Quote:
Originally Posted by alamostation
Why should car companies re-invent the wheel, or for that matter the distributor cap?
Years ago, I had a '63 Sunbeam Alpine. Front shocks were about $100 in 1979. I took one to an auto parts store and they let me look through their inventory. Shocks from a Chrysler Newport were an exact match. $8 a piece.
Why should we be surprised if something from a Mercedes is interchangable with a cheaper make? Is a parts supplier such as Bosch going to make two different parts or try to sell the same thing to two different companies?
My uncle was a sales rep for a carberator company with a sales route in Wisconsin, Michigan, Indiana and Illinois. He sold the same design to a major motorcycle company, two snowmobile companies and a farm equipment company. The price difference in replacement parts was amazing.
I'm sure you can find many interchangable parts if you look. Actually the stupidest example was that the same GM alternator was priced differently depending on the way it was clocked. Take out the four long bolts, turn the mounts 90 degrees, put the bolts back in and the $29 alternator became the $89 alternator.
|
There was a time in the 50s and 60s when MB used parts like ignitrion parts compatible with other cars: Bisch, Bilstein etc. No more
Sometimes it matters, sometimes, not. you gotta check yourself.
__________________
Strelnik
Invest in America: Buy a Congressman!
1950 170SD
1951 Citroen 11BN
1953 Citroen 11BNF limo
1953 220a project
1959 180D
1960 190D
1960 Borgward Isabella TS 2dr
1983 240D daily driver
1983 380SL
1990 350SDL daily driver alt
3 x Citroen DS21M, down from 5
3 x Citroen 2CV, down from 6
|