He is Robin Leach. He is Jada Markin. This is Car Keys.
Good morning, our hello to our listeners for this week's version of Car Keys with Jada
Markin, Robin Leach. J is going to give us a report from Lime Rock, which is where
he is as of this show's taping. And I want to start out by saying that we are rapidly
finishing the summer season, which means we will be heading into fall and then winter,
of course. And I want to start out by suggesting some comments for people to
start checking their cars and various area departments in prepping their cars,
your cars listeners, for this coming winter season. There are three areas,
maybe they're more, J can add in that I think you should be thinking about
looking out on your cars as you head towards the snow season. The first one
is tires. We talk on this show periodically about tires and tread wear
and tread depth and other things that affect cars performance on the road,
depending on what condition your tires are in. In the wintertime when you
have the chance of snowfall, you really want to know that you have
tires that can rip through the snow and reach the pavement with some form of
traction. And tires with very little tread life left are not the answer to
that. So you should take a walk around your car and check each of the
four corners for the tire tread depth situation. Normally they would be
about the same if your tires are in good condition and your cars have been in
good alignment and has not caused tires to wear unevenly. But maybe you put on
two tires in the front and you didn't put two tires in the back and you may
find that there is some marked difference in tread depth. So the more
tread depth you have, the better for winter season driving. The next area
of course is being... Hold on, hold on, hold on with the tires. Go ahead.
Well, I think it's always the obvious about tires. I mean, if you can put
snow tires on the car, you're better off. Or else, obviously, all
seasons tires are reasonably adequate. But all-wheel drive doesn't negate
the advantage of a full-blown snow tire. If you have summer tires, you do have
to be careful. And that's all I'm going to say about tires. Some summer
tires, like I put on my little sports car, are not meant to operate under
certain temperatures, which is around 35, 40 degrees, I believe. Fair
night. So there is that little issue with summer tires. But you should
not be running summer tires in the winter anyway. So that's all I have
to say about tires for now. All good additions to what I started out
with for you listeners. So just be very observational on your tire
condition, what type of tires you may be running on your cars. And if
you've got the money to afford a separate set of snow tires, only
tread wear, that's a good thing to be able to do. But then I'd like
to know, I'd like some of you listeners, if you're listening and you
happen to put studded snow tires on.
Take them off in the summer.
Take them off in the summer and stop flattering around our asphalt
roads, as I hear often, once the snow is gone, because they do damage
to the roads and they are a wasted wear factor for those tires to be
used in the next winter season. Next, I was going to go before Jay
supplemented my comments on the tire situation is, be sure that
your windshield washer system is working properly. And then you
have filled your windshield washer bottles, which are normally
under the front hood of most cars, if not all cars, with
proper anti-freeze protection windshield washer fluid. That is
not the anti-freeze you put in your radiator in your car. So
don't dump that stuff into your windshield washer bottle, because
that will not do a great job of clearing wind windshield. But you
do want to be sure that A, your bottle is full of minus 20 or
minus 25 degree below protection, because even sometimes the lines
between the bottle and the windshield washers where they
come out can freeze even with this, with this protection
feature in the windshield washer fluid. I guess that's those are
the two main areas. All windshield wiper blades, you want to
have windshield wiper blades that are not streaking when they go
on when the windshield gets wet. You should always, if your
car is parked outside and there's a big frost factor on
your windshield when you start up, be careful, but please
remove, take each of the windshield wipers on your front
windshield carefully in your hand and sort of peel it off the
windshield before you have to turn your windshield wipers on
if you do so before they have thawed from being frozen to the
windshield. That plus good windshield wiper blades are
probably the final area, unless Jay has something else along
those lines to add to this particular topic, and we will
not and turn your wipers off. I mean, we're getting way out
here. I mean, it's winter and I was going to say it's good.
We're going to forget this. Turn your wipers off in winter. If
you're going to leave your wipers on the windshield, because
when you restart the car and the wipers are stuck to the
windshield, it is not good for the electric motor.
Also the other other thing is if you can lift your blades
off and some hoods do not allow this to happen and put them in
an upward position vertical to the windshield overnight, that's
another good idea to keep your wiper blades from freezing to
the windshield.
