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Clarkson on Cars.

by Jeremy Clarkson.

Part 1

Dear Diary

I do not wish to regale you with tales of my movements towards the end of this month, for two reasons. Firstly, you would be unutterably bored; and secondly, I will miss most of the engagements involved anyway.I will miss them because I have not written them down anywhere. People have rung to invite me for a weekend's skiing, for a two-day trip to Scandinavia, for dinner, for whatever.Not being used to such popularity, I have said yes to everything, without really knowing whether anything clashes or, to be honest, when anything is.It is a minor miracle if I ever manage to get anywhere in the right decade, let alone on the right day.The reason for this shortfall is that I have never kept a diary. Oh to be sure, I've started many a year with every good intention, filling in my blood group in the personal section and entering things that happened a week ago so that if anyone peeps, they'll be gobsmacked at what appears to be a gay social life.By February the entries are getting pretty sparse. By March I've lost it or Beloved, in a flurry of domesticity, has fed it, along with the odd airline ticket and several cufflinks, to the washing machine. You may be interested to hear that I have the cleanest cheque book in Christendom.Most of my time on New Year's Eve was spent dreaming up all sorts of resolutions. This year, in among things like a four-weeks-and-already-broken ban on alcohol, and a fairytale promise to get fitter, I vowed to keep a diary.The question was, which one? In the run up to Christmas, any number of motor manufacturers sent such things. And, as they say in Scunthorpe, very nice too.Slimline and quite capable of fitting in a jacket pocket without making me look like an FBI agent, they do however face some stiff competition.First, there's the Peugeot 405 Fil-o-fax-u-like. Now, these things are of enormous benefit to the likes of Beloved, who has simply millions of absolutely lovely friends and needs to remind herself when my Visa card needs a wash. But to unpopular people like my good self, they're rather less use than a trawlerman in Warwick.With just five friends and, on average, two party invites a year, there's no real justification for me to be strolling around the place with something the size of a house brick under my arm.Besides, it has a section for goals, which I presume refers to ambition rather than football. I have several ambitions but writing them down won't get me any nearer to achieving them. I want to be king, for instance, and being able to see tomorrow's racing results today would be pretty useful too.Then there's my Psion Organiser. It's advertised on television as a sort of portable computer that fits neatly in a briefcase and acts out the role of diary, alarm clock, address book and calculator all rolled into one.As far as I'm concerned, though, it is of no use whatsoever, because I can't be bothered to learn how it works. The instruction booklet is bigger and even more boring than the Iliad and anyway I think I've broken it by getting into edit mode and telling it to bugger off.Casio do the Data Bank which is disguised as a calculator. It can even be used as one but beware, those who even think about entering an address or an appointment will screw up the innards good and proper. Well I did anyway.These electronic gizmos are all very well but I want to know what is wrong with a good old pencil and a piece of paper?I mean, if someone rings up (chance'd be a fine thing) and asks me to a party next week, I could have it written down in what; two, three seconds? I would need a team of advisers and a fortnight's free time even to turn the Psion on.The advantage is that it does have an ability to remind me audibly when I'm supposed to be going somewhere. This is where Pepys's little tool falls fait on its face.It's all very well remembering to write something down but this is about as much good as cleaning your shoes with manure if you don't look at the diary on the day in question.Even so, I'm a man of my word and, consequently, I'm keeping a diary like a good little boy.Choosing which book to use was not easy. I have the sex maniac's diary, which tells me where in the world I can have safe sex, how to apply a condom and on what day of the week I can indulge in what they call the Strathclyde muff dive.I also have the Guild of Motoring Writers' Who's Who diary but it is full to bursting with bad photographs of people in brown suits.The International Motors' diary they're the people who import Subarus, Isuzus and High and Dries is a convenient size and has all the usual Letts schoolboy stuff in it about temperature and time zones and Intercity services.But I do not urgently need to know when the main Jewish festivals are. Nor, frankly, am I terribly bothered about when Ramadan begins.Toyota's diary begins with a lovely shot of their Carina car in front of the Pont du Gard in the Ardeche, skips blissfully over the Letts schoolboy behaviour and gets straight on to page after page of slots for the parties.But far and away the most tasteful offering for 1989 comes from those Italian chappies at Fiat. Largely, the editorial section at the front of their book is taken up with a list of decent restaurants.It doesn't say they're decent though, which should make for some fireworks when a trainee Fiat mechanic from a dealer in Bolton comes to the capital on an Awayday and gets presented with a 60 bill at Poons.You can tell Fiat have aimed their diary at men near the top. But this one is no good to me either, because the allergies section on the personal page is far too small. I am allergic to cats, penicillin, pollen, house dust, nylon, trade union leaders and that man with the Tefal forehead who masquerades as Labour's health spokesman.Ford's gives no space at all to allergies and is full of all sorts of stuff I never knew I didn't need to know but this is the one I've selected. Instead of giving each week a page of its own, Ford have crammed an entire month on one double-page spread.This means I can do my shoelaces up on 4 April and feed the hamster on 16 May, and those who peek into the book will think I'm as busy as hell.

Golf GTi Loses Its CrownAt this rate, the weightlifting gold at the 1992 Olympics will be won by a paperboy from Basildon. And apart from having arms like the hind legs of a rhino, he will believe the world is full of cars that can go faster than 300 mph.Since the advent of what the publishing industry calls new technology, it has become a great deal cheaper to produce the printed word. This is why one now needs the anatomical properties of Kali to read the Sunday Times, and why the shelves at your local newsagent's are groaning under the weight of perfect-bound, laminated forestry.You may have wondered how the producers of Successful Cauliflower magazine make any money. The answer is, they don't, but seeing as it costs naff all to make it in the first place, nobody's complaining!Not so long ago, people bought their favourite magazine for a decent read on the bus. It would be stitched together from shoddy paper and when it was finished, it could be hung on a clip by the lavatory. Not any more.Take Country Life. Full of ads for houses that no one can afford and no one wants; you don't rad it, you arrange it on the coffee table as you would arrange a bunch of flowers. You may even feel the need to iron it occasionally.It is not a magazine. It is a statement. It says that while you may live in a neo-Georgian semi with a purple up 'n' over garage door, you are fully conversant with the delights of hopelessly expensive manaor houses in Oxfordshire.Or Horse and Hound, with its nonsensical line, 'I freely admit that the best of my fun, I owe it to Horse and Hound.'Nowadays, there are a million country-house and interior-design glossies full of curtains which cost 8000 and would look stupid anywhere but Castle Howard.Two luminaries in this domain are Tatler and Harpers and Queen, which are read a bit, but only by the middle classes scouring 'Bystander' or 'Jennifer's Diary' for photographs of their horrid, frilly-dress-shirted friends.But the best of all are the car magazines.There was a time when they treated the car for what it was a device which used a series of small explosions to move people around. But now, it is an artform. The days when you could get away with a front three-quarters shot taken in the office car park are gone.Then there are the front covers. How many times has the Golf GTi lost its crown? To my certain knowledge, the Escort XR3 was the first to steal it, yet when the Peugeot 205 GTI came along a couple of years later, somehow, the Golf had got it back again.And therefore we read in 72-point bold that the Golf GTi had lost its crown again, this time to the 205 GTI.So the Vauxhall Astra, you might imagine, would have to pinch it from the 205; but no, at some point Peugeot had given it back to VW who reluctantly had to hand it over again, this time to Vauxhall.Then in no particular order it has been worn by the Peugeot 309 GTI, the Astra GTE 16v, the Escort RS Turbo, the Delta Integrale and the Corolla GTi. But for some extraordinary reason, the prized headgear never gets handed directly from one winner to the next. It always goes back to VW in between times.For now, it is being worn by the 16-valve Astra but you can bet your bottom dollar that VW will have it back in time to lose it to the new 16-valve Integrale.The Quattro has been through a similar series of machinations. The Delta Integrale pinched its number one slot but had to give the crown back to Audi shortly afterwards because it was wearing the Golf's at the time.Audi held on to it for a bit but only a couple of months ago, relinquished it to Porsche's 911 Carrera 4.And aside from dispensing crowns on a weekly basis, headline writers have become obsessed with speed.'WE DRIVE THE 220-MPH JAG THEY DARE NOT BUILD' is the latest game. Not to be outdone, a rival publication, you can be assured, will drive a 230-mph Jag that can't be built the very next week. And so on towards infinity perhaps.We smirk when we read that Freddie Starr ate someone's hamster, yet we are expected to believe that some scribbler has driven a Jaguar that no one has built at a speed that current tyre technology won't allow anyway.I have driven a BMW 750iL at an indicated 156 mph on the autobahn and believe me, it is a bowel-loosening experience I do not wish to relive. Sure, I enjoy going quickly, but the notion of driving something like a Porsche 911, which has been tuned by a foreign grease monkey, at the speed of sound in a Welsh valley, appals as much as it amuses.The thing is that if you have a magazine on your coffee table that talks on its front cover about a car that hasn't been built doing 300 mph on the Milton Keynes ring road, visitors to your home will be impressed.If you leave motoring publications lying around which talk about how seatbelts save lives, those same visitors will drink their coffee very quickly and leave.Business-speak impresses too. Honda have smashed Porsche 48 times and Toyota have bludgeoned BMW to death on a weekly basis for two years. And all this smashing and bludgeoning has resulted in every move a manufacturer makes being seen as utterly crucial.As in, 'ON THE LIMIT IN ROVER'S LIFE-OR-DEATH MAESTRO'; or how about this recent gem: 'LOTUS'S MAKE-OR-BREAK ELAN.'Lotus are owned by General Motors, who are one of the world's biggest companies. Their R&D department is universally revered, with lucrative contracts from such financially secure outfits as the MoD.The Elan, successful or otherwise, will neither make nor break the company. It might on the other hand pinch the Golf GTi's crown. Clarkson Decides.

