329 lines
27 KiB
Plaintext
329 lines
27 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 2400
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Title: HPR2400: My commute into work
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr2400/hpr2400.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-19 02:20:46
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---
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This in HPR episode 2,400 I'm entitled My Commute Into Work.
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It is hosted by Bellomeberg and in about 37 minutes long and Karimaklin flag.
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The summary in this episode may record an episode across an entire commute into work.
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This episode of HPR is brought to you by an honesthost.com.
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Get 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HPR15.
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That's HPR15.
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Better web hosting that's honest and fair at An Honesthost.com.
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Well hello, my name is Dave, the love bug and you could be listening to this in one of
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two places.
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So I'm going to be publishing this to my anchor station this morning, this morning being
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Friday the 15th of September.
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I'm also going to be posting this as an episode to Hacker Public Radio.
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In a response to episode 2,377 of Hacker Public Radio where Mr X drove into work and recorded
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his commute, I thought I would do the same and it actually kind of falls in line with
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something that I said I was going to do on anchor a couple of days ago where I said
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I was going to record my entire commute into work.
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So all is good, all is good.
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So if you're listening on HPR and you've never heard of anchor then you can find my anchor
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station over at thelovebug.org for slash anchor.
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If you're on anchor and you've never heard of Hacker Public Radio then you can find my
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profile on my correspondent page on Hacker Public Radio at thelovebug.org slash HPR.
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So in terms of Hacker Public Radio I did a little bit of looking back as to how prolific
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I've been with recording episodes for HPR and it looks as though I'm doing this exactly
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the right moment.
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Now the general understanding expectation rule is that as a correspondent you should
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record one episode at least once a year.
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Now there are some people who record significantly more frequently than that and there are other
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correspondents that record significantly less frequently than that.
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But looking at my history I have only recorded two episodes.
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I have appeared on others but as a correspondent I have only ever recorded two episodes.
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One was episode 1890 which was entitled a short walk with my son.
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That was back in October of 2015 and that was me walking back from church with my son
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on a Saturday morning which I believe ended with me bumping him up the front steps at
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my house in his push chair which he found incredibly funny.
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My second episode for HPR was episode 2117 which was a what's in my bag for pod crawl which
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I recorded back in September of 2016 I'll stop making that horrible noise there we go.
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There I detailed in quite nauseating detail and also on video what I was taking to pod crawl
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in the way of technology, amusingly the majority of which I didn't actually use.
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So October 2015 September 2016 it's now September 2017 so I am absolutely right for recording
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this for HPR.
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So I'm recording this on my work Samson Galaxy A5 with a newer NW-W-E-R La Valleier
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La Valleier mic as recommended very frequently by Jonathan Culp.
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I have used this, I'm going to put words on it and you're going to get a sweet noise
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all the time so hopefully it's not too bad.
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Yeah he's used it prolifically on his HPR recordings and I've done a couple of recordings
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on anchor using it.
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Recording using the Ophonic Edit Android app as a recorder two reasons for that firstly
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because it's damn good recording software and secondly is I am going to run this through
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Ophonic as a web service to clean up the audio before I publish it to both of the locations
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where it's going to be ultimately sent to.
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I'm not sure if I've mentioned this before so I'm going to mention it again.
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I do have a number of options available to me for recording podcasts on the go so this
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is one of them.
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The lapel mic with one or more of my portable devices via my phone or all my tablets.
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But I also have the portable podcasting setup that I created that I used on Wednesday evening
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to record a conversation with my son Alex which I posted to anchor on Wednesday evening.
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If you're on anchor have a look at my episodes and you'll see what they're called.
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Set on my doorstep episode one.
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Yes.
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So the setup there is my Google Pixel C tablet with a USB-C to USB-A on the go adapter
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in which I then plug my USB microphone audio technology, no it's not an audio technology.
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It's a Samsung 2Q-AQ2U, Samsung Q2U which I have mentioned on HBR before.
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It's the equivalent of the AudioTenic here to 2,100 USB which is a USB and an XLR mic.
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It's actually the microphone that I use in my studio for podcasting and doing the podcast
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each week.
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So it's a very, very good and incredibly good value for money, microphone and even some
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of the professional podcasters like Daniel J. Lewis of the audacity to podcast recommends
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the AudioTenic at 2,100 USB as a good podcasting mic particularly for those people on a budget.
