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Like Ya Car - Early Years of Motoring in Australia

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  • Опубліковано 7 лис 2012
  • Episode from the 1999 TV series Our Century, presented by Ray Martin.When the motor car first started to appear on Australian roads, some saw it as a nuisance that scared the horses & a craze that was going to be short lived.

КОМЕНТАРІ • 530

  • @peterharvey4151
    @peterharvey4151 10 місяців тому +14

    I was 19, March 1981, I bought my 1st car, a 1967 HR Holden from Muir's Motors Ashfield, $1450..Freedom, good times, mates, girls..

    • @peterwarner5920
      @peterwarner5920 2 місяці тому

      My mum picked up her Pink EK. Holden from Muir's motors brand new.

    • @NoosaHeads
      @NoosaHeads Місяць тому

      15 years old car for $1450. Sounds a lot.

    • @peterkirgan2921
      @peterkirgan2921 Місяць тому

      I hope it was from Rick Tozer ? Lol😂 his daughter won miss nsw Karen he was a family friend !!!

    • @peterharvey4151
      @peterharvey4151 Місяць тому

      @@peterkirgan2921 yes it was from Rick Tozer, he was a friend of my father, Barry Harvey, Rick picked the car out for me when it was traded, called me at work and I bought it

  • @user-ov5uu5nn3r
    @user-ov5uu5nn3r 2 місяці тому +2

    My first car in 1985. HQ Prem, 253 V8 Auto. Ten bucks in your pocket, a pack of Ciggies NO mobile phone. That is FREEDOM. Things have changed and not for the better.

  • @realsocrates5272
    @realsocrates5272 5 років тому +90

    The beautiful Australia that we need back

    • @ivanolsen8596
      @ivanolsen8596 4 роки тому +15

      Our remarkable leaders have made sure that wont happen.

    • @hajorodyk1470
      @hajorodyk1470 3 роки тому +9

      Too bloody right, we’ve totally lost our unique identity!

    • @realsocrates5272
      @realsocrates5272 3 роки тому +11

      @@hajorodyk1470 Mate we gave in, stopped fighting for our country, totally surrendered to the corrupt elites..... Time to wake up is now or forever we are enslaved

    • @petergoodwin2465
      @petergoodwin2465 3 роки тому +2

      @pjdsa sorry Australia is fucked, it's a shell of itself. Sold out by traitors.

    • @petergoodwin2465
      @petergoodwin2465 3 роки тому +6

      @@realsocrates5272 must agree with that, spot on mate.

  • @catey62
    @catey62 4 роки тому +20

    Just a point to clarify about Holdens. ( and I'm not putting them down, I have owned many over the years but not since they started making the Commodore,despite my spending 10 years working at the Elizabeth plant from '87 to '97.) when the challenge was originally put out by Chifley, Lawrence Hartnett who was GM's Aussie manager at the time, approached GM's management in Detroit with his plan to build cars here in Australia. they declined repeatedly, wanting to build cars in the US and ship them here to sell rather than manufacture them here. However, Hartnett persisted and finally GM relented with one caveat. Lawrence Hartnett could set up manufacturing here in Australia, but GM refused to provide so much as a single penny towards the costs. so he approached Chifley, and he, eager to get Australia back on its feet after the war, working together with the Commonwealth bank came up with the initial 3,000,000 pounds needed to get things up and running. once GM got wind of this, they then stepped back into the picture, taking control of the project from then on.

  • @adriennehunt1799
    @adriennehunt1799 3 роки тому +14

    The beautiful FJ Holden was our 1st Aussie family car in 1960. My earliest memories is as a 4-5 year old standing on the floor in the back and just being able to touch the top of the front seat, which were all bench seats by the way.🦘🐨

    • @David_P132
      @David_P132 3 роки тому

      My first car, at age 17, in 1966.

  • @thekrevolution
    @thekrevolution 3 роки тому +5

    watching this more than a decade after, brings back great memories

  • @koosvanzyl2605
    @koosvanzyl2605 5 років тому +5

    This program made me thinking with nostalgia back at the Old South Africa. We even had the same advert: "Braaivleis, rugby, sunny skies and Chevrolet". So similar. Those were the days.

    • @metricstormtrooper
      @metricstormtrooper 5 місяців тому +1

      Yeah not having to polish your own car cook your own food or even clean up after yourself.

  • @davidrochow9382
    @davidrochow9382 3 роки тому +19

    You forgot the other Australian car company , Valiant by Chrysler. It was as much an Australian company as GMH and Ford. My dad ,uncle and their cousin used to spend many hours talking about which was best.

    • @gooseknack
      @gooseknack 2 роки тому +4

      True.. however, neither Ford nor Valiant had the history behind Holden as an entity and family in Australia. As for which was better, it's a matter of opinion and which you had in the family.
      Personally, I believe Holden was the better car.. those old Red Motors were near indestructible and had bullet proof reliable. They never suffered issues during Australia's hot summers either, as some of the early Fords did(know nothing of the Valiant). I know Holden well, had a HK Holden(1969)with a 186 red in the family for some 25 years(parted with it in 1995).. the motor lived on in a HG premier(1970) for another 15 years after that. The HG was finally retired in 2014 and let go of in 2020. It was still running like a sewing machine when it went.

    • @lifelongbachelor3651
      @lifelongbachelor3651 2 роки тому +2

      @@gooseknack they were no more reliable than chrysler's 225. holden, while having its genesis here, was not that after gm took over. the commodore, like the xd falcon, was a car engineered from an existing european model, the opel. the xd came from the grenada.

    • @sutherlandA1
      @sutherlandA1 9 місяців тому +1

      ​@@lifelongbachelor3651the xd may have looked like a MK2 Grenada but it was just a rebodied xc with only the headlights/front indicators the same as the euro model

  • @BradGryphonn
    @BradGryphonn 5 років тому +10

    Back in the 60s my parents owned an FX Holden (or an FJ). Dad drove a drilling rig and mum, my big sister and I followed him around the country in the Holden towing an 18 foot Franklin caravan. We were pretty much self-sufficient and often lived hundreds of kilometres from the nearest town. For you Trekkies, the licence plate was NCC-600. That was replaced with a '63 Falcon wagon (XM or XP I think) then that was replaced with an AP-6 Valiant wagon which mum and dad drove (with me and the dog and half our belongings) from Perth to Brisbane in late 1975. I was 11 going on 12 at the time. Prior to the FX, dad owned a 39 Ford that got written of by a drunk bloke in a Volkswagon in Brisbane city one night when I was 12 months old. Around 1964. Anyway, I'm rambling, sorry.