Dishing It OutIt ought to be safe to assume, I thought, that if 60,000 Brits go to France and sit in a field all weekend, BBC news editors would be intrigued. They would, I was sure, despatch their best available crew to find out just what had driven so many people to do such a thing.After all, when twelve women with short hair and dubious sexual preferences camped outside an Oxfordshire air base for a few days, they were besieged by TV reporters.When a couple of hundred Kentish ruralites wandered down to the village hall to hear a man from British Rail explain why their houses must be pulled down, they emerged two hours later, blinded by camera arc lights.When one man set up shop on Rockall, both the BBC and ITV hired helicopters at God-knows-how-much-a-minute to film the weird beard's flag-waving antics.And the South Ken embassy zone is permanently full of film crews, furiously rushing between the two people who have turned up to protest about the treatment of badgers in North Yemen and the half dozen who think the Chilean milk marketing board is overcharging.So, how come when 60,000 Brits formed part of the 200,000-strong crowd at the 24 hours of Le Mans, it didn't even get a mention on the BBC News?Rather than turn up for work on the Monday morning and face ridicule for not knowing who had won, I set aside twenty minutes on Sunday evening to find out.I noticed with glee that the newsreader chappie hurried through the usual bits on China and the Maggon's opposition to European monetary union and I fully expected the saved time would be used to show us how bronzed men and true had thrilled the crowds in what is easily the world's most famous motor race.But no. We had an interview with a cricketer who had hurt his cheek and couldn't play. Lots of people hurt their cheeks and can't do what they want as a result. I rubbed a chilli in my eye last night and they didn't send Michael Buerk round to find out how much it hurt. When they beamed us back to the studio, there was the presenter with the Refuge Assurance Sunday League cricket results.We heard how Mohammed from Leicester had scored 72, how Gary from Essex had bowled out six people and how Yorkshire were top of something or other.I kid you not. They devoted more time to cricket than they did to the slaughter of 2600 people in China. And, of course, there was not one word about Le Mans. In the next day's newspapers, it was the same story, with page after page about cricket followed by a brief paragraph that said, 'Merc won Le Mans and Jag didn't.'Now, the argument that cricket fans trot out at times like this, and we can safely assume that the BBC's news editors are fans, is that cricket has a bigger following in Britain than motor racing.Bull. The Test and County Cricket Board tell me that in 1988, 137,583 people turned up to watch Sunday league cricket. That means the seventeen teams each have an average weekly gate of 1074. They get five to ten times that to watch a Formula Three race at Donington.A Test match at Lord's can pull in about 80,000; the British Grand Prix manages almost exactly double that number of spectators.The Cricketer magazine has a circulation of 35,000 a month. Motoring News sells 78,000 copies every week. And then there's Motor Sport and Autosport.Those who claim cricket has a bigger following than motor racing are the sort of people who claim that fish are insects and that the Pope is a water buffalo; they should be made to live in rooms with rubber walls, and to wear suits with the arms sewn on sideways.You will never convince the old boy network that runs things round here that cricket should be banished from television and replaced with motor sport; but you could buy a HAL 9000 satellite dish. Mine is sculpted into a two-fingered salute and pointed at Broadcasting House. The reception is awful, actually, but it amuses all the neighbours.Quite apart from the fact that Sky is prepared to show us breasts and bottoms on a regular basis, it has two sport channels which devote a proper amount of time to the world of motor cars.Now, you know about how the satellite dish and the scrambler and the installation will cost you 350, and you probably know that Rupert Murdoch runs the whole show, but you probably don't know that, at any particular time of day, there will be some sort of motor sport being broadcast on the box. So when you're bored with Mickey Rourke and Kim Basinger sweating their way through another game of tonsil hockey, simply hit the force and watch Al Ulcer and Mario Androcles Jr slogging it out Stateside.Tonight, you will go home for a diet of cricket, interrupted briefly at 7.00 p.m. for Terry and June and again at 10.30 p.m. for Little and Large. After The Terminator, I will watch some Indycar racing followed by a bit of in-car action from the CRX Challenge.If you want to protest about the Beeb's apathy on the motor-sport front, then for heaven's sake, do absolutely nothing. Stay at home. Tidy your sock drawer out. Grade your grass clippings according to length. Do anything, but certainly do not form yourselves into a chanting, 60,000-strong mob or else the news crews will choose to ignore you.Fear not though because I know exactly how to get coverage. Tomorrow, the six of us who have been converted to USS Enterprise space television will become homosexuals and make camp outside Broadcasting House. We will have our heads shaved and refuse to eat anything except almonds and watercress.The day after, if the TV crews start to look bored, we will set fire to David Gatting.

Cars in ReviewVauxhall Belmont SRiOn the basis that children should neither be seen nor heard, it seems absurd that airlines and other people movers do not provide soundproof boxes into which they can be inserted.There are even people out there who, when buying a car, actually consider the well-being of their offspring. Manufacturers like Mitsubishi and Volvo use them as active selling aids even.But why on earth should you worry about the comfort and safety of something that will do nothing on the entire journey other than fight with its sister, vomit and make loud noises?When I produce children, I shall buy a Vauxhall Belmont. In order to fit in the back even half properly they will have to screw themselves up like one of those magician's foam balls. Even then, they will not be able to see where they're going because the Vauxhall has headrests like blackboards.There are more comfortable fairground rides than the Belmont.Eventually, they'll beg to be put in the really rather commodious boot. Which is where they should have been in the first place.Toyota Camry V6This time next year, if someone were to ask if I've ever driven a Toyota Camry V6, I will look gormless for a minute or two. Then I will say no.This will be wrong because I have driven a Toyota Camry V6 the Bob Harris of motordom.Turn on the engine, there is no sound; press the accelerator and still the only noise you can hear is a chaffinch, 50 yards away, rummaging through some discarded fish-and-chip papers.In a temper, you engage D on the purrundah gearbox and bury the throttle in the pleblon carpet. The chaffinch looks over to see what the chirp was and goes back to his rummaging.You could drive this car round a library and no one would look up. I live twelve miles from Heathrow, yet the sound of jets on their final approach is enough to warrant the evening TV being turned up. When Concorde is bringing Joan Collins's hairstyle over again, a full-scale Judas Priest concert is unable to compete.What I want and want now is for Toyota to buy Rolls-Royce, Pratt and Whitney and that French outfit that doesn't know its left from its right.I want them to show Europe and America that it is entirely possible to build an engine that doesn't make any noise at all.Volkswagen Passat 1.9 DieselIf you need to get from A to B in a hurry and the only car at your disposal is a Passat 1.9 diesel, then might I suggest you try jogging.We are talking here about a very slow car indeed, o to 60 is possible, but only just.At its launch VW talked at some length about how clean the new engine is. They used graphs to show what they were on about but these looked only like Luftwaffe air traffic in the 1940s.They were at pains to point out that the new engine has not been designed with speed in mind but glossed over the fact that it's barely capable of independent movement.And to cope with the power it gets two first gears, a third and two very high fifths.Mark my words, the trees'll love it.Proton Saga 1.5 SLXThis is how the steering in a Proton works. You twirl the wheel as quickly as possible and two whisks attached to the end of the column stir up a sort of box full of yoghurt. When the yoghurt is spinning fast enough, centrifugal force rotates the box and the wheels turn.Volkswagen CorradoThe brown-suited wise men of the motoring world have been saying that the new Corrado should have the 200SX's chassis, the Celica's equipment, the Piazza's price, the Prelude's engine and the 480 turbo's computer.But their opinions go for nought because in the coupe market, it is style that counts.Which of the following answers would you like to give if an impressionable young lady were to ask what sort of car you drove? a) a Nissan b) a Toyota c) a Volkswagen d) an Isuzu e) a Honda f) a Volvo?She equates VWs with Paula Hamilton and Nissans with zero per cent finance; thus the Corrado is bound to be more sought after than any Japanese competitor, no matter how many horsepower are entrusted to their rear wheels.