Let's let's talk about a few more summer things and events. I
mean, it's so nice out and we have a few more weeks of good
weather. So yeah, like I don't know, you mentioned that I
was here at Lime Rock Park and Lime Rock is part of this
historic festival that happens every year in our area and it is
the opportunity. I think it's the best opportunity for car
enthusiasts to see up close some very, very interesting,
sometimes very valuable cars and this all starts out. We
have talked about it. I think a couple of weeks ago, the
Thursday parade that happened this past week between Lime Rock,
Salisbury, Lakeville and ending in Falls Village. And for those
of you people who have never been to the Falls Village, I
call it a cocktail party in the center of town where all the
cars meet at the end of the parade. It's just a fabulous
gathering of very beautiful cars of all ages. And it's not just
the cars, it's the people and the stories. And it's fascinating
and it's amazing how many car people and cars we have just
in this area. It's truly incredible. And Robin, you
could, don't you have old cars? You should showcase one car
too. Well, you know, it's nice to report from it as which is
being done as we are taping this show. So it will be too late
for listeners to go this year. But this is something that
cars should put on their calendar every year. And we
will probably bring it up periodically in the future as we
get closer to next year's event. But it also is supplemented
by the Falls Village event too, which is also a place where
you can see a lot of over great older cars that have been
restored and fills the streets of the town of Canaan, which is
technically we call it Falls Village once or twice a year,
Jay, is it once a year?
There is a car show in July that has already occurred.
Yeah, there's a car show. I think it's in July that that
I've missed every year. That's pretty good too. That's also in
Falls Village. I think that the type of cars are very
different. But again, I have not been to the Falls Village car
show and the one in the summer. I can only attest to what was
there this weekend and and and you know, there and there was a
car show here at the track yesterday and some of the cars
are the same. There were probably a lot more cars here
yesterday. I know that the local roads were jammed early
yesterday morning and that went on through part of the morning.
You know, we had I don't know how many hundred troopers for the
NASCAR event and then here I think I don't know what happened
but there was there was a bit of a mess around the roads here
on 112. But I was already here. So I it's only here, say
far, but far, you know, for our listeners interest because
we keep referring to yesterday and the day before our shows
are taped weekly on Mondays. So you can do the figuration when we
say yesterday was a Sunday in this van. But I want to talk
about the cars themselves. And you know, I think we this is me
personally, I have, you know, the cars that are of interest to
me are the cars that I looked at when I was a kid. So I'm
partial to the cars of the 60s and 70s. And even 80s. And now we
see cars from the 90s, making it to, you know, Historic's
Festival. And I'm going, wait a minute, those are not old
cars. But then again, yes, they are. You know, 30, 40 year old
cars are vintage cars. And there's a great collection of
triumphs here. There's a great collection of there's a
huge contingent of racing Porsches air cooled 911s
announcements that have been in the news as we've been arriving
towards September 30, which is the date that the $7500 national
tax credit ends for any cars electric car purchases that have
not occurred before September 30 of this year. So if anybody is
listening in there planning, you're planning on getting an
electric car and you want the tax credits, you better have it
done by September 30. That's just a minor announcement as part
of our show. Not really minor $7500 is not $7500 is not minor,
but it is it is a date that is coming fast. As we head into
the fall. A couple of other things. One of the things I was
reading in one of my periodicals was what car makers
try to do to enhance car sales. And slant is I don't know I
didn't know that this could be as was possible. Slant is produces
which is Chrysler G and all that knowledge has a Durango model
out and they've got something called a SRT Hellcat jailbreak
version of the Durango, which is a big sort of midsize
crossover, I guess. The headline I'm reading here is the
2026 Dodge Durango, which has they yet to hit the dealer's
lots, I think, is getting a customized little jailbreak
edition that allows for more than a six million combinations of
features such as color options for brake calipers, badging,
seatbelts, wheels, and who knows what else to make up more
than six million options available. I don't even know how
you can design a vehicle that would have six million options
available. It's a mind boggling number. I think you help enhance
the sales of a vehicle whose sales have been diminishing, but
the vehicle is not disappearing. Jay, let me barge into
this. Yeah, I think it's totally ridiculous. First of
all, I think it's not six million options. It's six million
permutations, so combination of options. So you know, we're not
here to do math, but you know that that you know, yes, okay,
six million permutations so you can get green calipers and
yellow seatbelts or whatever. Here's a here's the thing. We
sell cars in this country. Dealers buy cars months in
advance. So dealers are stocking cars. So the
dealers are going to be spec ordering these vehicles, and
you're still going to walk on the lots and buying whatever the
dealer has. Nobody is nobody is buying is ordered spec ordering
a Dodge Durango in any foreseeable future. And I just
think it's ridiculous. And I think Stellantis is any other
manufacturer and any other manufacturer that tries this
is is is is I agree with you, Jay, ridiculous. I wouldn't
even think about wondering what my brake calipers should, could
know I want to be what color I have no problem with I have no
problems with the ability to order cars but right that then
needs to be a sales model and and so yeah, make it that you
can order a car if you go order if you you know the
extreme opposite is Porsche where you actually do spec order
cars and you go down the list of options and I've tried to
do it just for argument sake, even though I'm not in a market
for a new Porsche, you can't just do it in one session, it
takes hours and hours to go down the list. And it's tedious and
it gets really irritating because you kind of forget what
you started the boxes you started ticking. But again, if
you if the if the business model is to sell cars by
allocating, you know, reservations and then you
can spec order your own car. Great. But American car
manufacturers and the and the sales model in this country has
never been about that. It's been about putting inventory on
lots and letting people walk the lots and walk out with
whatever was shoved down their throat. And I'm being a little
hard here, but that's the way I see it.
