or even if they were not....I guessed a lot of car drivers made money on the side by acting like Taxi's ....I once was in Kiev in the Maychenko District and had to return to the Dnipro Hotel and it was very late like 2am My friends took me outside and as we were deciding what to do a car pulled up and asked if we needed a ride....I told the driver I needed to go to the Hotel and he waved me in...as we drove off I realized this guy was not Sober...within minutes he was offering me a drink from his Bottle...Fortunately there was little traffic and we got to the Hotel he even wanted to drink in front of the Hotel .... I also had one in Moscow that actually stopped beside a Fuel Truck on the side of the road and purchased petrol from the driver....Most of the time the rides were good but now that I look back there could have been some dangerous moments ....

  • @slotenmakerdenhaag
    @slotenmakerdenhaag 5 років тому +4

    Really appreciate these talks, interesting because we lived in Czechoslovakia, near enough to catch the scent of Soviet Union. Very interesting though I miss some reflections on the extreme materialism that emerged from this communist culture

  • @John_Longbow
    @John_Longbow 5 років тому +3

    A Skoda Estelle drove me all the way to second base back in the 80's. Thank you very much Czech Republic, it's still fondly appreciated.

    • @Bialy_1
      @Bialy_1 5 років тому +1

      In the 80's was no Czech Republic... :P

    • @John_Longbow
      @John_Longbow 5 років тому

      @@Bialy_1 At the time geography was not among my main objectives, at least this thank you are sincere even if it came a few decades too late.

  • @reddevilparatrooper
    @reddevilparatrooper 4 роки тому +3

    Very shocking from your conversation here in your channel. When I was 16 years old in 1984 during high school I bought my first car for $200.00. It was a 1968 Dodge Dart. I started working selling newspapers after school in 1980 when I was 12 years old for $4.00 a day. If I didn't spend any of it, it would have been $5,760.00 by 1984. By early 1984 I had total saved up after spending money during the summers was $2,500.00. I learned how to drive by paying and getting driving lessons on the weekends for $25.00 at the YMCA. I got pretty good and got my learners permit for 2 months, did my driving exam and road test that year. I got to drive my 68 Dodge Dart to high school till my graduation in 1986. My parents took my car when I joined the US Army that summer and they gave it to my youngest sister. When I was in the Army I was impressed by how much they paid me. I was getting paid $744.69 as a Private First Class before taxes. Even US Army Privates were able to buy used cars to drive around. My first duty station was Germany. We never needed cars in Europe because of the German public transportation system. For 2 years I saved my money. Majority of the guys who went back to the states and had some time left in service bought cars or trucks when they came back. Some guys bought brand new ones too.

  • @corsa701
    @corsa701 4 роки тому +1

    Brands of Soviet Cars? At least 4. But im from east Germany, so its maybe cheating.

  • @johnblackstone5261
    @johnblackstone5261 5 років тому +4

    1 Brand of Soviet Car before watching video:
    Lada
    AutoVAZ
    Moskovitch
    GAZ
    Did I get any right?

  • @mladjireferent9625
    @mladjireferent9625 5 років тому +3

    My grandpa still drives his baby blue Trabant. Pretty sure he threatened the guy that told him it's impossible for it to pass the technical. I'm from Serbia.

  • @TheAngelobarker
    @TheAngelobarker 5 років тому +4

    It is weird how ussr and Italy had such a close relationship despite everything. The fascist italians built many state of the art war ships machinery etc for russia despite being ideologically opposed and went to war with them soon after and they were part of nato yet sold lada fiat design.

    • @Bialy_1
      @Bialy_1 5 років тому +1

      Fiat got factory in Poland before the WW2 and communistic hostile takeover. "Lada" was in USSR in Poland it was just Fiat 125p...

    • @Bialy_1
      @Bialy_1 5 років тому +1

      " being ideologically opposed " like for example Italian Social Republic (1943 - 1945)?:P

    • @TheAngelobarker
      @TheAngelobarker 5 років тому

      @@Bialy_1 they sold the soviets the kiev class the 7u etc even when Mussolini had control in the 30s

  • @SiriusXAim
    @SiriusXAim 6 років тому +2

    The French had the same waiting list thing with their 2CV in the 60's. It was designed to be a people's car for farmers to get around. Production in the 50's was archaic, so you'd be put on a waiting list. So used 2CV's would cost more than new 2CV's.