Big Boys' ToysIt seems to me, Sir Isaac Newton could have been more gainfully employed. Any man who has the time to sit around in an autumnal orchard wondering why apples don't float around in space once they part company with the parental bough, ought to be out looking for a proper job.Maybe it was in the hobbies section of his c.v. or maybe employers in the seventeenth century were a trifle anti-Semitic, but either way, Isaac never did get a proper job and went on instead to design what was marketed ten years ago as the Ballrace, or Newton's Cradle.It set the scene for a host of so-called executive toys and relied for sales on the premise that the average high flyer doesn't have anything better to do while at his desk than sit watching a load of chrome balls bash the hell out of each other until it's coffee time or the phone shrills a cheery message that his wife's burnt supper again.Newton's thingumijig is, however, confined to page seven of yesterday's news now its headline grabbing antics of yesteryear fulfilled, in these days of war, hunger and crisp packets without little blue salt sachets in them, by a veritable myriad of toys all of which are jostling for pole position by the blotter.My rare sorties to the world of big business and, rarer still, my visits to the offices of those that control it, have revealed a constant.Whether the executive has plumped for red walls, white shag pile and chairs shaped like mattress springs or traditional oak panelling, leather seating and standard-lamp lighting, the centre-piece of his room is always an absolutely massive desk... a desk that's as uncluttered as a hermit's address book.To the right, there's the telephone; to the left, an intercom. Dead ahead, beyond the equally uncluttered blotter there are dog-eared photographs of his wife, taken in those salad days when she didn't burn supper, and his children, taken when they were angelic rather than punk.Somewhere, though, there will also be a toy not an Action Man or a Care Bear. An executive toy has to be more than just fun to play with. It must also be an attractive, decorative item which doesn't look out of place in a professional setting.You have to understand that the street cred of a top businessman would be seriously impaired should anyone bodyswerve his personal secretary, make it into the inner sanctum and catch him playing with a Scalextric set.But if you broke in and found him struggling with a Puzzleplex jigsaw, all would be well. These jigsaws are extraordinarily beautiful objets d'art which, almost incidentally, happen to be infernally difficult puzzles.Each one of these three-dimensional, wooden jigsaws is handmade, each is completely different from anything that has gone before and, best of all, the manufacturer, an eccentric called Peter Stocken, will create your puzzle in any shape you like a car, a Welsh dragon, an artificial lung, anything.You need an afternoon to complete a simple one and about 50 to buy it. For the more difficult variety, extend the time allowed to a day and start adding the noughts.I must confess I was hugely tempted to invest but had I succumbed, I fear you would not be reading this and that my superhuman, week-long struggle to give up smoking would have been thwarted.Another great puzzle is the much cheaper Philosopher's Knot, the idea being that you have to extricate a larger glass ball from a surrounding web of knotted string. It looks even trickier than that Hungarian cube thingy from last year.But the interesting thing about it is that were the ball made from shoddy plastic and the string from something of inferior quality, sales to businessmen would be sluggish. It looks good in between the telephone and the blotter on an executive's desk.Similarly, I noticed Fortnum and Mason are selling a twisted length of black and white plastic tubing for 35 in their gift department. I spent many minutes poring over this most unusual creation hoping an assistant would overcome any prejudices my tatty jeans were instilling in him and volunteer an explanation.None was forthcoming and because I always feel so foolish when asking such people what various things do, I kept my mouth shut. If I were in their shoes and such a question were fired at me, I should want to know why someone would be considering the purchase of an item without knowing what it was or did.Thus, I reserve behaviour of this kind until about 5.25 p.m. on Christmas Eve when, in desperation, I have been known to spend a week's wages on a device for melting the teeth of dead okapis merely because 'it looks nice'.The upshot of all this nonsense is that my notebook says 'funny plastic tubing. Fortnum's. 35'. If it is merely decorative, then it works well but costs rather a lot. If it has a function, then I should enjoy being enlightened.I'd actually gone to Fortnum's in search of a truly great executive toy an 18-inch-high suede rat in a blue leather coat and a felt hat. It is supposed to be Reckless from the Captain Beaky gang but he seems to have died now the hype has all quietened down as no one seemed to remember the item in question or from whence it came.I recall it cost close on 40 but, believe me, as a desk centre-piece, it had no peers.Unless, of course, you're a gadget kinda guy in which case 1986 holds much more in the way of excitement than dear old suede Reckless ever could.Take telephones. Quite why an executive needs the 15-memory variety with built-in answerphone, hands-off dial facility, digital read-out, supersonic turbo recall, optic fibre laser and led handset, I know not.Especially when I consider all he ever does is pick the damn thing up and say to his secretary, 'Get me whatsisname of doodah limited.'Hands up all those who are familiar with the wide-open secretary who's all set to transfer you to her boss until she finds out you've got something to do with his work when all of a sudden she will announce, 'He's in a meeting.'Is he hell. He's playing with his Philosopher's Knot and wanting to know why his wife has burnt supper for the eighth successive night.Or else he's sitting back, eyes half closed and fingers steepled enjoying the strains of Beethoven on the mini compact disc system with twin cassette auto play reverse and solar powered volume knob. Oh, and it can play music too.This is usually located in the bottom drawer a space which, in that bygone age before floppy discs (which I will not spell with a 'k') and cursors, was taken up with things called files.These stereos fascinate me. The smaller they are, the more expensive they are to buy. I don't see what's wrong with my simply enormous Rotel, Pioneer, Akai circa 1976 set up but evidently, it is miles too big and judging by some of the prices these days, it didn't cost enough either.Having said that though, I was staggered to see a Sinclair flat screen telly in a dusty corner of the Design Centre selling for just 99.95. As is the current vogue, the screen was the same size as your average sultana but the wiry bit round the back was encased in a washing machine-sized shell. No wonder old Clive had to sell out.Doubtless, he'll soon come up with a television so small that you won't be able to see it at all.When the days of invisible gadgetry are upon us, I may well take my place on the bandwagon and reap the benefits of being able to cover my desk with everything from a sunbed to a nuclear power station without my work space being pinched.At present though I have just three executive toys, not counting my telephone which is a straightforward British Telecom Ambassador and therefore doesn't count.Behind the Citroen press release to my left is the Waterford Crystal aeroplane I was given for Christmas by someone I didn't like very much until I found out it cost more than 50.Lost in the vicinity of a half-eaten packet of McVities dark chocolate biscuits remember, I'm trying to give up smoking and the designer-label notebook is a half-inch-high, hand-painted pig. Always have loved that.And occupying pride of place is my helicopter a stunningly good toy made by Mattell in the 1970s and foolishly dropped from the line-up a couple of years back. Tough luck you can't buy one these days.The machine, which is genuinely powered by its blades, is connected to a central command post by a wire and flies round in circles with a hook dangling underneath poised to pick up empty matchboxes and old Coke cans.Such precision flying requires 100 per cent Chuck Yeagerish concentration so, when I'm airborne, little thought is given to burnt suppers or indeed any of the rigours encountered in daily life.What lunchtime? What meeting? What Citroen press release?

Mobile Phones'Yes darling. I'll pick you up at eight... No this time I promise... Well, I know, but last night was different... Yes, well the night before was different too... No, standing around on Fulham Broadway isn't much fun... OK listen, if I'm late tonight, I'll buy you dinner at San Lorenzo. Bye.'Gulp. I've got an appointment in Twickenham at six.San Lorenzo costs twenty quid a head and that's without going bonkers on the port and brandy. Then there's the taxi and they don't take credit cards so I'll have to get some money out and the banks are closed.Now, my autobank's a dodgy little blighter. Sometimes it enjoys Gettyish generosity and will plunge wads of Harold Melvins into the recipient maulers but on other days, for no apparent reason, it's tighter than a Scotsman on holiday in Yorkshire and won't hand over so much as a damn penny.'I wouldn't mind if the green screen was polite and said something like, 'Sorry old chap but your overdraft's a little excessive and it'd be more than my job's worth to hand over the cash at the moment.'But 'insufficient funds available' is so terse; so final. And the queue behind, already exasperated by my inability to remember my code number on the first attempt, is reduced to a giggling mess as I shrug nonchalantly and, fighting back the tears of humiliation, stroll away as if it doesn't matter.But with the threat of an 80 experience among the stars at San Lorenzo hanging wearily about my person, there is no alternative and I find myself approaching the damn thing, dripping like ageing cheese in an old sock.Inevitably there's a queue. Inevitably a gang of screeching Hoorays fall in line astern of me. Inevitably I programme in the wrong number twice and inevitably I'm told, to the accompaniment of a crescendo of shrieks from the Ruperts, that I'm a miserable pauper.Boarding the tube at Sloane Square, I consider my predicament and weigh up the consequences of a late arrival at Fulham Broadway. They are too dire to contemplate. Eighty quid is a lot of money for a pauper. Oh God, please help.Now I bet you didn't know that God works in Volkswagen's press office. Because after my return to the den of iniquity that afternoon, Charles, who is VW's effervescent delivery driver, wandered in brandishing the keys to a 16-valve Scirocco I was due to test that week.And joy of joys, nestling in that sombre but tasteful interior was nigh on two grand's worth of Panasonic Vodaphone. Better still, VW would pick up the tab for any calls I made.If the meeting in Twickenham dragged on and I found myself in the kind of snarl-up only the A316 can muster, it was a simple question of ringing the beloved and thus avoiding an 80 outlay that would mean I'd have to live on a diet of small Macs and stickleback and chips for the forthcoming decade.Sure enough, the meeting did go on and on, despite endless tutting and continual references to Omega's finest. And sure enough every Cherry this side of Chernobyl was on the 316, misjudging approach speeds and getting confused by roundabouts.At ten to eight I realised there wasn't a hope in hell of getting to the Broadway on time and resorted to the Vodaphone. 'Hello sweetheart... no, don't shout at me... no, listen... I wa... Becau... No, I'm using a car phone and if this Nissan gets out of my way I'll be with you in about twenty minutes.'That simple message cost VW 10p and saved me eighty quid.This phone-in-the-car business was definitely worth looking into. I had at my disposal a Panasonic EBC1044 with hands-free facility which retails for 1774 excluding VAT. On top of this outlay you are faced with a 50 connection charge and a monthly fee of 25.Calls made between 7.30 a.m. and 7.30 p.m. from Monday to Friday cost 25p per minute but at all other times the cost is a mere 10p per minute.Any one of VW's 350 dealers can fit the hardware, which is broken down thus: 1375 for the handset and a complicated-looking box which was in the boot, 290 for the hands-free facility, 28.95 for the mounting kit and a whopping 79.95 for an aerial which would have to be replaced every time Chelsea played at home.Hands free, for those of you who've just returned from a sightseeing trip on Voyager Two, is a wonderful innovation which allows a driver to hold a conversation without taking his paws from the wheel.You simply dial up the number you wish or, if it's logged in the set's memory, press the appropriate code number, and hey presto, the job's done. A couple of seconds later you'll hear the ringing tone from a speaker located near your right ankle. The microphone into which you speak is attached to the sun visor.Trouble is, those without cars are unwise in the ways of modern automotive technology and, on one occasion, I noticed a few raised eyebrows from the incumbents of a bus queue as I sat in a traffic jam shouting at my sun visor.Because the Scirocco GTX 16v is a left hooker, they were that much closer and consequently their surprise turned into uncontrollable mirth as I went on to tell the visor I would meet it in the pub in ten minutes.Then there was the instance when I called a friend to ask about the availability of tickets for a ball I was due to attend.He said that I could bring along anyone I liked except 'that balding so-and-so' a mutual friend.Unfortunately, the gentleman in question was in the car at the time and heard every word.I did notice that the unit's performance is impaired to a notable degree when the hands-free facility is employed, so that the vocal chords of both conversationalists have to be strained to be audible.It's actually worse for the driver because whenever I used the device, I was invariably alongside a 3,000,000-hp Volvo tractor unit.And drivers of 3,000,000-hp tractor units don't like squirts in bright-red Sciroccos with telephones, so they rev their engine up to a point where the pistons are moving faster than a Beirut window shopper and it's making more noise than Pete Townsend on a Gibson pile driver.This effectively blots out conversation to the point that on many occasions I had to resort to the dangerous and potentially illegal practice of using the handset like a normal phone.Anyway, after saving the day with regards to dinner at San Lorenzo, I figured a call to dear old mother, who's utterly bemused by anything electronic, would be in order.I did, however, make the mistake of giving her the unit's number, which meant she rang at all the wrong times to find out a) where I was and b) how fast I was going.Three days later I found myself using every reserve of concentration as I tried to overtake a speedily driven 200 Turbo Quattro on a delightful stretch of A road in Hampshire a manoeuvre made even more difficult by my seating position and the Scirocco's 139 bhp against his 182.Quite the last thing I needed was a telephone call from the dear old soul up North and the resultant lecture on the dangers of driving too fast. I still think she believes I was doing 100 mph with one hand on a phone. Hands free is a difficult facility to explain when the Quattro up front is gaining ground and the sun roof's open.Besides, the Audi had a 79.95 aerial poking through the rear windscreen and I was busy plotting a means of finding out his number so I could call him up to say something dastardly like 'Your rear tyres are on fire'When I finally lost him I let my mind drift into scenes where the car phone could be even more useful than for warning womenfolk you're going to be late. Like if I saw a bank robbery and gave chase to the villains. I could call up the police and tell them what they were up to. I could be a hero. I'd be on the front page of the Sun.I know the manufacturers of these phones harp on about lost business and sales reps and traffic jams, but half the value is encased in their fun and snob value. Otherwise why is it everyone begins their conversation by saying, 'I'm on the car phone'?And why is it everyone who rode shotgun in the Scirocco that week ignored the technical sophistication of its 16-valve engine, ignored the fact it was left-hand drive, ignored the admiring glances from GTi pilots and said 'Ooh, it's got a phone'?I could have picked them up in Thrust Two or the space shuttle. They wouldn't have been bothered so long as they could play with a device that when placed on a hall windowsill is readily available courtesy of the DHSS.Two grand is a lot of dosh for someone whose autobank regularly says 'insufficient funds available', but if I spent a great deal of my time in one car rather than a very little of it in several, I'd be hugely tempted to invest.