    • @eoin1959
      @eoin1959 2 місяці тому +1

      No need to apologise. You're lucky to still have those memories, thanks for sharing them 😊

    • @ianking-jv4hg
      @ianking-jv4hg 2 місяці тому +1

      Ramble on brother, we about same age, and a few miles were done in holdens all through the sixties.
      i heard of humber snipe and others of the fifties but the first i really remember was the "FB" ( secound hand, in about '63, first new (family) car was
      HK 161 in '68.
      All good memories

  • @brianbattle3651
    @brianbattle3651 12 годин тому

    I have photographs where my father would buy cars in the 1940s/50s and cut the back down and make utes. This was in the Macleay River Valley in NSW. Dad wasn't a sportsman but his passion was cars. He couldn't get a job as a licensed mechanic because he didn't have sufficient education but he could repair any of the car sin that era. Mum used to go him for buying and selling cars but she couldn't stop him. There was an interesting incident in Kempsey in one of these utes. I was in the front with dad and my older sister was in the back of the ute and as we were going past the PO in Kempsey a bystander shouted out, " Hey mister you've lost something. Dad stopped and we found that my sister had fallen out of the ute and luckily she wasn't hurt.

  • @tyredlie
    @tyredlie 3 роки тому +5

    Every one knocks the old P76, it was the only car where you could fit a 44 gallon drum in the boot and close it perfectly. No, I didn’t have one, I drove the ‘70 XY Falcon V8, 351 C.I.

    • @ozcinemarob
      @ozcinemarob Рік тому

      P76 - Also hide 4 of your mates in the boot to sneek into the drive-in.

  • @jackfrost2146
    @jackfrost2146 3 роки тому +8

    Driving up a hill in the 50's-- "Oh no, a bloody Morris Minor in front of us. We'll be here all day!"

    • @lezlezman1843
      @lezlezman1843 3 роки тому +2

      With the right-turn signal on all the way, too!

    • @jackfrost2146
      @jackfrost2146 3 роки тому +1

      @@lezlezman1843 Ah, yes-the little finger thing that poked out the side. A revolution in design!

    • @tonysuda9066
      @tonysuda9066 3 роки тому

      A minor delay

  • @maryrafuse2297
    @maryrafuse2297 5 років тому +17

    I enjoyed that. Love to our Commonwealth brothers and sisters from Canada.

  • @geckozzed
    @geckozzed 3 роки тому +7

    One aspect of the advent of the motor car that didn't get much of a mention (if any) was the liberating effect it had on people's lives, and on women in particular. People were now able to go where they wanted, when they wanted, in a timely manner and in relative comfort and safety. In particular, women were not tied to the home, and could become independent, empowered and self-determining. Their participation in the workforce increased significantly, as did their particpation in other non-work activities.
    The term 'love affair with cars' is currently used perjoratively, as if it were an unhleathy obsession. People these days forget how benefical it was (and still is) for the population in general and women in particular.

  • @murbella7
    @murbella7 3 роки тому +5

    Great story. I remember a lot of it well.

  • @thomaselliott573
    @thomaselliott573 5 років тому +16

    Unfortunately this mockumentary suffers quite a bit from the superficial approach of Channel Nine and Ray Martin, but I guess it is the best we have got.

    • @thomaselliott573
      @thomaselliott573 5 років тому +3

      I don't think anyone could have been more superficial than Ray. What a shame.

    • @mikevale3620
      @mikevale3620 5 років тому +4

      Agree entirely...like most stuff on commercial TV it's dumbed down to the lowest common denominator.

    • @ivanolsen8596
      @ivanolsen8596 4 роки тому

      @@mikevale3620 As John Logie Baird said when he invented the TV
      " I dont know if I have done a good thing or bad". I think he did a
      good thing, just the corrupting influences of the channel owners
      have turned it into a worthless commodity.

  • @yurilemming4130
    @yurilemming4130 5 років тому +5

    My old dad had a P76 V8 he loved it, burnt orange colour.

    • @stevecallachor
      @stevecallachor 3 роки тому +1

      That colour was called "home on the orange", acrylic lacquer was just replacing nitrocellulose "Duco" about then so DuPont brought out a range of dazzling colours with fancy names to lift the appeal of their product. There was another crazy colour called"take me home to mother". There were about 10 colours in the range.
      Stavros

    • @petersinclair3997
      @petersinclair3997 3 роки тому +1

      The P76. A much maligned car.

  • @potrzebieneuman4702
    @potrzebieneuman4702 2 місяці тому

    So nice to hear the word "kilometre" spoken correctly for a change. Man I'd forgotten the Hey Charger ads on telly.

  • @jeanbaptistevallee4500
    @jeanbaptistevallee4500 5 років тому +2

    Very nice story.
    I am a vintage American and got a real kick seeing the Holden and other makers products for the first time.
    I find them very interesting and somewhat unsettling.
    At first glance on many of them I see something both nostalgic and familiar . Then I realize I have no idea what they are.
    One looked to me like a `55 Chevy with 56 Ford trim and paint. I am not certain I could tell unless I looked at the engine.
    I`d like to see more of these!

  • @sgtcrab1
    @sgtcrab1 5 років тому +3

    I had a VB Commodore. Looked like GM in line 6 and was pretty much an Opel. Nice little car. I forget the year but it was old and partly restored. I was in Tassie for a year in 2003-04.

    • @alanfunt4013
      @alanfunt4013 4 роки тому +2

      Mostly German Opel Senator and Opel Commodore with a local engine which dated back to 1964. The Holden in-line six was a close Chevrolet design that itself dated to the late 50's.

  • @jasoncarpp7742
    @jasoncarpp7742 10 років тому +4

    Fascinating history. Little did people know more than a century ago, that the automobile was here to stay, and the horse and carriage would have to find a different path to take. It was the same with our American cars. :)

  • @kerrykelaher2607
    @kerrykelaher2607 2 місяці тому +2

    " my grandfather got no3 off the production line " fx" he told me. " motor was blueprinted " a. " special order " his car was black !"