  • @joevogelberger9922
    @joevogelberger9922 5 років тому +3

    I love old Soviet cars!
    Overbuilt and underpowered!
    That ZAZ 968 is a cool little machine.
    I also like the style of the Moskvich 402 and the 412 with the removeable portable multi band radio.

  • @laszloferenczi
    @laszloferenczi 6 років тому +4

    At 7:17 that is an Ikarus 280. This type of buses were made in Hungary. (At that time it was Hungarian People's Republic)

    • @SquishyZoran
      @SquishyZoran 5 років тому +1

      Also rather interesting but Crown Coach corp partnered with them to sell a version based off of this.

    • @frankdenardo8684
      @frankdenardo8684 Рік тому

      The Ikarus bus that is built in Hungary 🇭🇺 is a common sight in Eastern European cities.

  • @strategicconsensus
    @strategicconsensus 6 років тому +2

    I have a little post-soviet footnote to this video. In the early nineties, say '93-'95, Russian sailors would do brisk business in old Soviet cars in Iceland. Russian fishing ships would dock in Reykjavik (where I lived) and elsewhere to resupply and drop off fish. And the sailors would then go about town and find eastern block cars to buy, because there had been plenty of Ladas (1200, 1300, Sport) sold in Iceland, even the occasional UAZ-452. The sailors didn't have much hard currency, but plenty of vodka and cigarettes to make up for it. And the Ladas didn't sell for much locally anyway. The story that I was told was that cars and in particular spare parts were hard to come by in russia in those early post-soviet years and so some of the cars would be chopped up for parts once at sea and the chassis dumped overboard. My friends mom got rid of her old Lada that way :)

  • @Flying_Lexus
    @Flying_Lexus 5 років тому +1

    That's rather strange that your family never owned a car. I was born in USSR and grew up in post USSR Russia and we had a car even in the 80s, before the USSR collapsed.

    • @frankdenardo8684
      @frankdenardo8684 Рік тому

      To buy a car in Eastern Europe. They put you on a waiting list, which can be up to ten years to get. Cars are strictly for the lucky ones.

  • @conantdog
    @conantdog 5 років тому +2

    Great videos your making 👍 great continuity , great to see who you are in this video 👍

  • @sotogremble953
    @sotogremble953 5 років тому +3

    I think those old Soviet cars are pretty cool and id like to have one of every model.

  • @pdsnpsnldlqnop3330
    @pdsnpsnldlqnop3330 2 роки тому +1

    As a cyclist I thought the roads of the former Eastern Europe were amazing. Your outlook on this is different if you are car dependent. Car dependency is like alcoholism, it is dependency.
    I have also lived in a teetotal town. There is (or was) part of Plymouth in the UK where there are no pubs. I really liked it there, but I don't drink. My housemates did drink and they hated it there!
    Each to their own, however, car dependency - like alcohol dependency - puts a cost on society and affects others. When the archaeologists wonder what hapened to us they will find these peculiar tin boxes and wonder why we crawled into them to kill everything including ourselves with them.

  • @kennedymcgovern5413
    @kennedymcgovern5413 5 років тому +1

    It takes an average of 10 years to get a car in the Soviet Union. 1 out of 7 families owned automobiles. You have to go through a major process and put the money out in advance. So this man did this and the dealer said "okay in 10 years come get your car."
    "Morning or afternoon?" The man replied. "Well what difference does it make?" Said the dealer.
    Well, said the man, the plumber is coming in the morning."

  • @joedeats
    @joedeats 6 років тому +1

    Volga and Lada came to mind. Interestingly the Lada was based on a Fiat.

  • @jamallabarge2665
    @jamallabarge2665 4 роки тому +1

    "Road Head" is a vulgar term, Sergei. Sorry that you got caught in this one, man.

  • @RetroGUY77
    @RetroGUY77 7 років тому +4

    So I went to a classic car in the UK show yesterday and there was a Moskvitch 1500 and a ZAZ Tavria hatchback. Never seen either before but they were really cool

    • @RetroGUY77
      @RetroGUY77 7 років тому +1

      USHANKA SHOW Certainly did! Do you want me to send them to you?