Last Year's ModelYesterday, a great many things went wrong. The girl at Suzuki said I couldn't drive a new Swift until next year and she'd call back when she knew precisely when.This, past experience has taught me, actually means get lost toerag.Moments later, I had the most awful row with two security guards at Earls Court because they wouldn't let me back a BMW twenty yards down a ramp. Sadly, the issue became personal as I enquired of them why it is that small people in peaked caps are always so damned intransigent and they, of me, why BMW drivers are always so ??$*!ing pushy.Eventually a bossy woman with a loud and hectoring demean-our came but I couldn't understand what she was saying to me because she was holding one of those walkie-talkie affairs that seem to emit nothing but white noise punctuated with people saying 'Roger' a lot.I finally managed to squeeze past the music teacher lookalike and her SS sidekicks when a charming man stepped from his Volvo Estate to ask them why it is that the working class always vote Labour. I didn't actually see what bearing his line of questioning had on the issue but his suicide antics diverted the heat for just long enough for me to win my battle.Sadly though, my war with the day was far from over. My Fiat test car ignited warning light after warning light until its interior began to resemble a Jean Michel Jarre concert, my doctor warned once again that if I didn't have a week off, my eczema would envelop the last vestiges of skin and Barry Reynolds rang up from Ford to say the Cosworth I was due to get next week would, in fact, be an XR2.Now, I have many weak spots my face is perhaps the most apparent but I do pride myself on an ability to maintain an even strain when the adversity is piling up.Some people, I know, reach for the paraquat if the sponge cake doesn't rise correctly. Others weep for weeks upon finding out their son's motorcycle isn't taxed. But I do none of these things, not least because I don't know how to make a sponge cake and don't have a son.What I do in times of crisis is try to put my predicament in perspective. As I sat on the phone listening to Mr Reynolds explaining why the Cosworth would not be winging its way to Fulham, I merely thought about that time when my sister ripped the last page from the Famous Five book I was reading and I was smacked for beating her up. And those dreadful tea-time visits to Aunt May's a sizeable woman who always sat with her bandaged legs wide apart and began all her toothless monologues with 'Do you remember when...'I even summoned up from the memory bank's deepest recess that incident when a load of town boys stole my school cap and put something a dog had done in my satchel.Still though, the pain of not getting a Cosworth hurt it hurt in the same way a Sherman tank would hurt if it ran over your legs. What I needed was to recall something so terrible, a moment that produced so much anguish, that not having a Cosworth would become joyous in comparison. I thought about the red mullet I'd eaten on the BMW 7-Series launch and how sad it was that I'd never again enjoy this, the best piece of food created by any chef anywhere, ever before.But the pain didn't go away until I remembered that moment on 10 October 1969 when I crashed my brand-new Buick Riviera into the coffee table and one of its four gleaming headlights dropped from the grille.This was the pride of my Dinky/Corgi fleet because it sported mirrors in the front and rear windows which, when covered up, dimmed the head and tail lamps.It cost 5/6d and was the envy of everyone at school. Once, Gary Needham offered to swap his Mercedes Pullman with the dirty front windscreen for it, but I refused. He even offered to throw in his Batmobile but I already had one of those even though Robin's window was broken after my sister trod on it. I beat her up for that too.She also lost the little yellow pellets you could fire from the boot-mounted mortars and I was the school laughing stock because I had to resort to matchsticks instead.I've still got my entire collection and am told the earlier variety with detachable rubber wheels will one day be worth a few bob.But I somehow doubt the ones I Humbrolised with all the finesse of a charging rhino will ever be worth more than the 5/6d I paid for them. The paint seemed to go everywhere except on the bodywork and because I usually did the red stripe down the side before the green job was dry, it all ran. If anyone out there will offer me 30p for a sludge-coloured Citroen DS Safari with a fingerprint on the bonnet I'd be willing to consider a trade.The best Citroen I ever had was a Citroen Pallas coupe finished in a metallic cherry red. That is still in perfect condition as are all the models I bought when rubber wheels were being phased out to be replaced by the plastic variety. There's an Alfa Pininfarina and another white Alfa with a gold spoiler and no roof. Looks like something from Thunderbirds but at least it enables me to trace the roots of my current love affair with the GTV6.I suppose my trips to Youngsters in the high street every Saturday ceased in the 1970s when die cast went out of fashion and Dinky died. An Esso oil tanker was, I believe, my last purchase.I was once given a plastic kit of the MR2 by Toyota which I tried fashioning into something resembling a car but the disaster which ensued convinced me that model-making is an avenue I should not pursue. The finished article is a bloodstained mess that visitors to my house think is an aubergine.In recent years my preoccupation with cars has centred around the variety that are too big for my sister to tread on.However, as she is now a solicitor and presumably responsible enough not to smash up her brother's belongings, I have recently begun wondering whether a foray into the world of toy cars might be a good plan.On a recent trip to Sicily I noticed every shop window was full of die-cast toy cars made by Burago. They're a good deal bigger than my Dinky and Corgi collection and, even allowing for inflation, they're a good deal more expensive too but I swear on my Buick's lost headlight, they really are superb. And you can buy them here.Foolishly, I went all the way to Hamleys to check on prices only to discover that my local filling station sells them. In case you're interested, set aside around a tenner for the best examples.There's a massive range encompassing all kinds of models and all kinds of sizes but having scrutinized the line-up, considered my age and the use to which I would put them, I reckon those which are produced to a scale of 1/18 are best.For sure, an eleven-year-old who has a penchant for Hum-brolising his toy prior to racing it through a sandpit would be better off with the tinier, and therefore cheaper variety but the bigger ones are so beautifully crafted, they don't look out of place among the Lladro and leather-bound Britannicas on your bookcase.Without question, the best of them all is the Testarossa which is mounted on a lovely piece of wood. Now, I don't like the look of full-size Testarossas with their Vauxhall Astra front ends, their silly door mirrors and boot scrapers down the side but in model form, they look superb.The bonnet, boot and doors open to reveal faithfully scaled-down copies of the car's innards even the tyre treads are accurate. Another masterpiece is the 250GTO which comes with chromed bonnet catches and the E-type a proper one from 1961 can't be ignored either. Others are the Mercedes SSKL, the Bugatti Type 59, the Jaguar SS100, the 250 Testarossa, the Alfa Romeo 2300 Spider, the Mercedes SSK, the Lancia Aurelia Spyder, the Bugatti Grand Prix, the Mercedes 300SL and the Alfa Romeo 8C 2300 Monza, drool drool drool.There's also a model of the Rolls-Royce Camargue though I swear that if you painted it pink, it would look just the same as the car Parker used to chauffeur for Lady Penelope. Also, the windscreen wipers look like a pair of silver telegraph poles sprouting from the bonnet.Burago's best sellers are now sitting in moist soil at home receiving a daily dosage of Fison's Make It Grow fertiliser.