  • @jackieharpold1664
    @jackieharpold1664 3 роки тому +2

    I do like the pianos they make there and it has a beautiful sounds .

  • @Eoquencawacha
    @Eoquencawacha 7 років тому +37

    My first car was a V8 4 speed Charger but I survived anyway

    • @CovidConQuitTheCensorship
      @CovidConQuitTheCensorship 5 років тому +3

      Yes they were like tanks. My Grandmother drove one lol and scared the shit out of me when she got behind the wheel 😂

    • @tarzan9022
      @tarzan9022 3 роки тому

      Your a GOOSE And so is the person who replied to you about her cranmotha scering him

    • @freeagent8225
      @freeagent8225 3 роки тому

      Lucky bastard, I had a 770 , got 16mpg on one run which I'm proud of.

    • @billwilliams9362
      @billwilliams9362 2 роки тому

      HEY CHARGER 🤘

  • @ottovonostrovo1486
    @ottovonostrovo1486 7 років тому +4

    In Canada it wasn't even possible to drive across Canada until 1943 when the northern route HWY 11 from Ottawa to Nipigon finally opened it wasn't until 1960 when the southern route over lake Superior from Sault St. Marie to Nipigon was finally opened.

    • @Palifiox
      @Palifiox 7 років тому +2

      That's interesting to realise how recent it was. A woman and her teenage daughter were the first to drive all around Australia in the 1920s. There were no roads in much of the more remote country. I had a book detailing their adventures in one chapter but I seem to have lost it. By 1930 several people had done it.

  • @apd8339
    @apd8339 6 років тому +26

    ''Not The Kingswood". R.I.P Ted.

    • @apd8339
      @apd8339 6 років тому

      thanks mate.

    • @markpollard9202
      @markpollard9202 5 років тому

      Yeahh these..days..not the craptiva mate TED ..they even changed the beer...fucking hypster shit generation..tooheys extra dry...KFC killed my uncle....craft beer is for hypsters who cant drink forshit...in2000 pub 8 pints 4 hours ..t bone chips veg drove the motor car home..💋🤣😂🇦🇺🤓🤭never again..likethat...thats GUINESS TOO...FUCK OURSOCIETY THESE DAYS...AUSTRALIA UR FUCKED...VB ISTHE BEST BEER...BRING BACK KB GOLD...goodon ya boss APD 83 falcon...

    • @JewishEvangelist
      @JewishEvangelist 5 років тому +1

      Because of all the bitching Muslims coming in, you'll never get Kingswood Country re-runs on the TV again ... while they play MASH re-runs every year.

    • @ivanolsen8596
      @ivanolsen8596 4 роки тому +1

      @Aussie Pom Too many unpolished dipsticks in Canberra.

    • @NathanChisholm041
      @NathanChisholm041 3 роки тому

      Money on the fridge!

  • @nicoledeloncrais5940
    @nicoledeloncrais5940 Місяць тому

    Bloody brilliant. Grandad was an investor, dad could fix everything, & if he couldn't get a car part, he just made it himself. No such thing as can't in my family.

  • @user-fb7qu8lu7s
    @user-fb7qu8lu7s 2 місяці тому +2

    I’m an Aussie through and through, but We didn’t Invent the Utility.

  • @letsseeif
    @letsseeif 2 місяці тому +1

    Dad owned an F J Holden bought new in the early sixties. The Holden was really a Chevrolet 215 monocoque construction. [should be 1952.]

    • @Perusalstein
      @Perusalstein Місяць тому

      @ letsseeif: FJ NOS? (new old stock)? In 1956 the FE replaced the FJ.

    • @letsseeif
      @letsseeif Місяць тому

      Correction. My father's FJ Holden was bought new in 1952, two tone green bought from Preston Motors Melbourne from Mister Speedy to Mr. Pace. [My little funny-but true.]

  • @dhanaty6744
    @dhanaty6744 3 роки тому +4

    Every man needs these kinds, were we drive cars and not like the ones now where they drive us (no fun)

  • @vk5jajay147
    @vk5jajay147 5 років тому +3

    Nice trip down Nostalgia track, Thanks for the video Ray Martin..

  • @BCBtrucks64
    @BCBtrucks64 3 роки тому +1

    what a great story of old beth , and its great to seea time when only aussies were out enjoying life in the aussie car

  • @byronknipe9028
    @byronknipe9028 5 років тому +1

    How many people remember the Hartnett cars that were being built in the no longer used Commonwealth Aircraft Corporation factory at Fisherman's Bend in Melbourne in the early 1950s ? There were to be a range of models from a 2 cylinder town car, 4 cylinder family sedan, and a large 6 cylinder car. Very advanced engineering at the time. A very few of the 2 cylinder models were made before GMH contrived to stop Hartnett's material supply.

    • @ivanolsen8596
      @ivanolsen8596 4 роки тому

      I remember the LLoyd Hartnett, its most outstanding feature
      was no reverse gear, no doubt LLoyd planned to rectify this later.
      GMs actions are reminiscent of todays Big2 supermarkets.

  • @craigpennington1251
    @craigpennington1251 5 років тому +3

    I think that all around the world people had a favorite car they owned or wanted to own. Mine was a 1966 Pontiac GTO. Best car I've ever had. I like a lot of the foreign cars too and the Holdens are super cool. Today's cars aren't cars but rolling computer juke boxes, very very expensive ones. And pump gas, what a joke. I always wanted to go to Australia too.

    • @Papa-fv1rn
      @Papa-fv1rn 5 років тому +1

      "Today's cars aren't cars but rolling computer juke boxes, very very expensive ones." I'll second that, Craig.

  • @user-fb7qu8lu7s
    @user-fb7qu8lu7s 2 місяці тому

    The first Drive In , in Australia was at Burwood Victoria,Not Coburg.

    • @haralambostsaktserlis9658
      @haralambostsaktserlis9658 29 днів тому

      Now that land it was on in Burwood is going to be part of the Suburban Rail Loop East currently under construction...