    • @RetroGUY77
      @RetroGUY77 7 років тому +2

      USHANKA SHOW Great. Where do I email them too

  • @ktmcandog
    @ktmcandog 5 років тому +2

    Here in Canada Ladas where sold in the 70s and 80s. They where basically considered junk with poor reliability but the Lada Niva 4X4 was a different story in they where basically reliable and tough as a T72 tank. I had a friend that had a Niva and was over six foot tall and 300 lbs and looked like a Russian bear driving it. Some still talk about them more then thirty years after they disappeared and the odd one can still be found on a farm or for use in a hunting camp bush . In the late 80s I spotted and stopped at a the last Lada dealership in Toronto as they had a new Lada on display on a ramp in front of the dealership and as a mechanic I was curious and walked under it to inspect the chassis and couldn't believe the condition as all the rubber bushings in the suspension where rotten and split like it was 10 years old. I guess the quality was slipping as the end of the Soviet Union had occurred. Awesome channel ---KTMcandog!

  • @markvoelker6620
    @markvoelker6620 5 років тому +2

    Ahahaha roadhead! That's how the cowboy actor Tom Mix died in 1940.

  • @Larkinchance
    @Larkinchance 5 років тому +1

    America's love of the automobile is fading into the past. Main reason is that they are no longer the best on the road.. They all look like Japanese and they have are proprietary computers..
    The craze of today for young people is computers, smart phones and their room

  • @cevizagac5725
    @cevizagac5725 5 років тому +2

    In Turkey, Lada Samara (Sputnik) has been solded in end of the 80's and beginning if 90's so it was quite famous in my country. Even we call it as a "soviet tank". It worked in winter really well but summer it had heat problem. It had really Russian character so we liked a lot ))

  • @theskunkupine1809
    @theskunkupine1809 5 років тому +2

    Holy shit. The SSSR was way ahead of their time. It takes about 9 years to save up enough to afford to buy a new car here in the states in 2019.

    • @Kejsaren
      @Kejsaren 5 років тому +2

      With a part time minimum wage job, sure.

    • @93corollausa94
      @93corollausa94 Рік тому +1

      a mitsubishi mirage costs $15k, median annual salary is $35k

  • @gregorywilson2124
    @gregorywilson2124 Рік тому +1

    How expensive was a house? I guess if you had such good public transportation then cars were unnecessary.

    • @UshankaShow
      @UshankaShow  Рік тому +1

      House or an apartment? Most Soviet cities had extensive system of public transportation

  • @bigdog4173
    @bigdog4173 5 років тому +1

    Well put simply,if you lived in a USSR city,owning a car was a waste of time money and effort..It was just NOT necessary. Public transport in USSR cities was well organised indeed..If you lived in rural areas well then a car was more necessary..There were quite a few different makes and models,and they were unsophisticated but solid and reliable..like western cars the designs were sometimes not so good,and certain models had certain weaknesses..The USSR driving test was so hard you had to practically be a mechanic to pass it,you were expected to be able to maintain and repair the car yourself,support infrastructure for cars was limited to say the least..people who had cars often took them to the garage/motor pool at their place of employment if there was one,and got the mechanic there to service it..parts were always in short supply,..windscreen wipers were often stolen,and drivers would remove them after parking the car..Another thing about the USSR was that you couldnt "just take off in your car" on a whim..It was a planned economy,and you needed permission to go places,there was no touring setup,with motels,gas stations,highways and roadside diners like Route 66...as well in winter it was practically impossible to drive intercity..People flew by plane Aeroflot,had quite cheap fares..Many countries that have good public transport also have less car ownership. Here in Sydney Australia,I dont have a car,nor would I need or want one..I can get about very effectively,at low cost,via bus,train or tram..If I need to travel long distance,coach and domestic air travel are better value..1200kms takes about 2 hours by plane,and about $100..by car it takes all day stressful driving and costs more in fuel...

  • @MrKichtopher
    @MrKichtopher 5 років тому +1

    Amazed you kept a straight face during your roadhead bit...