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We don't monetize any of our podcasting activities so yeah, good value for money, stroke budget
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works for me.
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So yeah, when I'm out and about and I'm doing podcasting that will be the setup I use.
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So metabolite, the adapter, USB microphone and I'll record into the euphonic edit as well.
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So yeah, it is all good.
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Yeah, Mr. X, when he did his episode a few days ago on HBR he was talking about the
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podcast that he's had in the past, he's got, he had two Ford Fokai, but I actually had
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a huge number of cars in the past.
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I first passed my driving test, I think it was 1997 at the ripe old age of 24, I was very
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late starting to drive.
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I didn't see the point in it, I didn't see an insisting in it, so I didn't bother.
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But when I did learn to drive it, it was one of those kind of eureka moments, wow, I can
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drive, I can move myself around, I am good to drive absolutely everywhere.
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I remember when I first passed my driving test and bought my first car, I used to go out
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a lunchtime from work and just drive around for three quarters of an hour because I could.
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So yeah, my first car was a Red Mark I Ford Fiesta, I believe it was a V suffix registration
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plate which would have placed it in 1979, VWX.
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Yeah, I'm sure it was V. It was a 1.1 economy, now obviously the word economy means
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utterly gutless.
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I really struggled to get any particular performance out of that vehicle, although just anecdotally
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I had a really amusing situation when I had that car.
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You could find yourself foot to the floor, following wind, downhill and you still wouldn't
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be going more than about 50, 55 miles an hour in it, but I remember driving down the A3
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near Gilford in the south of England, and I didn't even bother looking at the speedo
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because I knew that my car wasn't capable of going over 60 miles an hour anyway.
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So I just know what I thought, bombing down the A3, Gilford Cathedral in the distance,
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I remember the day very clearly, and there's a services petrol station and as I was coming
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on to that, I kind of looked down and see if I needed fuel, and notice that my speedo
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said 100 miles an hour, I'm like there is no way in the world that this car is doing
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100 miles an hour, so I kind of slowed down a bit and I thought this is really, really
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slow.
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And I noticed that I don't need fuel anyway, so I went to the petrol station and I stopped
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at the petrol pump, just about to get out of the car, I looked down at the speedo and
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it said 40, so what had actually happened is I must have gone past the point of 12 o'clock
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on the speedometer, and the speedo needle had slipped for 40 miles an hour ahead of itself.
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And yeah, basically I was doing 100 miles an hour and I was doing 60, which was incredibly
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disappointing, and yet somewhat relieving at the same time, I don't think my car would
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have coped with the concept of going 100 miles an hour without bits falling off it.
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So my second car after that was a Austin Mini Metro 1.3, it was a metallic blue, and
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I remember vividly after I'd switched to that car, that because obviously I'd been
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used to having to make the car work with my old Ford Fiesta because it was so gutless.
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The first time I tried to execute an overtake on a dual carriageway, I nearly went into
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the vehicle, the back of the vehicle I was trying to overtake, because going from a 1.1
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gutless wonder until 1.3, it admittedly it wasn't a particularly powerful 1.3, it was
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significantly more powerful than the one I had before, so I had to kind of very quickly
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adjust my expectations of the vehicle that I was driving, so I didn't crash it.
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But that wasn't a bad car, I mean anybody who's driven a Mini Metro in the past will
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know, they're not exactly the most aesthetically pleasing or desirable cars, but to me it was
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quite something.
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The car I had after that was my pride and joy, it was a Suzuki Swift L-plate, so L prefix
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in the UK which means it was from 1991, and this would have been about 1999-2000, I got
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that car and it was gorgeous, it was a 1.4, it wasn't particularly high spec'd, so it was
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fairly, what's the word?
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In fact no, it would have been earlier than 1990, 1999, so yeah it wasn't really high spec'd,
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the interior wasn't very well-kitted out, but it was a gorgeous car, it was gorgeous
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to drive, it was good to look at, it was dog blue Suzuki Swift, and I loved it, unfortunately
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around about that time of my life I entered into financial difficulties, and because the
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vehicle itself was on finance I was forced basically, voluntarily, admittedly, to return
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the vehicle to its rifle owner which was the finance company, so a little bit of a
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dark situation there, both in sort of terms of my personal life at the time, and also
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the fact that I had to give up what was essentially a beautiful car.