Watch ItI suppose if one were to weigh up all the pros and cons, one would probably decide that it is a good idea to wear trousers while out shopping on a Saturday morning.If one were to peruse the pots, pans and Pyrex in Boots, for instance, wearing nothing below the belt except socks, shoes and underpants, one would feel silly and, well, really rather naked.Builders spend six months of the year with no shirts on and people from Islington wander around in bare feet, but no one aside from pupils at a strange public school in North Yorkshire, women, and Scotsmen would dream of venturing from the confines of a homestead without strides.Bearing this argument in mind, it would be all too easy to assume that trousers are the most important item in my wardrobe but believe me, they're not.I would rather go to a Buckingham Palace garden party clad only in a pair of day-glo 'Willie Hamilton for Prime Minister' Y-fronts than spend so much as ten seconds of my day without a watch.With nothing around the left wrist, my whole arm feels like one of those Birds Angel Cream Delight blancmange thingies you see floating around in telly ads.Take my watch off and I begin to get some idea of what Alan Shepard must have felt like when he became the first American to do something the English hadn't done before.Not knowing what the time is makes me more miserable than missing a premium-bond jackpot by one digit. More angry than I was the other night when I discovered the reason why I'd been stationary on the M1 for three hours was because some buffoon with his bottom hanging out had dumped a pile of gravel in the outside lane and gone home.And right now, I am miserable because the watch I was given on my first day away at school has developed a tendency to stop every few minutes and my replacement, a twenty-first birthday present, is so exquisite I daren't wear it for the everyday hustle and bustle one encounters when waging war with a wayward word processor.And anyway, its strap's broken.This has therefore meant that as I sit here writing, I do not know what time it is. It's dark so that means it's way past six o'clock. If it's later than eight, it means I've missed my weekly game of snooker. If it's later than ten, I'm not being paid enough.Today, I've been out and about trying to find a stand-in timepiece.The local watch emporium does some very natty lines but somehow, I don't see myself in a pink see-through number. Nor am I particularly interested in those chromium washing machine sized things that tell you what the chairman of Suzuki had for breakfast that morning.Being of a weedy disposition, I would imagine I'd be allergic to metal straps so the watch of my dreams has to have a hide strap none of this namby-pamby plastic for me. I like people who disembowel lizards.I want a circular face with two hands, numbers and the date. That's it. No alarm bells if you forget to wake up. No Mickey Mouse noises. No colour-coded laser-optic workings.Everything in the shop either fitted the bill perfectly but was far, far too expensive, or was correctly priced but made by somebody called Swatch or Crutch or something.There was even one horrid white thing with the legend 'TURBO' writ large all over it. To call an aftershave 'TURBO' is fair enough. To call a vacuum cleaner 'TURBO' is fairer enough still, but a TURBO watch is plain ridiculous.Turbo in my book means nasty lag and torque steer, which are unwelcome in a car let alone a watch. I mean how useful is a timepiece if the hands dawdle their way past midday with all the alacrity of a damp log and then explode through the afternoon like an F-14 on combat power with excess torque making the minute hand go backwards?If I were going to write something about cars on a watch, I'd be inclined to go for the economy angle. Surely no one buys a watch because it goes fast, but there must be people around who would like the idea of one that needs winding infrequently on account of its aerodynamic cogs or whatever.Yes, when Omega come to me for the name of a new watch, I shall suggest 'spoiler' or 'thin tyres' or maybe 'fuel cut off on the overrun'.After a good deal of huffing and puffing I stormed out of the shop. It's not that I object to having things written on the strap or face but I can't abide some of the words dreamed up by blue-spectacled berks in marketing departments.One of the finest watches I have ever clapped eyes on was designed to commemorate the launch of the Mark Two Golf and given by Volkswagen to every journalist in Britain from the newest trainee on the Rotherham Advertiser to Ian Hislop.Sadly, at the time, my worth in the eyes of the powers that be at VAG amounted to little more than it would if I were a scuba diver for the Galapagos Islands Turtle Preservation Society, so I did without. Which a) was a shame and b) explains why I called them VAG and not Volkswagen Audi as they now prefer.Thinking that the same designer who came up with the GTi timepiece might still hold sway in VW's good offices, I made enquiries about other watches they market.Evidently there's just one, for those who have a Quattro or those who want us to think they have a Quattro, but it's awful. The sort of thing a second-division footballer would covert. You can't see the watch for all the dials and I'd like to bet its weight is somewhere in the region of eight tons. Besides, it costs 345 plus VAT.Equally exorbitant is the Ferrari Formula collection which is made up of a wide and delightful selection. Leaving aside those with allergenic straps, you're left with the Marine Collection with their racy two-tone straps or the City Collection with an ease of style that reminds me of Anthony Hopkins's performance in Pravda.They're perfect in every respect except one. I can't abide Ferraris. I don't like the way they look, the noise they make, or the people who drive them. What I'd like to know is how on earth can the same people who sanctioned the aesthetic abortion called the Testarossa possibly be responsible for a collection of watches that are an equal of Kim Basinger in the beauty stakes.It all came to nought though because they had Ferrari written on them and things with Ferrari written on them are pricey.Things, at this stage, were beginning to get desperate. BMW don't do watches at all and I didn't dare ring Jaguar because they were too busy being smug about their new XJ6 even though the one I drove was of marginal merit. The boot clanged. The steering was too light. The glovebox didn't fit properly and I didn't like the dashboard. Here speaks the only man in Britain who prefers, by a mile, the new 7-Series BMW.I know it's possible to buy Aston Martin or Lamborghini or Rolls-Royce watches but quite frankly it's also possible to go bankrupt. And wearing one of those is just another way of saying in the most ostentatious way possible, 'Hey everyone, I'm very rich.'Which I'm not.And this is why the watch I have finally decided to buy only costs 30.It doesn't meet one single criterion I'd laid down except price, but I was so taken with the idea, I don't care that it's plastic or that its face looks like Joseph's dreamcoat or that it is made by the Swatch empire.Marketed by Alfa Romeo and sold through their dealer network all seven of them it has a navy-blue plastic strap, a navy-blue surround and a great big Alfa Romeo cross and serpent on the face.It doesn't sport any numbers and in the words of the girl at Alfa, the winder is gold but it isn't gold.It's got a date hole, it's got heaps of character and because it bears the Alfa badge, it says to those who see it, 'I'm someone who appreciates Italian style but not to the extent that I'm going to pay 4 billion for it.'Those prepared to read even further between the lines will notice that it tells people I'm also the kinda guy who hasn't lost sight of his youth, who has a devil may care attitude to institutionalisation. Well that's what some idiot with blue spectacles told me last night. I reckon the most important things it tells people are the time and that I like Alfa Romeos.The chairman of Suzuki can have black pudding and treacle in the morning, the Dow-Jones index can collapse and the sugar-beet price in Albania can go through the roof but I will have no way of knowing.And I will not care.