  • @HandeToon
    @HandeToon 7 років тому +3

    I'm Finnish, the first two cars I remember us having were both Lada Samaras. =D

  • @onuonu7336
    @onuonu7336 5 років тому +1

    What about POBEDA (meaning "victory") first, it was named RODINA (meaning "homeland") but Stalin asked "really, you are going to sell homeland? How much does it cost then?" ...so they changed the name.
    Also, Stalin went to test-drive with some car model (not sure, early Moskvich perhaps) and first it had two doors, and a passenger had to get to the backseat from behind the driver. So when Stalin sat behind, suddenly the driver realized that oops, this should not be that the leader has to struggle to sit in the car. And was sceared af. When the test-drive ended, Stalin came out from the backseat and said "make it comfortable!" and so they redesigned the car to have four doors, which is actually much better :D

    • @Bialy_1
      @Bialy_1 5 років тому

      Stalin was visiting a small town in Russia. Huge crowd was there to receive him, holding signs with words of praise for Stalin, Party, Union etc.
      Among them, secret police officers spotted a particularly old man holding a sign saying "Thank you comrade Stalin, for a happy childhood!".
      r>Officers approached him angrily. "What is this, some kind of mockery!? You must be at least 80 years old, comrade Stalin wasn't even born when you were a child!"
      Old man said - "That's exactly what I'm thankful for!"

  • @stillamitchinmybook6320
    @stillamitchinmybook6320 5 років тому +2

    I was like no way hes talking about what I think hes talking about 😂😂😂🤣 I thought maybe road rage was what he was talking about 😂😂😂😂 I died laughing!!!

  • @lenardmalcolm8800
    @lenardmalcolm8800 6 років тому +3

    Love the hat I own one I’m ex Australian army met some Russian troops and got one brilliant in winter

  • @CdA_Native
    @CdA_Native 5 років тому +2

    Lived there for 5 years......boy, this guy is "spot on!"

  • @steveboschen9141
    @steveboschen9141 5 років тому +1

    I really enjoy your videos and, honestly, I didn't know what "road head was either". I had a hunch when you said your wife was angry with you, but I wasn't sure until I googled it and now I know. Anyway....keep up the videos. They are fascinating!

  • @martinhughes2549
    @martinhughes2549 6 років тому +1

    The Lada was quite a popular cheap car in the UK. It was a FIAT design wasn't it?( although a popular joke about LADA's was that to double the value all you had to do was add a full tank of fuel!) Moscovich made bubble cars as well didn't they?

  • @bmw320540750
    @bmw320540750 8 років тому +3

    about LADA Car, it used to be sold in middle east as well, and i use to have one model Lada 2107, but i remember that the price of this car brand new from the dealer was around $3500-4000, it was the cheapest car in the market, that's true it doesn't has any luxury features like power windows, air condition, auto transmission..etc, but it was tough car, safe,, and well built, but it was simple ugly car.

    • @snoopypingas5426
      @snoopypingas5426 7 років тому +2

      They made lada 2107 in egypt's lada factory until the year 2012 I think. It's pretty amazing really.

  • @gavinhudson3064
    @gavinhudson3064 5 років тому +1

    My dad's first car was a second hand Austin A35, that he bought off my Nan in the early 1960's. He was one of 30% of the British public who owned a car. How cool is that!!

  • @bebopwing1
    @bebopwing1 5 років тому +2

    Oh man, the road head line killed me

  • @RetroGUY77
    @RetroGUY77 8 років тому +7

    Ladas were very popular in the UK. I have a relative who had a Lada 2108 (the hatchback) in 1988 but he didn't have to wait 9 years for it and it didn't cost 5 years wages... According to the Internet it cost just over £5000. Lada was known to be a very cheap brand of cars and they were the joke of the roads due to outdated styling and inferior reliability. I've seen car magazines at the time say. 'The Soviet Union's car for the 80s is the equivalent of Europe's car for the 70s'.

    • @The_Ballo
      @The_Ballo 7 років тому

      Supposedly built like a tank, too. Not in terms of reliability, but the body steel thickness

    • @Deerock_FL
      @Deerock_FL 5 років тому

      We had the Yugo here in the US in the late 80s. Those things were so bad they would break down during the test drive

  • @Mrgunsngear
    @Mrgunsngear Рік тому

    🍿

  • @zd1322
    @zd1322 5 років тому +2

    Lol, alright, let's start a GoFundMe to get him laid in the back seat of a car! LMAO

  • @ET-RAMBLINGS
    @ET-RAMBLINGS 5 років тому +5

    The Soviet government subsidized public transportation while U.S. politicians did the same for automobiles with government financed roads and highways plus tax breaks for oil producers.