Porsche enough. Stellantis is also revised vitalizing the
charger, I believe it is a charger with a gasoline powered
version of the next generation charger. But they're omitting a
very big option, at least in the beginning, which is that of
the Hemi V8. And they're trying to do it with the six
owned versions going forward. Jay, I'm not sure it is charger
coming in electric version. Now, but the interesting thing is that
they're bringing back a gasoline or they're enhancing a gasoline
version of the next generation charger as opposed to continuing
to try to make this push towards electrifying this
particular car as well as other electric cars, which is also
being postponed by other manufacturers to as we go
towards 2030.
I just see one desperate situation after another in the
Stellantis world, but that's just me.
Yeah, that is you.
Hey, I don't know.
Let's go to the topic of the slate, which we've discussed
in a couple of previous versions of this show. One of the
things that is happening as the slay is trying to get to
market is that the price has already jumped for the minimum
intended minimum price of under $20,000 before you started to
having to add options. It's now more like $25,000. And the
problem with this is I understand that the couple of
manufacturers, and I'll state because I think I saw the
name is Toyota, are trying to bring forth a new smaller
pickup truck in the $30,000 under price range, albeit
maybe today will be fossil fuels or that is gasoline
engine version versions of this and not electrified. But as
Slate prepares to make his debut into our American market, and
it is very appealing when you read this, when you read the
stories about what it's going to be. And they're trying to
get $50 or $100 deposits from people and they want to build
150,000 a year. Could the slate be J? This is for your
comment. Too little too late type of situation.
No, I don't think I don't I don't think so. I don't think so
at all. But the concept is going to evolve. So you know, we
remember when Tesla was going to come out with a $30,000 model
three, and it ended up being, you know, but it actually
happens now. But that's another story. I think this I mean, I
haven't followed the latest news on Slate. But, you know,
for little little trucklets, I wish we'd get the Suzuki Samurai
back, which I saw. I saw a new one in in Europe just last week
or the week before when I was there. And it looks very much
like the original one. You really have to look at it
closely. It is hardly any larger. So it's a very, very
compact little SUV. It looks as boxy as the original. And
yet it's a totally modern vehicle. And I just wish we'd
see this on our on our side of the pond. So yeah, I think
there's a market for, you know, cool little electric trucks
or SUVs. Yeah, short answer. Slate has appeared in the
September version of car and driver with a very long and
detailed article on the slate. And along with probably I
haven't read this word by word. But it's just, you know, keep
getting delays here and delays there. And every time there's
a delay, the price has an option to change a little bit from
what the headline says. That's a totally ridiculous. I think
optional suggestion about what the slate is all about. I just
think that, you know, we've talked about the slate J and you've
looked at the you've looked at it in depth, I think more than I
have. The question is, you know, Ford's got the Maverick,
right, which comes as a hybrid version of its basic power
train. And I think it was and may still be just under the
$30,000 availability situation if you can find one with
nothing, no options. Will this slate at $25,000 sell better
than a Ford Maverick with a combination of a hybrid power
train, which I think is more practical still, as we move
towards the electric world of cars. And people are still sort
of not necessarily going towards full electric yet in numbers
that make a lot of sense.
Well, the slate is not yet out. It's going to take another
couple years. So things are going to change between now and then
then I look forward to seeing it. And, you know, there's always
room for another vehicle, I think so.
Okay. Anything major about the goings on at Lime Rock of the
weekend that is about to end as we are doing this show?
I just saw a very nice early 70s Cadillac El Dorado turn in front
of me. I was just like, it's like a throwback in time. And it's
just, it's just very cool, just nice old cars. I wish I
agree. Some of the old designs are really, you know, it's a
heart you heart back to those days of those designs. Square,
of course, they were both sides in many cases. When you're
talking about the 80s and 70s versions of cars, right? When did
the size start diminishing?
1977. Remember, 76 was the last of the long hoods and long tails
and 77. Everybody chopped their cars like GM chopped the
Chevy Caprices and Ford chopped their LTDs or whatever they
were called, country's cars.
And now also were huge boats and disappeared and all that. But
boy, when you see them today, it does for those of us who are
old enough to have been back in that earlier era. It is really
a wonderful memory enhancing what I think happened.