  • @nofrackingzone7479
    @nofrackingzone7479 8 років тому +10

    Sadly Australia now show no homegrown auto industry. Ford, Holden (GM) Toyota produce elsewhere where labor is cheaper and the government more friendly. Those who worked in the factories assembling those cars will be on layoff, the parts suppliers, and their suppliers will eventually fold also. The economic effect slowly spreads across the country.

    • @nofrackingzone7479
      @nofrackingzone7479 7 років тому +1

      LTLUCKYLUKE it would be nice if there were a Australian home grown alternative; however, the startup cost would be outrageous. The government there wouldn't be willing to finance the effort and I can't see any individual or group willing to risk it on a 'new unknown' brand dedicated to what in reality is a small market.

    • @leoncutajar1369
      @leoncutajar1369 7 років тому +2

      Sadly Australia has become a full socialist country and socialists don't build any thing well if at all.

    • @leoncutajar1369
      @leoncutajar1369 7 років тому

      Roy Sage
      Australia built 4 cylinder cars before howard signed the free trade agreement with Korea in the late 90's which saw cars like the Hyundai Excel for $13.999.
      The reason they built large sedan was because that was all the rest of the world was already importing everything else into Australia.
      The subsidies were part of the Buttons plan in order to lower tariff in the 80's.
      The car companies should have sacked everyone and left when John Button announced his plan in 1985.
      It doesn't matter who owns the company nobody works for their injury or loss and neither should they.

    • @leoncutajar1369
      @leoncutajar1369 7 років тому +1

      Even if they were not designed here many 4 cylinder cars were built here.
      The free trade agreements were and are treasonous.
      The excessive rules, regulations taxes and central banking all played a role.
      Ford threatened to leave as early as 1985.
      The 1995 incident your referring to is the Ford Taurus car which ford hoped it could to import and replace the falcon with.
      Holden thought about doing the same when the VL commodore came to an end in 1988 but decided against it because at the time Australians still wanted 6 cylinder and V8 rear wheel drive sedans and no other GM plant was building such a car.
      The subsudies were a sort of substitute for the tariff reductions.
      The car companies should be commended for their stupidity for staying as long as they did because only a fool would keep investing when the governments were doing their level best to destroy the industry especially since the majority of Australian manufacturing had already been offshored or gone bust.
      It wasn't.
      Most Australian products are not banned and they can go into Asian countries without tariffs BUT there are other rules and costs these governments can impose on Australian products which make buying them very undesirable to the locals.
      If you want to know what is really behind the demise of Australian Manufacturing google "The Lima Declaration" of 1975.
      Most modified cars lose money it doesn't matter the make but generally stock used 4 cylinders hold their value very well.

  • @woodywoody51
    @woodywoody51 5 років тому +1

    The song was originally meat pies Kangaroos and Aussie cars, but was changed to Holden cars for an ad.

    • @hebneh
      @hebneh 5 років тому +2

      I suspect this actually was an Australian version of a similar advertising song used in the USA, which was about "baseball, hot dogs, apple pie and Chevrolet".

    • @woodywoody51
      @woodywoody51 5 років тому +2

      @@hebneh Yep you're right

  • @waynemgtregear7228
    @waynemgtregear7228 5 років тому +5

    football baseball hot dogs & Chevrolet cars were first to use this type of phrase in advertising. Holden was never an Australian car but a Yanki car by GMC

  • @NebukedNezzer
    @NebukedNezzer 5 років тому +1

    I was in Melborn 1966. rode in a cab that I thought was a 55 chevrolet but the driver said it was a 60 holden.

    • @colinl9018
      @colinl9018 5 років тому +1

      That would of been an FB Holden Sedan. All those early Holdens right up until 1974 or thereabouts were based on Chevy models.

  • @kaindog100
    @kaindog100 3 роки тому +2

    I’ve still got my late fathers tyre levers in my toolbox. They still get used occasionally like last year on my 1970 mini for persuasion but never for tyres.

  • @scrap351
    @scrap351 9 років тому +3

    LOVE CARS, LOVE THIA CLIP !!!!!!

  • @billwilliams9362
    @billwilliams9362 2 роки тому

    My 1st car was a Vanguard with a main bearing knock , paid $50 .

  • @NEMISIS990
    @NEMISIS990 3 роки тому

    I remember my dad had a Holden Apollo and we had that till I was at least 10, bloody reliable those cars

    • @duncanyourmate2433
      @duncanyourmate2433 Рік тому

      cause it was a Toyota Camry SV21, rebadged , great cars none the less

  • @robertfoster7807
    @robertfoster7807 21 день тому

    Xm falcon with vacum windscreen wipers i had one the wipers were usless driving up a steep hill

  • @istp1967
    @istp1967 5 років тому +2

    Leyland P76 😁😂😂😂 What a junk heap they were!! Gumtrees by the Roadwy - love live Slim Dusty, the greatest folk singer in Australian history.

    • @petersinclair3997
      @petersinclair3997 3 роки тому

      Known as the P38 in the trade, because it was half a car.

  • @jeffking6286
    @jeffking6286 6 років тому +8

    Back when cars were cars and not computers on wheels!!!

    • @petergoodwin2465
      @petergoodwin2465 3 роки тому

      @pjdsa I'll have a head on with my valiant into your Poofter car any day.

  • @sandywebsdale8247
    @sandywebsdale8247 6 років тому +17

    R.I.P the Aussie car 😒

    • @keratase1880
      @keratase1880 6 років тому +1

      Sandy Websdale finally you guys have cars that are better built... If AU cars are any good to 'Au conditions', why not export them but cater for the export market i.e smaller engine but its maintaining durability

    • @paspax
      @paspax 6 років тому +1

      They were exported.

    • @apd8339
      @apd8339 5 років тому

      I Agree.

    • @southwest3671
      @southwest3671 5 років тому

      Weren’t Holdens basically German Opels and Vauxhalls with V8 engines propped in them?

    • @gen3v8
      @gen3v8 5 років тому

      @@southwest3671 Once upon a time.. That`s how we rolled

  • @Davez621
    @Davez621 9 років тому +6

    09:42 - Jesus, I can't believe how much ground clearance that Holden has!

    • @larrywalker6105
      @larrywalker6105 6 років тому +1

      CheesyTV They were made higher 13" i believe to give plenty of clearance on dirt roads ie Outback , not many paved roads back then.