  • @isleifoterogarcia4478
    @isleifoterogarcia4478 5 років тому +1

    Thanks for the video Sergei. The last part was a blast. Very interesting and you knew how to make humor too. Great.

  • @P7777-u7r
    @P7777-u7r 5 років тому +2

    I can name 2 brands paused the video there:
    Moskvitch or AZLK
    Lada or VAZ

  • @bencegunyho6183
    @bencegunyho6183 6 років тому +5

    Lada, Kraz, Zaporoshec, Volga, Moskvitsch, Zil and so much other

    • @bencegunyho6183
      @bencegunyho6183 6 років тому

      USHANKA SHOW thanks. My dream car is a Lada 1200 S. I love the cars of the eastern bloc! And of course your chanel! Love from Hungary

    • @emilkarpo
      @emilkarpo 6 років тому

      I've always been more of a GAZ 3110 Volga myself......

    • @ksztyrix
      @ksztyrix 6 років тому

      Bence Gunyhó Kamaz

  • @dr.k9769
    @dr.k9769 6 років тому

    USSR..... Let's talk about how no actually had cars during the USSR .... But, we've all seen the UA-cam vids... Russian drivers are really really scary... Maybe the USSR knew something we didn't.... 😂 ( its a joke guys... I luv Russian folks! I luv the mother land!

  • @motorhead6763
    @motorhead6763 6 років тому +1

    Mercedes BMW Audi VW junk here in America. All break down and cost $$$$$$ to fix. Russian cars probably better. Volvo was good now Chinese junk. Shalom

    • @motorhead6763
      @motorhead6763 6 років тому

      Jason Pohlod I have 300k on My Chevy van cheap to Fix never breaks Down . American cars ære good since 1998 up

  • @ethanthereenactorguy4829
    @ethanthereenactorguy4829 5 років тому +1

    Here is one tip for American car culture! There are two universal symbols for driving, your middle finger, which means idi nahui, and the thumbs up which means "thanks", or "you go!"

  • @davidwarner6755
    @davidwarner6755 Рік тому

    Road head...? Perhaps they meant motor head (somebody interested in cars and working on them). Otherwise, I suppose it could be some sort of sexual innuendo, but I have never heard that term being used. I do remember a couple of Soviet cars while I was serving in Europe. The Yugo and FSO brands seemed to be cheap alternatives to the Western market. Personally, I owned several Dneipr and Ural motorcycles. One the Dneipr two-wheel model I liked was the Soviet Knight. Very simple to work on but not the most reliable machines.

  • @Poorexampeofhuman
    @Poorexampeofhuman 2 місяці тому

    Have got to experience road head?? Made me laugh but its a valid question for someone whom is unfamiliar with American slang words. I am thankful for you channel its given me a point of view i didn't have before. Better understanding of other cultures and people

  • @blakekeithley3400
    @blakekeithley3400 8 місяців тому

    Try researching the interstate highway system. This system a defense project initiated by Eisenhower transformed America.
    The Road trip is an American right of passage.
    Ladas are essentially Fiats . The government limousines are copies of Packards. The ubiquitous “Russian Truck” was a reverse engineered Studebaker from lend lease trucks .

  • @jimkey920
    @jimkey920 6 років тому +1

    Lada! Volga, like in the Film, "Driver For Vera". My first car I bought when I was a teenager. It was a 1939 Dodge. I paid $10 for it, it was 4 door ver heavy and gas was .23 cents agallon. My next one I bought when i was 15. It was a 1931 Model A="A" Ford, I paid $40 for it. My family operated sawmills then: My dad commandered the engine to run planer at the mill. I sold the tired and wheels to a neighbor for $10 and another neighbor bought the body so his pigs could get out of the rain, I got another $10 for that. I next bought a1947 Ford Coupe for $60 I had to rebuild the engine I bought the parts for $54 and did the work myself. When i was 26 years old i bought a 1947 Packard business coupe, it wouln't run, I paid a junk price $8. I found the car had a burnt valve. Took awhile to find one; I had to pay $12 for the valve. It was a beautiful car. Strangely I don't remember getting rid of it...... Must have been traumatic for me. When i lived in Ukraine , my wife wanted me to get a car, I didn't because drivers are too agressive. they even run over people on the sidewalks. Besides public transportation is cheap and dependable. If I did get a car there it would be a Lada. Parts are everywhere and they are easy to repair.