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After that I had another Mini Metro, it was a 1.1 liter Mini Metro on a D-plate which
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would have been 1986 registered car, and it was actually my mum, it was her car, which
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she gave to me actually, but it wouldn't have got much on the, what you call it, part
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of exchange or private sale, because it was an old car, it wasn't particularly powerful,
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it was a car, it got me around, so I was happy with it, it did exactly what it was supposed
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to do, but I tried to think how long I had that for, I think I must have driven it for
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a good year, year and a half before I ended up replacing it, you don't have to forgive
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me, because I'm doing this from memory and my chronology of this next set of cars is
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a little bit, a little bit hazy, I believe that the next car I had after that was a company
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car through work, because I was actually acting as customer services manager at the time,
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so I had a company car, which was a white Ford Cavalier, which to me was a tank, because
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I had two mini-metros, a Ford Fiesta and a Suzuki Swift, I think used to small cars, and
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as we go through the remainder of this chronology, you will appreciate that I am very much used
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to smaller cars, so yeah, moving on from that, I believe the next car I had was a, a Peugeot
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205, a Peugeot 205, oh, crumbs, what was the designation? It was a 1.4, it was beautiful,
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it was a red, I think it was an XSI on an F-play, so 1998 F prefix, red-stress play in the
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UK, now that was the car, my second car that I actually intended to keep for life, beautiful car,
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it drove like a dream, it was responsive, it was very, very pokey, both in size and in performance,
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and yeah, that would have been the car I would have kept, and unfortunately, through circumstances,
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outside of my control, that car was quite brutally taken away from me, it was a very cold and icy night,
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the car was parked on a side road where it had been for, you know, six, nine months previous,
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someone came around the corner at the dead of night, I was asleep in bed, and misjudged it,
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skidded, smashed into the car, broke it off, so absolutely gutted about that, because like I say,
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that was the car I intended to keep, after that, it was kind of an emergency search for a new car,
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and there was a friend of ours, there's a lesson to be learned here, there was a friend of ours who
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just were looking to get rid of their Peugeot 205, and I thought, okay, well, it's 205, you know,
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I can't go wrong with that, so I bought it, it was incredibly good value for money, and now I know why,
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it was, I can't remember the registration plate, it might have been C, which would have been
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a 1980s, 1985 plate, I don't know, it was 1980s anyway, 206, the designation was
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something R, it was a 1.3 non-injection, and it wasn't that nice a car at all, it was white,
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it needed a lot of attention, the engine mounting went on it at one point, so when accelerating
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away from the standstill, I found there was a huge click coming from the engine bay, and that's
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basically where the mounting had broken, and it was shifting from below the mounting to above the
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mounting, where the engine was physically moving, so little is scary, but the car had a number of
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problems with it, not least of which was the thermostat went, so it would overheat at the
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moment, notice, so called the AA out, the automobile association, that I was a member of at the
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time, they just said, we'll take the thermostat out, and just be aware that you've got no
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attention control on the engine, anyway got rid of that, and switched to my first diesel car
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actually, it was a K registered, which would have been 1990, diesel 1.7, diesel, red,
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voxel, astro, that was a nice car actually, first diesel car I owned, very, very much,
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very different experience to drive, a diesel car for the first time, but you know you kind of
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adapt to these things, learn the different foibles of driving and how the engine responds to you when
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you drive it, had a weird quirk in that the air intake for the engine was really, really close
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to the ground, so I was always advised, if you're going to go through a puddle, go through incredibly
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slowly, otherwise the air intake will basically suck up the water from the road, into the engine
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and you'd break your engine, unfortunately that car, although it was a good car, it was reliable,
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I really enjoyed driving it, it had a fault though it wasn't aware of, in terms of the oil,
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there was an oil leak, and if you've ever known or ever had a diesel, you'd know that having oil
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in the car is absolutely critical, because of how the engine works, I mean yeah okay, it's
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critical to have oil in any engine, but more so in the diesel, so we didn't realise it, we in 2003,
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we went to buy a new car, we still didn't have kids by this point, we went to car craft
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in Sheffields, like huge car supermarket, and bought our first family car, which was a blue
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per show 206 on a white plate, which would have been 2021, 2001, and we actually, I remember this
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clearly, we bought it on the 29th of March 2003, the car was registered on the 29th of March 2001,
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so we actually bought the car on its second birthday, which we took us as a good omen,
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I don't know whether it was owner, but we exchanged the old Vauxhall Astra, we exchanged and put it
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out in its part exchange, and when they took the car, which they took it out of question,