    • @blackholeentry3489
      @blackholeentry3489 5 років тому +1

      Neither can Jesus!

  • @kerrykelaher2607
    @kerrykelaher2607 2 місяці тому +1

    " jimmy Barnes owns and drives " a fj Holden "! 😮

  • @clarence8117
    @clarence8117 2 роки тому

    Love this video

  • @graemewilliams1308
    @graemewilliams1308 8 років тому +3

    My first car, FX Holden. $75 with blown head gasket.

    • @Mick_Aus
      @Mick_Aus 6 років тому +1

      Graeme Williams : Did you hale from the Wattle Park region?

    • @davidhamilton506
      @davidhamilton506 5 років тому +1

      Memorable Holdens: 48-215 (FX), FJ, FE, FC, FB, EK, EJ, EH, HD, HR, HQ, HK, HT, and HG, with the HK introducing the two door iconic Monaro.............PS: Please note, HQ comes after HG and not after HR, cheers...

    • @raymossop4610
      @raymossop4610 3 роки тому

      @@davidhamilton506 You have one wrong HQ should be HK then after HG comes HQ

    • @davidhamilton506
      @davidhamilton506 3 роки тому

      @@raymossop4610 Thank you Ray, you're indeed correct. I've just noticed my gaff there. Yes, way back then I was returning to Canberra from Sydney down the Hume, and spied a Vehicle Transporter load of new HQs. I remember disliking the taillight/indicator set up that was installed in the rear bumper bar. Later that week, I called into the Holden Dealer and looked it over, and came away not all that impressed. I'm just four inches shy of 6 foot and in sitting behind the wheel of the HQ, I'm like just looking over the steering wheel. Anyhow, thanks for the feedback. I've now corrected that error. Cheers and stay safe ol' mate...

  • @FirstLast-nm2pu
    @FirstLast-nm2pu 3 роки тому

    That was very good to watch and did show what it really was like. Great show, thanks

  • @johncniall5096
    @johncniall5096 2 місяці тому

    I owned an fc Holden my mates had fj s and fc Holden picked them up for peanuts those were th days lived them spare parts cost peanuts n easy to fix

  • @stephanielee-davis6370
    @stephanielee-davis6370 5 років тому +1

    The drive in liquor store 11:56 is an interesting idea.

  • @bossdog1480
    @bossdog1480 2 місяці тому

    The add was actually a copy of an add for Chevrolet cars. Not even that was Aussie.
    As usual people bag the P76 which was actually way ahead of its time and a really good car. Just the parent company was in dire financial straits at the time. There was also a lot of sabotage to make sure it never succeeded like it should have done.

  • @1945bobc
    @1945bobc 5 років тому +3

    The P76 , the car you could put a 44 gallon drum in & shut the boot , they don't makem like tnhat any more,

    • @markpollard9202
      @markpollard9202 5 років тому

      Fukn oath u could...best drive in car...bar chev impala lol🇦🇺🤓😂🤣🤟

    • @guanghunglo3594
      @guanghunglo3594 5 років тому

      Thank God for that!

  • @electronicalliancetv5764
    @electronicalliancetv5764 5 років тому

    Hello Wayne -get stuff mate and ive followed your career -top stuff ,its david Rickard mate remember we acted in wantirna highs "finninans rainbow" -I was good too but you took it to another level ,All the best mate (cast me in one of your great shows lol) -cheers màte

  • @metricstormtrooper
    @metricstormtrooper 5 місяців тому

    Discovered we were able to manufacture on a grand scale and then forgot it again after company management fled to countries with cheaper wages, who would have thought?

  • @kennethroyce5968
    @kennethroyce5968 3 роки тому +3

    Are we there yet?

    • @letsseeif
      @letsseeif Місяць тому

      Every kid's lament.

  • @David_P132
    @David_P132 3 роки тому

    My first car at age 17: FJ Holden; now there's one in the National Museum.

    • @patrickjankowski3476
      @patrickjankowski3476 3 роки тому

      How many people do you think have stuck their you know whats, in the car exhaust pipes??

  • @pawelsawicki7003
    @pawelsawicki7003 3 роки тому +1

    Nice one

  • @adoreslaurel
    @adoreslaurel 5 років тому +4

    Mate of mine had an FJ, right hand king pin dropped out on a country road and he finished up in a drain.Quality???

    • @peterbrown6224
      @peterbrown6224 5 років тому +2

      Remember the vacuum-driven wipers?

    • @adoreslaurel
      @adoreslaurel 5 років тому +1

      @@peterbrown6224 I would rather forget, we had 'em right up 1960 FB.

    • @7316bobe
      @7316bobe 5 років тому +1

      Remember those horrid king pin suspensions positively evil, and the rust. Most cars made in Australia were rusting before they even left the factory.

    • @adoreslaurel
      @adoreslaurel 5 років тому +2

      @@7316bobe Yes I jumped into an FE about '61 , stomped on the floor and it "moved".

    • @7316bobe
      @7316bobe 5 років тому +4

      @@peterbrown6224 I sure do wipers flat out going down hill and completely stopped going up hills. Do you remember vacuum wipers at the drive in. Every body with them running there motors so the wipers could clear the windscreen, but in my car there were better things to do than watch the movie. I had a 1956 Ford Customline with bench seats like single beds. I still love that old car.

  • @Mr2stroketom
    @Mr2stroketom 7 років тому +11

    There was a third major car maker back then, that built better cars than holden and ford, not that he mentioned it.

    • @poisonedgas3831
      @poisonedgas3831 7 років тому +6

      Tom Quigley chrysler was always the best...

    • @Mr2stroketom
      @Mr2stroketom 7 років тому +4

      Yep, totally agree

    • @southwest3671
      @southwest3671 5 років тому +1

      Leyland?

    • @yurilemming4130
      @yurilemming4130 5 років тому +5

      VW beetles were built to 85% Aussie content, gearboxes, engines, castings all bodywork was pressed & assembled here in the 1960s, I worked there in foundry & heat treatment.Factory was in Westall Vic

    • @mikevale3620
      @mikevale3620 5 років тому +8

      Yes Chrysler was conveniently overlooked...despite it building the best 6 cylinder engines in Australia, the HEMI 6.