  • @bodyloverz30
    @bodyloverz30 5 років тому +1

    What about the Soviet ZiL Limos? They were so cool, the long black cars of the Soviet Politburo!

  • @vf5126
    @vf5126 Рік тому

    Thousands of wasted gallons racing muscle cars (90 mph in a 30) ..waking up in ‘intensive care’ after a wreck.. The US is excessive, your Soviet experience was repressive, somewhere there must have been a healthy blend ~

  • @brent440
    @brent440 4 роки тому

    who copied who? let's see.....soviet car from 1966 looks just like american car from 1956! I'll say soviets copy lol!

  • @mcelravys
    @mcelravys Рік тому

    Lada, Muscovitch, Trebant was German, Skoda is Czech. Lada was a licensed built Fiat.

  • @adityasanthanam1945
    @adityasanthanam1945 5 років тому

    Where is ZiL like 110, 111, 114, 4104, etc? They were better than Chaika, more luxurious, larger, more comfortable, more important, etc. They were used by the Soviet heads of state. The regular people were not able to own or drive one. I also believe they were not for sale for people, only government could buy.

  • @jamallabarge2665
    @jamallabarge2665 4 роки тому

    Lada........ the indestructible car.
    The Camel is a horse designed by a committee. I kind of imagine that a committee backed by the KGB and Soviet Army can achieve similar feats with automobiles.

  • @claudgurr431
    @claudgurr431 Рік тому

    I believe the Lada is the #8 best selling model in history, simply because they have been in production for so long. I had the pleasure of driving a Chaika in the UK once, like driving an old American car with worn out suspension!. If youtube videos are anything to go by another affect of cars being such a rare luxury in Russia until recently is the incredible lack of driving skills demonstrated by the average driver.
    I'm happy to have experienced roadhead on several occasions too!

  • @lorenzo_br5803
    @lorenzo_br5803 8 років тому +3

    how else yeld "LADA!!! LADA NIVA, LADA LAIKA!!!!" in the start of the video?

  • @OlagGan
    @OlagGan 3 роки тому

    O wouldn't condem everyone as not knowing a make of Russian car. The kids post 1992 or so might have issues, but most people before that would know of at least one. Especially in the UK the Lads was incredibly well known and was basically seen as a joke. 'Can I get a Petrol cap for a Lada. OK that seems like a good swap" was a very common joke.

  • @lordshango4184
    @lordshango4184 6 років тому

    It’s unfortunate that due to Western media, people had this biased idea that everything which came out of the Soviet Union was inferior and of poor quality. The Soviet Union had some of the brightest minds and technology during its existence. It was sad that the leadership of the USSR couldn’t harness all the great potential of its rich resources towards a good end but, instead, wasted these resources on mindless and extremely foolish endeavors much to the detriment of its citizens. On the question Soviet automobiles, I grew up around some Soviet vehicles in Africa and I can vouch for their reliability and quality. Obviously, they weren’t designed to be easy on the eyes - in other words, they weren’t “eye candies” lol - but they got the job done. They were sturdy, reliable, unbreakable workhorses which handled the poor, unpaved, dirt roads pretty well. Of course, they broke down but they were easy to fix and any mechanic worth his salt was able to do so. Whereas, the Western manufactured vehicles were nicer, beautifully designed, more complex and technologically ahead of their Soviet counterparts, the aesthetically lacking, simple and basic Soviet cars/automobiles on the other hand, were better able to endure the battering, the humongous workloads, poor roads and rough handling to which we subjected them - and, to us that meant quality. They did the job and served us well without too much fuss unlike the Western vehicles.

  • @razormc954
    @razormc954 4 роки тому

    I know of LADA...
    Another big thing about car culture here in America is that we are very big on auto racing.. Like the Indianapolis 500, which fun fact, is the largest single day sporting event in America... We "Gear heads" (the correct term for us car enthusiasts here in America) are very big on tuning our cars to get the most performance possible out of them and we then race them against each other
    Oh and "Road Head" is a term for sex on the road. Your friends are, what we call here in the States, "assholes"