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they said to us, we really don't know how you drove this car here, because it was humanely
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to fail, because the oil leak engine failure was absolutely human, and I didn't pick that up,
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went driving the car in at all, I didn't pick up that there was any problem with it whatsoever,
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so yeah, we were quite lucky to get rid of it, so yeah, we had this, this per show 206, beautiful
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three-door metallic blue vehicle, which we had for a good number of years, and it was a lovely car,
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I love driving it, it had all the Monkcons, electric windows, did it have a summary, yes it had a
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summary, no it didn't have a summary, sorry my apologies, but it did have climate control air
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conditioning and a decent stereo system, it was lovely, unfortunately it started to generate,
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sorry to display issues, to do with the engine management system, and when we moved up to
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South Yorkshire where we were living now, we took it to a garage that we trusted,
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and they replaced so many parts on it, they did a lot of work on it, most of the work they did
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for us, they didn't charge us for, because they recognised that the work that they had done
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didn't actually make any difference, so they didn't charge us, which I think is incredible
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customer service, it goes without saying that we still use that garage now, you know,
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14 years later, they've been great for us, so yeah, we had to get rid of it,
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but it was around this time, we actually became a two car family,
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and I need to try and work out exactly what the chronology was here,
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and I'm going to get this wrong, I know, but over the next few years we kind of flitted
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between a number of vehicles, so I'm pretty certain the next car I got after the
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206 is a Voxel Vectra Estate, which is on a V-Player, V-Prefix, which would have been 1999.
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Registration, that is not the year, and that was actually given to us by my stepdad,
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because he realised that we were having problems with our current car, he basically donated
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that car to us, which was incredibly generous of him, but I think under the same circumstances,
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had he tried to partner exchange that or do a private sale, he wouldn't have got much cash for
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it anyway, so he figured that donating it to somebody who could make use of it would be
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beneficial, so yeah, that was a good car, it was an automatic estate,
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beneficial for so many reasons, I mean first automatic I had the wife drove,
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so she actually used it primarily, have we only had one car at the time, so I think Caroline
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was doing public transport to work most of the time, and I had it for commuting into notting the
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most still working, notting the city at the time, which was a 45 minute commute, sorry I'm behind
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the very, very slow transit man, so I had that primarily, and then I then went out and bought a
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Nissan Almira, I can't remember the license plates on it, excuse me, I'm doing an overtake,
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I probably shouldn't, there we go, yeah I had a red Nissan Almira, which I think was on
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an L, a K plate, a K registered Nissan Almira, so then we went back up to a two car family,
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so Caroline had the vector estate, I had the Almira, and you know, it was always gravy,
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and then I can't remember which car went first, but we went through another series of vehicles,
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so I think the Almira was replaced by, oh I just know I can't remember which round it was,
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anyway we lost the, over time we lost the Almira and the, the Vectra, we got rid of both of them,
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because they both started displaying issues, Caroline at one point she ended up with a red
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voxel corsa, which she just couldn't get on with, so we got a shot of that as well,
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and then I, I think when Caroline had the voxel corsa still,
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hang on let me work this one out, I think when, when Caroline had the voxel corsa still,
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I bought myself from a friend of ours, and I know we bought from a friend before and it was
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a bad experience, at least I knew that this car had been looked after, and that's the car I'm
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actually driving at the moment, which is my very trusty voxel corsa and lupo, which was actually
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the voxel corsa and equipment, the satire rosa I believe, the satire rosa came out first,
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when the VHG group bought sat, they then created a voxel version of the aerosol called the lupo,
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and it is, it's a tiny car, it really is legally a Caroline fit for, four people in it, two in the
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front, two in the bag, there's no room for a middle, a middle passenger in the back seat,
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and we had that as a solo car for quite a while, which meant that we couldn't travel anywhere,
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as a family, and I remember that Christmas, we arranged to go down and see my parents,
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sorry my mum and stepdad, in order to do that, we had to hire a car so that we could,
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we could actually go down there as a family, and we figured that that is just no way of doing it,
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and I wanted to keep this car because it is incredibly, and I mean, seriously, seriously economical,
|
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it does about 70 miles to the gallon of diesel, sorry I didn't mention it was diesel,
|
||
|
|
the lupo, and yeah, amazing car, saved me an absolute fortune on fuel, to have this car,
|
||
|
|
rather than the Almira, I think it was a petrol car, the Almira, and I think it was doing me something
|
||
|
|
like 28 miles to the gallon, so it was constantly unfortunate in fuel when I was doing best
|
||
|
|
apart of 100 miles a day, yeah, well that one out, so yeah, we had to do something about the
|
||
|
|
fact that we couldn't go around as a family in this car, so we went to, what's it called?