JMC NOThe bungalow itself warranted little merit. The bay windows played host to a selection of bull's-eye glass, carriage lamps illuminated the neo-Georgian front door and gnomes with fishing rods frolicked among the horribly organised front garden.There is little doubt that I would not enjoy the company of whoever had chosen this mish-mash of tasteless addenda. People with carriage lamps are people who have children called Janet. And children called Janet aren't allowed to eat sweets between meals or wear jeans.Ordinarily, I would not concern myself with this sort of house or the people who occupy it, but in this instance I am sorely tempted to write them a letter explaining why they are the most ghastly individuals this side of anyone who indulges in tactical voting to oust the Conservatives.You see, nailed to their teak gatepost is one of those polished tree-trunk slices with the legend 'Olcote' picked out in Olde Worlde York Tea Shoppe script.That's bad enough but to make matters much, much worse, I have learned that this quaint mnemonic stands for Our Little Corner Of The Earth.Point one: if your house is numbered, don't mess up the postman's schedule by giving it a name. And point two: if you insist on making everyone wait two weeks for their letters, at least give it a name with some credibility.If you have an awful bungalow with a ning-nong illuminated doorbell, you should call it 'The Foul Little Bungalow That's Equipped With Every Nasty Piece Of DIY Kit I Could Find At Alabama Homecare'.You should never call it 'Olcote'. I can think of some pretty unsavoury corners of the Earth to which I would despatch people who do: Beirut for those who do it by accident, West Thurrock for persistent offenders and Basrah for those who see nothing wrong with it.Out there it would be a case of calling your AK47-pock-marked shack 'Olcote Babama'. This, for the uninitiated, stands for Our Little Corner Of The Earth's Been Annihilated By A Mig Again. And given half a chance, I'd be the pilot.It's all to do with taking the art of personalisation to extremes. You can make your house more comfortable by fitting central heating and thick carpets or you can distinguish it from those up the road by painting it day-glo lime green. These moves are fine; they make life more comfortable, more aesthetically pleasing. More of a statement.But do tell, what are the advantages of changing your address from 22 Laburnum Drive to Sunny View, Laburnum Drive? Do you really think you should command any more respect from people who are writing to you simply because Sunny View might conjure up the mental picture of a Baronial Hall perched atop a cowslip-thronged hillside meadow, whereas number 22 sounds like it's just part of a vast neo-Georgian estate?It's the same with motor cars. Speaking personally, I don't much care for after market add-ons like spoilers and floodlights and rear speakers the size of Wales but if such paraphernalia are your bag, then go ahead.Similarly, if it riles you to spy 2000 other guys driving around in identical Ford Sapphires every day, go on, get the spray can out and give it one of those paint jobs which hippies lavish on their ageing Bedford vans.But, for heaven's sake, stop there. Do not invest in a personalised number plate or else the next fully operational jet fighter that whistles toward your frolicking gnomes will have me at the helm and my fingers on the Sidewinder release mechanism.I do not understand what appeal a cherished registration plate has unless it says something funny like DEV 1L, or ORG45M, or PEN15.I have spent, oh, it must be close on fifteen minutes now, desperately trying to think of one reason why I should spend many hundreds, if not thousands, of pounds just so those within the vicinity of my battered CRX would know my initials are shared with Mr Christ.If I were so intent on relaying this information to all and sundry, why couldn't I simply put up big notices in the windows? Or buy one of those electioneering loud hailers?I was once forced to spend a week behind the wheel of an FSO which sported a registration plate that said FSO5. This was more embarrassing than the time when I spent an hour damning the dreadful Shake 'n' Vac advert on television only to discover I was sitting opposite the copywriter who'd written it.You see, FSO5 is probably worth well into four-figure territory and I could see the drivers of neighbouring cars howling with Pythonesque laughter at me, the buffoon they thought had spent so much on a number plate, he couldn't afford anything better than a Polonez.Worse are the idiots who spend a fortune on numbers like 316BMW for their BMW316s.We all know it's a 316 because the badge says so and anyway, had the buffoon not bought the number plate, he could probably have afforded a 325i.While I object in the strongest possible sense to those who simply buy their initials or those of their car and to hell with what number comes in tandem, I have been amused in the past by various stories and sightings.There's the tale of a chap who lost a retina in World War II and now drives round in a car which bears the registration number, 1 EYE.Then there's a friend of Beloved, called Tammy, who has TAM1 69. I've been dying to meet her but, so far, various endeavours have ended with stern words and threats of no morning coffee for six weeks.According to the autonumerologist's bible, called Car Numbers, Jimmy Tarbuck owns COM1C but unless he drives a black Mini which is parked in a very seedy part of Fulham every night, I suspect an error has been made.Other celebrities to own cherished plates are Max Bygraves who, it is said, turned down a 30,000 offer from Mercedes Benz for MB1, Kevin Keegan with KK A1, Jimmy White with 1 CUE, Bernard Manning with BJM 1 and Petula Clarke with PET 1.Notice any similarity between these characters? Well I'll tell you. They are the staple diet of TV Times profiles and ITV quiz shows which have purple and orange backdrops, question masters in brown suits and lots of inane innuendo about bottoms.In short, they are working-class heroes, the televisual nouveau riche, beloved by the kind who live in gaudy bungalows called Olcote.And don't think I've been through the book looking for people of this ilk. I searched in vain for mention of gentlemen like David Attenborough and Michael Palin but I fear they are not the sort to advertise their arrival.They are the sort who would invest in a cherished plate only if it were likely to shock or amuse. And there's plenty of scope. Michael Palin would, I'm sure, shy away from PAL 1N but if you offered him TAX1 or TUR8O, I'm sure he'd take the plunge. I know I would.The thing is that when the registration system changed from suffixes to prefixes in 1983, the chances of any more cherished plates emerging from the DVLC evaporated.In a bid to cut the pressure on staff who were forever being pestered by dealers for decent combinations, they no longer issue plates bearing any number less than 21. So it's tough luck to all you Dianas and Nigels out there who were waiting with bated breath.However, it is still possible to buy numbers that were issued when civil servants didn't mind spending a few minutes each day acting the role of their job title.If you wish to buy a registration number, it must be from a vehicle that is currently taxed or has been taxed within the past six months.No longer is it any good to find some old wreck in a farmyard with the plate you've always wanted. And anyway, in 1983, the Swansea computer erased all knowledge of any car which hadn't been taxed within the previous two years.Providing, however, the donor and recipient vehicles meet with the approval of those inscrutable chappies at your local vehicle-licensing office, all you have to do is obtain a V317 form from your LVLO, fill it in, hand it, along with the two requisite tax discs and registration documents to the inscrutable chappie, give him 80 and head off back to your little corner of the earth.Alternatively, you can ring up one of the endless cherished-number-plate dealers in the Sunday Times' Look Business Personal Finance News, section 24, and tell him what you're after.They keep details of what's on offer and who wants what and are normally able to help, providing your request isn't too parochial.However, if you wish to take the plunge, I should do so in a hurry because when I win the football pools, I shall buy up every number I consider tasteless and throw them into the Marianas Trench.Then, I shall bomb all numbered houses with names and if there's anything left in the kitty, I will erect kart tracks on every cricket pitch in Christendom.

Big BikesI do not hold with the decision to hold Britain's premiere motor race at Silverstone for five years on the trot, because it is a very boring circuit indeed, but at least if you're important, like me, you can camp out in the middle and run into nice people who say even nicer things, like why don't you come and have a spot of lunch?The big hassle is that if you wish to run into a lot of these people you must be in several places all at the same time.Which in turn means you have to forge expeditions that make Ranulph Fiennes's Transglobe jaunt look like a Saturday cycle ride to the shops.The last time I spent a few days at Silverstone I had a motorcycle at my disposal which, in theory, is the ideal tool for the job but (and this may come as a surprise to those of you who know me as a devil-may-care kinda guy who thinks nothing of hanging upside down in stunt planes) I do not know how to ride things with two wheels.I had a go but after I'd engaged the clutch and applied full throttle, I found myself spinning round in a rather noisy circle.This, I learned later, was because I'd forgotten to release the front brake. I also learned that the onlookers would have been immensely impressed with the stunt had they not caught a glimpse of my countenance, which, instead of bearing a proud and cocky grin, registered only abject terror.And that was the end of my brief encounter with motorcycles, which, I have decided, should be left to those with acne, no imagination and a penchant for wearing rubber clothes.Not being someone who readily goes back on his word, I found myself facing something of a dilemma as the Grand Prix weekend loomed ever nearer. Was I, a) to forget my vow and get a motorcycle; b) get a push bike and risk a cardiac arrest; or c) should I rely on shoe leather, which would mean a range limitation of no more than one or two feet in any direction as a result of acute, inherent and irreversible laziness?The answer, as is always the case in such cheap games, was in fact, d) none of these.Suzuki and Honda came to the rescue with a brace of four-wheeled motorbikes which seemed to offer the perfect blend of nippiness (sorry), fresh-air thrills and car-like safety.In fact, they didn't. The Honda fell short of the mark by some considerable margin because it is, without a shadow of doubt, the most frightening thing yet created by man. Which is saying something.The Suzuki failed to live up to my expectations because it is runner-up to the Honda in the sheer terror stakes.Richard Branson has driven a powerboat across the Atlantic in seven minutes; he has flown a hot-air balloon the size of Birmingham over the same distance in nine and a half seconds but he knows nothing of real danger because, as far as I know, he has never tried to go anywhere on a quad bike.You see, it's no good just sitting on these four-wheeled motorcycles and hoping you can get to where you want to go, because, depending on which machine you choose to use, you will either end up at your destination covered in bruises or you will end up at completely the wrong place.The 2495 Honda TRX 250 fourtrax is an out-and-out racer, with extrovert styling and a two-stroke 250-cc motor which will propel it to 100 mph having dispensed with the 0 to 60 increment in about five seconds.Although it could be used in farms or forests, because nature has yet to invent an obstacle to stop these buzz bombs, the TRX is bought in small numbers only by people who wish to win various off-road races.The controls are familiar to any motorcyclist, the only fundamental difference being the throttle, which is not activated by a twist grip. Instead, there's a little thumb-operated lever which stands no chance of jamming open should the infernal thing fall on its side.Which it does. Often.While it is akin to a Group B evolution car, the 2999 Suzuki LT4WD is sort of Range Roverish. Like the Honda, it gets mostly motorcycle controls but it has no clutch, a reverse gear, three ranges, a locking differential and switchable two- or four-wheel drive.We are forever being told how clever the Japanese are becoming in the art of miniaturisation, but to have crammed this little lot into a machine the size of a salted peanut is nothing short of remarkable.It's powered by a four-stroke 250-cc engine which develops 20 bhp and has five forward gears which can be shifted even with the throttle wide open. Every other lever on it, and there are 37, is a brake.The Honda's main failing is a simple one. With 45 bhp on tap, it is too bloody fast for appalling weeds like me.When it's off the cam, everything is fine and it potters round at a leisurely pace, popping and spluttering a bit but getting by all right.However, if you inadvertently get the motor in its thankfully narrow power band, then the front wheels leave the ground and you must sit there and do nothing until you hit something. Well that's what I did anyway.If you remove your thumb from the accelerator, the engine braking is sufficient to hurl you over the handlebars. If you steer, the back slews round and you roll, and if you keep the power on, you just end up going faster and faster, until you're scared rigid and incapable of taking any preventative action at all. You are, not to put too fine a point on it, stuck in a no-win situation from which there is only one escape: an accident.The Suzuki has a less serious problem but it's one that warrants a mention none the less. In essence, the rider has no say in which direction it goes.You can do what you will with the handlebars but you will continue to make straight line forward progress until a) you stop by applying one of the 37 brakes or b) you run into something.Now, if you stop, you will have to dismount, lift up the front, take a theodolite bearing on where you want to go, drop the front down so it points in the proper direction and set off again towards the next accident.I found the best way to alter course was to strike things a glancing blow. With practice, it's possible to bash into the selected target at exactly the correct speed and angle so you emerge from the confrontation pointing at your destination. A bit like snooker on wheels.The best targets for such assaults are people, as they're mushy and don't harm the bike's bodywork or tracking. Car doors are good too because they buckle and bend long before anything on the super sturdy Suzi gives up the ghost.So, after a brief flirtation on the Honda, I gave it to a colleague for the duration and I later saw him fairly regularly, on each occasion wearing a frightened look on his face and heading off towards whatever horizon was currently nearest.I stuck with the Suzuki, and, after a while, became quite accustomed to ricocheting my way from baby to grannie to car door to helicopter landing gear in a sort of large-scale demonstration of Brownian motion.Only once did I hurt myself on it. Because of its huge, underinflated tyres and plethora of gear ratio and drive selection levers, I figured it would be as adept at traversing rough ground as those hamster lookalike thingummys which live in the Andes.So, bearing this in mind, I tried to scale a 45-degree slope which felt, as I reached halfway house, like I'd overdone things. Doubtless the bike was sailing through the test without even gently perspiring, but from where I sat, it felt like there was no way we'd reach the crest.The foot I put down to act as a sort of stabiliser was promptly run over by the back wheel which, thankfully, wasn't as painful as you might imagine. This though is because my left foot is used to being squashed. In the past year, it's been run over four times, once by myself in an XJS and three times by other people. And I'm not joking either.Happily, on rough ground, the front tyres do enjoy a modicum of grip so I was able to turn round and head back to terra firma where they became as sticky as sheet ice again.All the while, I kept being overtaken by this maniac on the out-of-control Honda who kept squeaking about how he'd just overtaken Gordon Murray and run Nigel Mansell off his moped. Poor chap spent the entire evening muttering about power to weight ratios and how slow Thrust Two is.As I loaded my Suzuki on the back of a Mitsubishi pickup truck for the homeward voyage on Sunday evening, I was quite sad. There's a challenge in mastering a four-wheeled bike that one simply does not encounter in the everyday world of electric-windowed cars.I should like to be able to buy such a beast for everyday use but unfortunately, because they have no indicators or tax discs, they cannot be taken on public highways and byways, which is a shame. It should be much easier to drive on a road than in a field, there's so much more to hit.I don't understand how F. Giles Esq can be allowed to pedal his pre-Boer War tractor up the A1 at 2 mph when the lord of the manor isn't even able to dart across the Nether Middlecombe to Lower Peasepottage back road on a Suzi Q to see how his sheep are doing.Unless this silly law is repealed immediately, I shall become an anarchist.