  • @ZephyrCarClub
    @ZephyrCarClub 5 років тому +2

    Pity they never showed all the British cars on the roads back then. They made the Holden seem older than what it was.

    • @martinloney6322
      @martinloney6322 2 місяці тому

      Most of them were inferior to the Holden.

  • @boriskarloff9992
    @boriskarloff9992 5 років тому +4

    Holden, "Australia's Own Car" fell apart in the first Redex. Not one of em made it home. Yet all 11 Peugeot 203s made it home with K Tubman winning in one. Australian conditions, bullshit, there's a lot more Australian conditions in Africa.

    • @davidhamilton506
      @davidhamilton506 5 років тому +1

      I liked Jack Murray, and if memory serves, he drove a '48 Ford Deluxe...

    • @tivet4
      @tivet4 4 роки тому +1

      australia made best but british doesnt want australia made car great british did sugar put in fuel tank holden damage motor by british

    • @gogogeedus
      @gogogeedus 3 роки тому

      @@tivet4 I could believe it, those old Poms are so Shifty!

    • @gogogeedus
      @gogogeedus 3 роки тому

      Holden never promoted racing their vehicles, and that was their policy, it was only later that they gave permition for cars to be modified buy an outside company formed by the Holden dealers, this was called the Holden Dealer Team.

  • @returnofthenative
    @returnofthenative 2 місяці тому

    I like 'olden, him my favourite.

  • @dsm1983A
    @dsm1983A 8 років тому

    Thanks for uploading this cool video.

  • @OzzysRadioHalfHour
    @OzzysRadioHalfHour 5 років тому +2

    Old Holdens never die.
    Old.

    • @colinl9018
      @colinl9018 5 років тому

      They just go Faster!

    • @rudolfpeterudo3100
      @rudolfpeterudo3100 5 років тому +1

      On a good day you could hear them rusting or was that Ford?

    • @OzzysRadioHalfHour
      @OzzysRadioHalfHour 5 років тому +1

      Ford.
      Found on rubbish dump

    • @ivanolsen8596
      @ivanolsen8596 4 роки тому

      Just get sent to Japan to be converted to Toyotas.

  • @denisthemenace.
    @denisthemenace. 2 місяці тому

    Our Australia. All gone now. Why did we let it happen?

  • @ronaldfazekas6492
    @ronaldfazekas6492 3 роки тому +1

    Sorry--but I am sure the "utility" or "ute" was not an Australian invention--American Dodge and Chevrolet predated it with the "express" body--later known as the "pickup" truck

  • @adoreslaurel
    @adoreslaurel 5 років тому +1

    Well the basic FJ design was a Detroit job, meant to be a compact Chevrolet. They rusted before your eyes. dripped oil all over the front engine mount rotting it out.

    • @tonyjones6689
      @tonyjones6689 5 років тому +3

      the oil leak was rust protection from the factory now you get it from the dealer

    • @adoreslaurel
      @adoreslaurel 5 років тому

      @@tonyjones6689 Oh great, thanks for that.

    • @7316bobe
      @7316bobe 5 років тому +1

      Yes and we all know what the F in FJ actually stood for.

    • @adoreslaurel
      @adoreslaurel 5 років тому

      @@7316bobe That doesn't sound good.

  • @starmanskye
    @starmanskye 7 років тому +2

    I dunno, seems odd that Australian entrepreneurs, manufacturers, engineers and inventors seemed to 'miss' the incredible opportunity and popular need for the universal drivetrain-chassis versatility of the Toyata Land Cruiser's platform practicality for multiple body-styles re: jeep, station-wagon and pickup. The Holden Ute seemed to be JUST practial enough to inhibitthe development of an Ausie 4X4 utility alternative. So when Japanese Toyota Landcruisers became available at at an affordable cost and in large numbers, with an established parts industry, there was a large pent-up demand market that Ausies never realized. Possibly, the demand was not enough to support developing a whole new brand just to satisfy a projected domestic niche-market.
    But it seems, Holden COULD have added a more utilitarian jeep 4X4 version to their lineup. By building a foreign alternative to British Landrover and American Willys Jeep as slightly upscale light-truck with offroad capability version, a 'bush truck', Japan found and filled a HUGE export trade. Too bad Australia couldn't have done something similiar. Failure of GM corporate imagination, or management reluctance to take a gamble?

    • @bossdog1480
      @bossdog1480 6 років тому +1

      starmanskye. I have seen a couple of 4wd Falcon utes with high ground clearance. I don't know who made them though.

    • @ivanolsen8596
      @ivanolsen8596 4 роки тому

      @@bossdog1480 They were converted using Willys parts, cant
      remember who did the conversion, Holden did a ute too.
      Neither took off, a shame, the owners loved them.

    • @bossdog1480
      @bossdog1480 4 роки тому +1

      @@ivanolsen8596 I saw an FC converted to a 4wd about 40 years ago in Bunbury. I don't know how they got it registered over there with the anti modified car Nazis, but it was around for a while. Looked 'diferent'.

    • @ivanolsen8596
      @ivanolsen8596 4 роки тому

      @@bossdog1480 I think 40 years ago the Bunbury Council would
      have handled the licensing of vehicles, before the nazis took over.
      The councils checked the vehicles themselves and if they thought
      it safe and roadworthy it got licensed.
      Now there are guidelines for mods, then it has to scrutenised
      by a so called engineer, hardly worth the bother anymore.
      BTW, I saw a 4WD Rolls Royce in QLD a few years ago,
      it came from Rainbow Beach.

    • @bossdog1480
      @bossdog1480 4 роки тому +1

      @@ivanolsen8596 The Nazis were already well established back then too. If you had an old Holden and it had to go over the Pits they would take a large crowbar and try to drive it through the floor. If it went through the car was only good for spare parts after that. That's why I was surprised that the 4WD FC was able to pass registration.
      The checking station is long gone. It used to be on the main street down near where Drooly's Pizza used to be. They used to work strictly to the book and you had to line up early or you wouldn't get seen that day. Many a good old car was denied rego by those p..ks. The GOOD thing with WA regos was that once a car was rego'ed it didn't have to be inspected each year like in NSW. The cops would always look your car over when they pulled you over and if they didn't like what they saw you got a sticker. That meant a trip to the Pits and if the car had ANY faults it would fail. In those days we never had much money so a lot of old cars never made it out alive.