|
||
|
|
Oh, crumbs, I can't remember the place, it's another car supermarket in a car people, that was it,
|
||
|
|
a car people in Sheffield, and we were going for a look, in quotes, we went for a look, close quotes,
|
||
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|
to see what cars were available, and what it was that we wanted to look for in a car,
|
||
|
|
so we took the whole family and we went around this car supermarket looking at cars,
|
||
|
|
oh there were some lovely cars there, they really were, and they were kind of in the price range
|
||
|
|
we wanted to pay, and I think we saw a say out of ether, which is, sorry, a say out of lay-on,
|
||
|
|
which is quite a nice sort of small family car, and there was a Peugeot 306, we saw
|
||
|
|
I think there might have actually been a Rena Magan, was it a Magan or whatever the larger version,
|
||
|
|
a Rena scenic that we saw that would have been, would have been really nice, anyway, when we were
|
||
|
|
walking around, we clocked these cars, we'd shortlisted some of these cars, you're going to
|
||
|
|
overtake this on our issue, we shortlisted some of these cars, and we ended up with the say out
|
||
|
|
lay-on, which musically I'm actually following a say out there on another moment, say out lay-on,
|
||
|
|
a Rena Magan, because we determined that the scenic would have been too expensive,
|
||
|
|
and this Peugeot 306, so we went back and revisited them, and looked at the prices,
|
||
|
|
the features you were getting for it, the mileage, we basically went through and
|
||
|
|
totten up everything, and we asked a look at two of the cars, and I can't what the other car was,
|
||
|
|
but one of the cars we did also look at in detail was the Peugeot 306, and we all took turns
|
||
|
|
in sitting in it, Alex sat in it, the girls sat in it, Caroline sat in it, and it felt comfortable,
|
||
|
|
but then we asked Alex to get out, and he wouldn't, he said, I don't want to get out of this car,
|
||
|
|
so we kind of took that as a sign that maybe this is the car we wanted, and it was an ex-motivability,
|
||
|
|
excuse me, an ex-motivability car, motivability is a scheme in the UK where people who have
|
||
|
|
motivability issues, they buy cars on their behalf, and basically rent them out to the people
|
||
|
|
they need them, so it was a well-kitted out car, it was an incredibly low mileage car, and that's
|
||
|
|
very much the case with motivability cars, they tend to be low mileage, and it kind of ticked every
|
||
|
|
box, so we asked for a test drive, so both Caroline and I went and test drove this car, and we went
|
||
|
|
out for just driving the local industrial estate road, and yeah, we both absolutely adored the car,
|
||
|
|
so we ended up getting it, so that's where we are now, we have two cars, me with my, excuse me,
|
||
|
|
I should have brought a glass of water, a glass of water, a bottle of water, me with my
|
||
|
|
box of open loophole, which I am driving at the moment to work, I've been recording 30 minutes
|
||
|
|
so far, and probably about a mile from work, so this worked out quite well, and Caroline, well,
|
||
|
|
Caroline with the family car, so when we go places, we're going the family car, if it's long driving,
|
||
|
|
I tend to drive, but Caroline does enjoy driving the car as well, so there we go, I hope you
|
||
|
|
enjoyed that, for the benefit of those of you listening on HPR, there will be four show notes
|
||
|
|
with the details of all the cars, and a rough chronology of the years, we had them, if you're
|
||
|
|
listening on anchor, well you're going to get this episode today at the time of recording 15th of
|
||
|
|
September, the guys at the Hacker Public Radio will get it later than that, depending on when the
|
||
|
|
next available slow show slot is, which then raises the point, that if you're not listening to Hacker
|
||
|
|