Invaders from CarsNow let me make one thing perfectly clear. If I say I will be in the pub at 8 o'clock, I will be in the pub at 8 o'clock.I will not arrive, breathless, at a quarter past blaming the traffic or an unlikely encounter with a crazed Bengal tiger.Punctuality is a fine art and I have mastered it to such a degree that as the second hand of my unusually accurate Tissot rock watch the one that's as individual as my own signature sweeps round to herald the appointed hour, I will be just about to enter the pre-arranged venue. My expected companion, however, is rarely, if ever, in evidence. This makes me mad.What I can't understand is how on earth other people aren't able to manage the business of being on time quite as well as I do. Some do the breathless bit, some try to claim that they've been in a meeting which went on a bit but these people are usually estate agents and thus not worth talking to anyway. Then there are those who saunter in an hour late with nary an apology.No matter. The thing is that if you arrive before the people you're supposed to be meeting, you must find something to do.Something that lets other people in the bar know that you haven't been stood up. You can always hear them muttering about how 'she isn't coming' and sometimes how they're 'not in the least bit surprised with a face like that'.You try desperately not to look at your watch every four seconds until eventually you are forced to cast aside all thoughts of giving the person just another five minutes. When you leave without speaking to anyone, it lets those who have been laughing at you know they were right all along.Thus, if you're ever in a Fulham pub and someone greets you like he's your best friend, it'll probably be me, so don't worry about it.Far and away the best way of passing the time on such occasions is to insert various coinage into a space invader machine thingy. I do this a lot.In fact, I've just worked out that I spend more time playing computer games than I spend on the loo. This makes me an addict. I need help. These machines have become my confidants. I talk to them, thank them when they're kind, swear at them when they're not.And I've become rather good at them, which is a shame. Of all the things I could have been good at, it would have to be computer games, wouldn't it? What about raising money for the deaf? Or organising RNLI balls? Or being able to drive round the Nurburgring with gusto?Some of the more modern games are a bit baffling; you know, the ones where you insert 20p in exchange for six seconds of bangs and explosions, none of which have anything whatsoever to do with the buttons you're hitting, before a terse message explains that the game is over.Worse than my autobank, some of them.Asteroids will always hold a special place in my heart along with Scramble and Pole Position but recently I've discovered that one can buy similar games for use on home computers like the one I'm using to write this story now.The best I've found to date is called Grand Prix Simulator which costs a meagre 1.99. Such is its popularity that it is currently topping the little known Gallup charts for home computer games. How long will it be before someone commissions a bunch of pollsters to find out which flower shop is selling the most hyacinths?Anyway, you control a little car which beetles round a track trying to beat either the bogey car or an opponent or both. Complete the first course successfully and you get to reach stage two, where the track becomes trickier and the bogey car driver more competent.Happily the programmers at Codemasters who make Grand Prix Simulator have resisted the temptation to use complicated graphics such as one finds on modern-day arcade machines. I always find that home computer games programmed by clever dicks are harder to play than a game of archery in a foggy beehive, don't you?Thus, the cars are simple squares and you, the player, look down on the circuit rather than along the bonnet of your steed.Funniest of all, though, is the fact that leering from the promotional material that accompanies this game is the dreadfully ugly face of my old mate Johnnie Dumfries, the man who lost his job at Lotus when Camel insisted that at least one of their Grand Prix drivers had a face to match their new yellow paintwork.Johnnie, says the Codemasters' press release, reckons the game is every bit as exciting as the real thing a comment which should, I feel, be taken with liberal helpings of salt.How, pray, can sitting in your living room steering some electrons round a TV screen be as exciting as travelling at 200 mph behind a crazy Italian who, on balance, would rather you didn't overtake him?As it turned out, Johnnie was more than willing to take me on in a do-or-die battle to the death... er, I mean flag.Needless to say, I thrashed him and like a true cynic did not accept any of his feeble excuses. I know his wife was in hospital at the time and I know the burden of having accepted a Jaguar drive was hanging heavily on his shoulders but I have problems too, you know. I mean, the shoe-lace in my left brogue is getting awfully thin and, not being the sort of person who ever sets foot in a shop, I have no idea where one sets about borrowing a replacement. Do Russell and Bromley, for instance, have a press test fleet I wondered as I lapped the Scottish Earl before he'd even left the grid.Time and time again I explained that in order to go forward, you simply press the letter 'F'. But he just couldn't grasp it.I wonder if the bosses at Codemaster realise this. These two younglings, six-year-old David Darling and his four-year-old brother, Richard, expect to sell well over 200,000 copies of their latest offering and that will mean a substantial injection to their 2 million turnover.Fair enough, they have become very rich because they exploit the weaknesses of people like me. But is their life really complete?Have they ever seen a ptarmigan in its full winter plumage? Do they know where Siena is? Is it possible they've never ridden on the back of a dolphin? These are the things that matter in life. Playing with computers just fills in the gaps.2001 isn't that far away any more you know.

