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On 01/03/25 20:36, J. J. Lodder wrote:You're being generous if you think it was just forgetting. The display he and his wingman Vance just gave was clearly intended to have Ukraine twisting in the wind.Kerr-Mudd, John <admin@127.0.0.1> wrote:right-safety-device-181812.html?stockInventory=undefined>
>On Wed, 25 Sep 2024 14:40:44 +0100 Phil <phil@anonymous.invalid>[-]
wrote:>I was more than a little surprised, just this morning, to find
that in my local branch of Halfords, for a mere £3.99, I can buy
a handy guide to stick on my windscreen:
>
<https://www.halfords.com/motoring/travel-accessories/travel-equipment/speed>
>>>>>
I can't help wondering who, in the 21st century, is expected to
buy this "safety device".
Classic cars without dual display?>But requiring scriptytosh to view the website is standard.
You can still buy new speedometers with a single display, for
classic cars. It proves how classic they are.
>
OTOH, most new cars sold in Europe have single scale speedometers.
It is the dual scale things which have become classic. Even the new
Minis have a single scale, kilometers only, (don't know about Minis
sold in Britain)
I have never seen an Australian car with a dual mph/km/h display. I
presume that the dual display is confined to countries who started to
transition to metric and never finished the job. A bit like the idiot
who said he had a solution to end a war but forgot to invite one of the
parties to the negotiations.
Does any country other than the UK have dual-display speedos?The US, although with electronic dashes it is likely to be one-at-a-time and switchable. Dual displays on US cars began showing up in the late '60s.
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