Public Radio, you should be, so Hacker Public Radio dot org, I'm not going to get into too much
|
||
|
|
detail about it because for those that are actually on Hacker Public Radio, you already know about it
|
||
|
|
because you're listening, yay, so I suppose I should wind down, because it's Friday, I will be
|
||
|
|
doing some planning this evening, all this afternoon, this evening for tonight's episode of the
|
||
|
|
Bugcast, episode 479 will be broadcast live tonight, you're very welcome to join us if you're listening
|
||
|
|
on anchor, join us tonight for episode 479 over at thebugcast.org slash live, if you're listening
|
||
|
|
on, oh, nicely done, if you're listening on Hacker Public Radio then we'll just go to the Bugcast.org
|
||
|
|
and find out when the next show is, it's probably going to be on Friday. I have been podcasting for,
|
||
|
|
this is my 10th year podcasting now, released my first episode in March 2008, so in March 2018,
|
||
|
|
which is only three months away, we'll be celebrating both 10 years and also our 500th
|
||
|
|
episode of the Bugcast. I am on other podcasts as well, historically more, but other podcasts have
|
||
|
|
kind of like faded and ended up on hiatus, but I'm now a regular on tuxjam, which you can find at
|
||
|
|
tuxjam.otherside.network. I am a regular contributor to CC Jam, oh that reminds me, I should have put a
|
||
|
|
CC Jam out this week, plum, my episode as well, at ccjam.otherside.network. I appeared on
|
||
|
|
episode or two episodes in fact of the Ubuntu podcast, which I'm really, really quite psyched about,
|
||
|
|
hopefully they'll even be back. And other ones as well, including Hacker Public Radio and of course
|
||
|
|
my iPodcast here on anchor, which has become my audio blog. So I am now turning right
|
||
|
|
into the estate. So the drive this morning, woo, let's start on a ride about it. The drive this
|
||
|
|
morning has taken me from Connys Bratt in South Yorkshire in the UK to New Olatin in North Nottingham
|
||
|
|
shire. So it's about 28 miles. I recorded this at the point I started the car, so it's taken me 35
|
||
|
|
minutes, which actually isn't bad at all. Not bad at all. It's kind of a slalom as I get in here,
|
||
|
|
sort of turn right then left then right then left. But I am now turning into Alcar Park.
|
||
|
|
And my breakfast buddy is here. On a Thursday usually, me and the colleague that I've known for
|
||
|
|
many many years, we have Cook Breakfast here at the office. And he wasn't in yesterday, so I had
|
||
|
|
Cook Breakfast on my own, you know, Billy Noe makes in the restaurant. So we said we would do breakfast
|
||
|
|
on Friday as well. So he's in and I am now parked up and I'm going to switch this off. I'm going
|
||
|
|
to go in and I'm going to enjoy myself a rather hacking breakfast. So with that having been said,
|
||
|
|
thank you very much for listening. If you've got this far, please do leave a comment. It'd be nice
|
||
|
|
to know what cars you've got. If you're listening on Hacker Public Radio, why not record an episode
|
||
|
|
about your car, yourself? Do the book.
|
||
|
|
You've been listening to Hacker Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio. We are a community podcast
|
||
|
|
network that releases shows every weekday Monday through Friday. Today's show, like all our shows,
|
||
|
|
was contributed by an HBR listener like yourself. If you ever thought of recording a podcast,
|
||
|
|
then click on our contribute link to find out how easy it really is. Hacker Public Radio was
|
||
|
|
founded by the digital dog pound and the infonomicon computer club and it's part of the binary
|
||
|
|
revolution at binrev.com. If you have comments on today's show, please email the host directly,
|
||
|
|
leave a comment on the website or record a follow-up episode yourself. Unless otherwise status,
|
||
|
|
today's show is released on the create of comments, attribution, share a light 3.0 license.
|