The biggest trend I think is if you compare, you know, when
when we were younger, like in the 60s or 70s, I was not I'm
not going to say there were only but either the car market was
basically European manufacturers and American
manufacturers and American manufacturers at cars that were
way bigger than I'd say average and the European cars were just
so small. And it's interesting when you see them now, you
know, side by side, the old cars, it's like the European
cars are so small, the little fiat's, the little mini
Morse's, the little Triumph's, MG's are so small cars. And we
had in those days here, we had, you know, big boats. And now
it's like all the cars, you know, if you look at what GM
produces, Ford produces, or the European manufacturers, all
those cars are just pretty much the same size, you know,
within a certain model range. Anyway, and so cars have
become a lot more all the same. But then again, there's a
Pagani here on the on the Midway and you know, a Pagani is
multimillion dollar car. It is a work of art. It's a sports
car. What they call a hypercar. It's not my my type of car,
even if I had all the money in the world, which I don't.
But it's it's a work of art. It's cool. So yeah, a lot
going on here. But a lot of stories met a shop owner that
has a shop just in Lakeville that preps Porsches. And I knew of
the name, but I'd never met the gentleman and very nice guy
and, and builds old Porsches or rebuilds old Porsches.
Well, we you've mentioned this particular place a couple of
times earlier and earlier shows as well. So have you have
not been to his shop though, right?
I have not. But I certainly will in the very foreseeable
future.
He's got pretty good business, I understand from my limited
knowledge of his presence in our area. Yep. And we are, it's
interesting. I'm not the West Connecticut colonel's got very
good service garages, when you say, and then you have
specialists like this Porsche guy and who's tucked away and
down a little side street with I don't think there's any
signage on the street. No, the main street to get down there.
Certainly doesn't need it. He doesn't need it. So it all makes
this area that we do our recording and the show in a
very sort of specialized place from to be living in,
driving in. And I guess we could bring up as we get
towards the end of this show. The fact that there's been
a lot of repaving going on, you brought it up, I think
an earlier show around our corner. And the interesting
thing I'm watching is what happens when the newly paved
area meets the area that may have been paved two or three
years ago, but they're not going to continue paving putting
the new paving on to recently paved old area. It's you know,
you can really tell the difference drivers when
you're the tire noise that you get in your car changes
as you go from a newly paved road where it might be much
more quiet and less noticeable. And you drive on to a road
that is two years worn down two years, two to three years
down, and the noise picks up as the roughness of the
pavement is starting to appear as the surface slowly
erodes, I guess, or loses its new smooth luster.
Yeah, and I find myself accelerating and picking up
speed when I'm on new pavement. Absolutely. And then you
hit the old pavement and the friction increases between the
tires and the and the road and you slow down where you
might have been going downhill and speeding up. Any more
things? A little safety tip. Trying to think of
something. While you're thinking, I'm going to just
say, get back to the old bicycles on the road
situation. I'm over here in my Massachusetts summer place
and the people are out bicycling, and we are mostly two
lane roads. And some of them are two lane of older width
designed in the newer two lane roads. And we have lots of
trees draping over these roads. And let me tell you, when
the sun is out, or when it and you go, you see a road
lined with trees, it gets a lot darker. And unless the
bicyclists have their blinking lights on, and now all
them have them on in the front, most of them have them on
the back. They are very difficult to see drivers. And I
know it happens around our Northwest corner as well. We've
got a lot of bicycles going around there too in the
summer months and into the fall and picking up lights.
Let's you know, school buses are back on the road. So
they are indeed. Beware of that. And don't pass
them. They're getting school buses with cameras on
those side markers to go out. But I know a lot of towns in
Connecticut have got cameras now that are designed to
capture people who break the law and pass a school bus that
is either stopped or stopping to pick up children or
drop them off depending on what time of day it is. Okay,
enjoy the rest of summer. Yes, enjoy the rest of the
summer drive safely. And we will be on with another
show very soon. This is Carkeys, Jay DeMarcan, Robin
Leach. Carkeys with Robin Leach and Jay DeMarcan is
produced at the facilities of WHDD 91.9 FM, Robinhood
Radio dot com, Sharon Connecticut.
About this episode
Robin Leach and Jay de Marcken discuss essential winter car preparations, focusing on tire safety and maintenance, including the importance of tread depth and the advantages of snow tires. Jay reports live from Lime Rock Park, highlighting a historic car festival and the impressive variety of vintage vehicles on display. The duo also debates the latest automotive trends, including Stellantis' new customizable Dodge Durango and the anticipated electric Slate pickup truck, while reflecting on the evolution of car design and the significance of proper vehicle care as seasons change.