  • @neilmcginn2074
    @neilmcginn2074 Рік тому

    Is that Leonard Teale doing the voice-over in Football Meatpies Kangaroos and Holden Cars ad?

  • @340jd
    @340jd Місяць тому

    No mention of Chrysler other than 3 seconds of a (Hey) Charger, bloody typical.

  • @dieter1215
    @dieter1215 9 років тому +1

    Thanks for the upload

  • @PaulHayman-tq5kb
    @PaulHayman-tq5kb 2 місяці тому

    The Holden broughm was the best Holden

  • @keithammleter3824
    @keithammleter3824 5 років тому +1

    Incidentally, those Ford Popular utilities ("Bandt utes") were disgustingly bad. My uncle had one in a moment of weakness. The engine was so gutless, that with any sort of load on, top gear could only be used down hill. But not a steep hill. Very poor brakes. Very poor reliability. He usually had at least two or three "failure to proceed" each year. He preferred to start it from cold with the crank handle as it had only a small low compression engine easy to turn, and using the starter motor cold would rapidly cause starter motor failure. What you would expect, really, given that it was essentially a pre-war English dirt cheap car.
    So, while a farmer might have wrote and asked for it, no farmer could put up with it.

  • @tamer1773
    @tamer1773 5 років тому +1

    I think it's unfortunate that the Australian built car is a thing of the past. Australian cars were sometimes direct copies of American models, but a lot of them managed to look "different, but familiar." They were a great take on the US cars adapted to the Australian market and quite often a marked improvement.

  • @Neil-Aspinall
    @Neil-Aspinall 5 років тому

    I was under the impression that the Ford Falcon was an American design? It was the under pinnings of the 1964 Mustang.

    • @erroneouscode
      @erroneouscode 5 років тому

      It was an American design. The first model as pictured in this film is virtually identical to the U.S version, but successive models veered further and further away.

    • @hebneh
      @hebneh 5 років тому +1

      The American Ford Falcon was introduced in late 1959 as a 1960 model. In the USA, foreign car sales had unexpectedly increased a great deal starting in 1958 as more people turned away from the immense and gaudy Detroit vehicles and bought compact imported cars instead. This pushed Ford, General Motors, and Chrysler into all bringing out small cars for 1960. And this craze for foreign cars led to a small number of Holdens being imported to Hawaii in the late '50s, although I don't think they ever got to the mainland USA.

  • @fishaholiclures
    @fishaholiclures 5 років тому +2

    So here in 2019, we really are no different than 1890, we are back to importing cars and fuel... and they say history never repeats itself.

    • @Papa-fv1rn
      @Papa-fv1rn 5 років тому +1

      Bradoutandabout, actually history always repeats itself.

    • @ivanolsen8596
      @ivanolsen8596 4 роки тому

      @steve gale Maybe, but they were designed in the good ole US of Hay
      and built by a Yank company, so what does that tell you?

  • @bigglesflysagain1749
    @bigglesflysagain1749 6 років тому

    After a FORD PREFECT, my Dad went to a Holden EK......then an FE .

    • @bossdog1480
      @bossdog1480 6 років тому +3

      BIGGLES, Did he go backwards? FE was before EK.

  • @jam63112
    @jam63112 7 років тому +4

    I remember Mad Max was in Australia

  • @neilforbes416
    @neilforbes416 3 роки тому +1

    3:59 Four years before the start of the (20th) Century? That would make it 1897 as the 20th Century began in 1901.

  • @Wandjina104
    @Wandjina104 2 місяці тому

    I had an FJ. Terrible car. So much fun.

  • @aussie.clippa
    @aussie.clippa 3 роки тому +1

    I was waitin for landcruiser Toyota v8 which conquered australia

  • @petercoppen3364
    @petercoppen3364 5 років тому +1

    Ray Martin and alot of others would be so sad to see what has happened now.

    • @neilforbes416
      @neilforbes416 5 років тому

      Ray Martin is still alive. You're talking of him as if he were dead.

    • @ivanolsen8596
      @ivanolsen8596 4 роки тому +1

      @@neilforbes416 Ray Martin is alive? I thought he was like Agro,
      only brought out of his box when needed.

    • @neilforbes416
      @neilforbes416 4 роки тому +1

      @@ivanolsen8596 LOL

  • @lorenzomagazzeni5425
    @lorenzomagazzeni5425 5 років тому +2

    Holdens and Ford and Chrislers made in Australia were bullet proof.

    • @frankwatt745
      @frankwatt745 5 років тому

      But not rust proof

    • @mickcarson8504
      @mickcarson8504 3 роки тому +1

      @@frankwatt745
      Kidding, Frank? I still own a 1965 Valiant AP6 PV v8 over 50 years and no rust.

  • @clarencejones7916
    @clarencejones7916 3 роки тому +2

    funny I always though Australians rode around on the backs of Kangaroos 🦘 and kept Koalas as pets 🙄🤔😆🤣😂

    • @anaussie213
      @anaussie213 3 роки тому +1

      We do.

    • @ivanolsen8596
      @ivanolsen8596 2 роки тому

      Only when we are not driving our Valiants across the gibbers.

  • @frankwatt745
    @frankwatt745 5 років тому

    Did I hear correctly? Open road speed limits not until 1970s?
    They were 60 mph most places in the 1960s when I got my driver's license and i'm pretty sure at least 10 years before that. Maybe he meant the metric measure speed of 100 kph which is what it became when Australia caught up with the non-Anglo world and adopted metric measures.

    • @linmal2242
      @linmal2242 5 років тому +3

      frank watt Back then you would see a road sign with a slant through it denoting 'unrestricted' meaning any speed you liked (or were game enough to do) !

    • @frankwatt745
      @frankwatt745 5 років тому

      @@linmal2242 : It didn't mean 'unrestricted', merely open road limits which in my case was 60 mph. That is a misconception widely held. See www.whichcar.com.au/features/a-brief-history-of-open-speed-limits-in-australia It might have applied in the Northern Territory.
      There was also a sign comprising a white circle with a horizontal black line (very similar to the present-day 'No Entry' signs that have a red disc with a horizontal white line.) IIRC, it was atop a sturdy guide post indicating the left side of the road in places where there wasn't a clear view of the road ahead (because of a curve or brow of a hill). They were matched by a plain white disc indicating the right hand side. That was before the days of the red and white reflectors used now.

    • @davidhamilton506
      @davidhamilton506 5 років тому +1

      Frank, correct, that round white sign with the diagonal black stripe from top right to bottom left, was referred to as a derestricted speed sign, but in fact had a prima facia limit of 60mph. If caught exceeding 60mph, the onus was on the driver to prove, that at the time, his speed was not endangering himself or any other road user. (Read that as a long straight stretch of road in good condition). Later, they did away with the round sign (that had clear glass "marbles" for driving at night), and introduced a larger white reflective flat, rectangular sign with it's black border and diagonal black stripe. That sign was our emblem for the *Black Rebels Motorcycle Club* , that we hand painted onto the shoulder sleeves of our leather jackets. Ah yes, fond memories of that other life............PS, Just looked at the link you gave Lin Mal. Excellent, along with all the other leads in red. Thank you Frank, cheers mate...

  • @306champion
    @306champion 6 років тому +1

    The "FX" or"48-215" is before my time but I thought it was known as the 48-218. I remember when speed limits were imposed (in Vic anyway). It had been open slather so long as you could prove it was safe to do so but if it was unsafe the limit was 50 mph. First a 70 mph limit was imposed but shortly after it was reduced to 60 mph which was closely followed by the metric conversion to 100 kph (62mph). I remember the "P76" as a 15 year old. I nicknamed it the mobile wedge at the time but in truth it was probably before its time and now they have a bit of a cult following.
    Oh how I remember the "Sin Bins", always wanted one, never had one lol.
    I got to mention 12:16, to see this add (which I remember very well) gives me a hell of a chuckle considering the controversy of obesity these days, I'm only pointing the difference in time. Great viewing.

    • @bossdog1480
      @bossdog1480 6 років тому +1

      306 CHAMPION Definately 48-215.

    • @davidhamilton506
      @davidhamilton506 5 років тому +2

      *306 CHAMPION* Ah yes, the P76, the only vehicle at the time, where one could lay a 44 gallon (205litre), drum on it's side in the boot (trunk), and close the lid................The drum, as depicted in one of the car's advertising stunts is empty, as there's no way you could manhandle a full one in, short of rolling it out of a Bobcat's bucket, and pity the dead drop to the boot floor and how the rear suspension would hold up. Then of course, to unload, would see the boot lid removed, and grapple hooks hook under the top edge, hmm, no, second thoughts, I reckon I'll have that 44 of Anti-Freeze delivered, lol................ Anti-Freeze, by volume is far heavier that petrol. Actually, that advertisement for the P76 at the time, was just to show it's humongous boot capacity. Thanks for the memories...

    • @peterpiper831
      @peterpiper831 Рік тому

      The regular Holden was the 48-215, the Ute was the 50-2106 and I'm sure there were other designations for the Business model, Taxi model....

  • @waynewright2886
    @waynewright2886 5 років тому +3

    Bloody Good Machines You Aussies Built, Although, You Had the U.S. Versions of the Chevrolet Impala, Built there, along with Pontiac, Cadillac, Maybe Oldsmobile, as For Ford, the Falcon was Started in Australia for the 1960 Model Year, it Came to us in the States in 59 for the 60 Model Year, & was Fords 1st American Smaller Cars for 60, & Lasted Until New Years Day 1970, when Ford Stopped Building them here in the U.S. & Replaced them with the Maverick (1969-77), but you Aussies Kept them in Production Until After the 21st Century.
    As for Chrysler Models Built in Aussie Land, Y'all had the Big Dodges, The Bloody Chargers that were Different that the American Chargers in the 70's, the Aussie Built Dodge Phoenix's Y'all Built Down There, were here in America Known as the Plymouth Fury's.
    it's Weird, but it's the Australian Way of Life with your Bloody Holden's, & Aussie Built Chevy's, & Fords!

    • @gogogeedus
      @gogogeedus 3 роки тому

      Yer it was called the Falcon but it changed every couple of years in design, we designed all our own falcons up until the last one, we also built and designed the territory which was an SUV based around the falcon platform, Ford have been built in Australia since the T model rolled of the production line at the disused wool-store in 1925, we produced all our own iron and as far as I know they were completely Australian made. we made our own cars before Tarrant got involved in building Fords.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tarrant_automobile

  • @MarkHenstridge
    @MarkHenstridge 4 роки тому

    As a teen in the 70s, I had an EH Holden

    • @David_P132
      @David_P132 4 роки тому

      As a teen in the 60s I pranged Dad's EH Holden 😁

  • @markissboi3583
    @markissboi3583 4 роки тому +3

    👨‍💻The dirt road in our street 60s -70s b4 bitchumen was laid the POT HOLES were so Big !😳HOW BIG ?🤷‍♂️ a volkswagen full of young teen GIRLS disappeared down a pothole and came back as women 😆👩‍🔬that's how deep they were haa! then we got a B/W TV 1975 & seen countdown just as i was growing up 14yr old wheew 🥇👍🐨🦘

  • @duncanyourmate2433
    @duncanyourmate2433 Рік тому

    Ray always leaves out something , We were a closed country , if it wasnt an English /Commonwealth car it attracted big Tariff Taxes , the original 215 , Fx , came from GM Canada , may of been designed in Detroit , but left Canada ,

  • @ralphburton6947
    @ralphburton6947 5 років тому +1

    Well worth watching.....v. interesting.

  • @servicarrider
    @servicarrider 8 років тому

    Very interesting. Thanks.

  • @NoosaHeads
    @NoosaHeads Місяць тому

    As good as modern cars are, I doubt if the average modern (2024) sedan could put up with that 10,000 mile torture trail.

    • @tonyp2865
      @tonyp2865 19 днів тому

      Toyota 70 series would do 10 times over.

  • @kirstinetermansen7234
    @kirstinetermansen7234 5 років тому +1

    I'm impressed, they pretty high psychological sell
    Look as USA trained

  • @ForkliftDriver1321
    @ForkliftDriver1321 5 років тому

    Thank you

  • @stanojevicnatasa2514
    @stanojevicnatasa2514 7 років тому +2

    What is the name of the cartoon at 00:13? Thank you ahead....