The RevengerI was never allowed to play with guns when I was a child. While various friends were able to scamper around the local woods with their Johnny Sevens, I had to make do with an old twig. And convincing an eight-year-old he was dead simply because I'd pointed a piece of larch his way was not quite as easy as you might imagine.Twenty years on and the ban still exists. However, this is probably just as well because if the law did permit me to bear arms, then this week alone two people at least would have died horrible, bloody deaths.First to receive a neat 9 mm hole in the side of his face would have been the service manager at a large London Fiat dealer who tried to charge Beloved a staggering 418 for some minor work on her Panda.Second would have been the driver of a Citroen CX estate who, in a display of intransigence to rival Mrs Thatcher at an EEC farm subsidy committee meeting, brought Fulham Road to a grinding standstill.The plethora of smashed computer keyboards and broken telephones that litter the office are testimony to the fact that not so very far below my veneer of calm lies a rampant beast with foam round its mouth and a bright-red countenance.This aspect of my make-up was, I think, inherited from my grandfather who regularly threw his shoes through the television screen whenever Harold Wilson's face appeared on it.Now, as things stand, the situation is not too complicated. After I've dialled directory enquiries for the ninth time and it's still engaged, I will hurl my telephone at the wall. It's my plaster. It's my phone. I can thus do as I like with them.Similarly, when I've spent two days working on a story and my computer announces that it's made a syntax error and, as a result, the fruit of my labours has vanished into a silicon no man's land from which there is no escape, the keyboard and sometimes its accompanying screen often learn what it's like to collide with a sledgehammer.Again, the consequences, as far as others are concerned, amount to a big fat zero. The world continues to revolve, various whales still get regular supplies of plankton and biscuit-and-raisin Yorkies don't seem to get any cheaper.Now, when stuck behind some moron in a Nissan who is driving with all the alacrity and the verve of a koala bear on Valium, just what options are open to the unarmed Britisher?One can shout a little but she will not hear. One can, one probably does, salivate to some extent but she will not notice or one can resort to the horn and lights, but she will not care.As a result, one is forced to let one's pacemaker take the strain while dreaming of thumbscrews and racks and vats of boiling oil into which all Nissan drivers should be immersed.Sticks and stones may break her bones but words etc, etc.I'd like to think that if an Uzi machine pistol was lying on the seat beside me, I'd only use it to shoot holes in the culprit's tyres but this is a bit like thinking I could sit here at 11 in the morning with a biscuit-and-raisin Yorkie and not eat it.In America, of course, one is allowed to go about one's business carrying an entire armoury in one's flak jacket, and this explains why we are forever being regaled with tales of cabbies in New York who shoot people whose cars have stalled at the lights. I don't blame them. I know I would.A country where one is given the wherewithal to rid the roads of awful drivers seems like one helluva place to live and I'd be off like a shot if I thought I wouldn't have to adopt a silly accent, wear daft clothes and drive around in a soggy car with chrome all over it.These drawbacks have always been enough to make staying in Britain worthwhile... just. Now, though, thanks to my 'Revenger', the land of hope and glory is a much more satisfactory place in which to lay my hat.This 9.95 toy, according to its Taiwanese manufacturers, is the ultimate weapon in the fight against frustration. It can, they say, reduce tension and hostility in almost any circumstances. And they speak the truth.It is a small black box with high-tech knobs and BMW-style service indicator flashing lights all over it, which one attaches to one's dashboard with the provided Velcro strips.What it does is make a selection of noises. Press button A and the speaker emits a death ray sound similar to the awful cacophony space invader machines make in pubs when you're trying to speak with someone you haven't seen for ages.Button B is labelled 'front machine gun', and this predictably makes sort of Bren noises, while button C reproduces the sound of a high-velocity shell: wheeeeeeeeeeeeekaprunch!Apparently, Bloomingdales in New York sell one of these things every four minutes and Selfridges on Oxford Street report a similar level of interest.However, my example has been somewhat modified to make it even better. The trouble is that the standard kit deafens only those who are sharing a vehicle with it. You can stab all three buttons at once but Mrs Nissan-Driver, in blissful ignorance, will continue to stall in that yellow box every time those infernal traffic lights indulge in a spot of metamorphosis.As I've said before in this column, I am to engineering what parsley sauce is to Bosch fuel injection but when it comes to electronic whizzkiddery, I'm a match for that bald chappie who made a million electric slippers that no one wanted to buy.Thus, I have been able to run a wire from my Revenger to a much more powerful speaker which is located just behind the radiator grille of my CRX.Its inventor, 29-year-old David McMahan, says: 'The Revenger is as harmless as jingle bells but has a tremendous therapeutic effect.' Not any more it ain't me old mate.Such is the authenticity and volume of my machine-gun sound that I have actually seen people duck when my finger hits the 'trigger'. One day, one of the Nissan-clad berks will have a heart attack when they hear the 84,000 decibel rendition of a shell heading their way. This will be a good thing. I see myself as a R0SPA pioneer.Time and time again, blithering idiots have given me palpitations with their unbelievable antics on the road. Well, no longer am I going to get mad. I'm going to get even.Unfortunately, a group calling themselves the moral majority actually, they're surprisingly few in number and live in socially aware places like Hampstead and Barnes will undoubtedly kick up the most godawful fuss when my modified Revenger gets its first victim.But these people must stick with their muesli and their lentils. I'm on a mission.

CharadesHis slippers were slightly at odds with the neat brown suit, pristine white shirt and silk tie but, nevertheless, he was the managing director of a major Japanese corporation. Clad in a pair of Chinos and an open-neck shirt, it didn't tax anyone's powers of perception to ascertain that in the world of motoring journalism, I rank well down with the chaps who rewrite press releases for papers like the Bengal Bugle.Yet the man in the brown suit was indulging in a bow which took his face so close to the ground that just for a moment, I figured he was smelling the gravel.He wasn't the only one either. Everyone with whom I came into contact on my two-day, whistlestop tour of Japan spent the entire duration of our conversation rubbing their noses in the dirt. It takes some getting used to.But I managed it and now I am fast losing friends by insisting that if they wish to speak to me, they avert their eyes.I read somewhere the other day that nearly 80 per cent of Britishers had never been in an aeroplane. Taking that quite remarkable fact a stage further, it would be sensible to assume that the vast majority of the 20 per cent who have flown somewhere have flown within Europe be it southern Spain, a Greek island or Majorca.Among those who have ventured futher afield, I would hazard a guess that America is usually the most popular destination.In essence, Japan is still an unknown quantity in terms of personal experience. Sure, we all are fully aware that it's a paid-up member of the capitalist Western world but because it's on the other side of the globe and doesn't have holiday-isle status, it isn't all that popular with foreigners from the English-speaking world.Generally speaking, I've always had the world divided into four categories and largely, these views are echoed by those with whom I've conversed on the subject.We have countries behind the Iron Curtain where we expect to find downtrodden people in brown coats shuffling from one decaying tower block to the next in search of a lettuce or a Beatles album.Then we have the third world where lots of people in loin cloths sit around wondering why there are no more lettuces.Third comes the West, with billions of lettuces that everyone can afford to buy whenever they want.And finally there's the Far East Thailand, Burma etc where everyone sits in the lotus position with their hands on their heads wondering what on earth a lettuce is.Go to any of these places and you know what to expect. You know America is full of people in checked trousers who say 'gee' a lot. You know people in Australia go to work in shorts and call one another mate. You know the French will be rude, that the Burmese will be polite, that Hong Kong's full of skyscrapers and imitation Rolexes and that Antarctica is bloody cold.Since all those spoilsport explorers wandered round the world last century discovering places and writing about them, there are no surprises left. And it's still going on today. Between them, Wilbur Smith and Bob Geldof have given me a razor-sharp, Kodacolor Gold image of exactly what Africa is like. And I've never even been there.Japan, though, was a shock. Because they build television sets that look like European television sets, gramophones that look like European gramophones and motor cars that look like European motor cars, it's easy to believe that they're as Westernised as a plate of McDonald's fries or the Queen.But this, I can assure you, is not the case. They may have all the exterior trappings of what you and I would call Western civilisation but they are fundamentally different both deep down and on the surface.My two-day visit to the Daihatsu factory provided a fascinating insight into just what makes these chaps tick and more importantly, whether I was wrong in a Performance Car story twelve months or so ago to argue that they would never be able to destroy the European car industry with the same consummate ease they crushed various local motorbike businesses.Obviously, in two days, you cannot glean all that you could in a lifetime but I've heard politicians spout wildly on subjects about which they know absolutely nothing. And people listen to them.The first thing that will strike you as odd in Japan is how polite everyone is. Quite apart from the neverending bowing, they have obsequiousness down to an art that even the Chinese haven't mastered.The Daihatsu PR man who sat in the back of my car to explain how I should get about in what is the world's worst-signposted country epitomised this. Whereas in England, you or I would shout, 'Take the next left', he would lean forward, apologise for blocking the view in my rear-view mirror and say, 'Excuse me, Mr Crarkson, would you mind taking the next turning you find to the reft.' By which time I'd gone past it.The Daihatsu factories and offices were bedecked with Union Jacks to mark our visit, receptionists bowed so low that they disappeared behind their desks and everywhere there were signs saying things like 'Welcome respectful journalists from UK'. I am not respectful. I have a criminal record in France and I pick my nose.Whereas at European press functions, a PR person and a couple of directors will play host to upwards of 50 journalists, Daihatsu wheeled out their president, Mr Tomonaru Eguchi, and enough hierarchy to make up six rugby teams. The result was that I felt sorry for them if something went wrong with their arrangements.At an Audi press launch recently, one errant driver finished the slalom by smashing his Quattro into the electronic timing gear. It was hugely funny to watch the stony faced Germans trying to cope with this unexpected hiccough.In Japan, the test route Daihatsu had chosen for us to evaluate their new four-wheel-drive Charade was plagued with an eight-mile traffic jam which wrecked their schedule. I nearly cried. If this had happened in Germany where they tried just as hard to be organised, you'd have heard me laughing in Aberdeen.Similarly, when a lift at the company headquarters refused to leave the basement, thus forcing some of my colleagues to use the stairs, you could see they were close to tears. Some had to be helped from the building when they heard the lift operator plunge a sword into her belly.I think we ate her that night for supper. And the liftmaker. And his wife.Not only are they more polite than any Westerner I've ever met, they're also more weird. Their tables and chairs don't have legs which, if you ask me, is a bit silly.Also, one of the things that didn't feature in my hotel room was a bed. Some of the things it did feature were five pairs of slippers, one for the hallway, one for the bedroom, one for the loo, one for the washroom, and one for the bathroom.I just wore my brogues all the time.This though was not allowed at supper time when a geisha girl spent the entire meal cooking each mouthful of lift operator individually and dropping it between my ever-ready lips. She even dabbed my battered, time-worn face with a warm flannel in between chews.Now, you might imagine that I've returned from my visit a fully converted Japophile but I haven't, because I simply can't work out what makes them tick. Trying to fathom them out is like trying to contemplate the infinity of space or how Seat sell any cars. It just can't be done.I've had business dealings with Japan in the past and have emerged from every meeting staggered at their intransigence. They simply will not take no for an answer and will, if needs be, scheme and connive way into the night until their opponent is a pulsating wreck beyond argument.This feature was evident in various conversations I had with Daihatsu's engineers. 'Why don't you buy SCS brakes from Lucas?' 'Because we're making our own.' 'Wouldn't it be cheaper to buy them now?' 'We'd rather develop our own.' 'Don't you think it would help create a favourable impression of Daihatsu in Europe if you bought some European equipment?' 'We've got some Pirelli tyres and anyway we can do better than SCS.' End of story.Language was always a stumbling block but the stock answer to everything was always, 'We're working on it' and they probably are.It's easy to be working on lots of things when 1500 members of your 11,000 strong workforce are in the R&D department.I suspect there are two reasons why they are working on everything. One is because of that indigenous Japanese trait called nationalism and the other is because that was the only phrase these guys have licked. Even the translators were about as good at English as I am at French.I know things like 'Et maintenant, comme le chien' and 'Vous avez des idees an dessus de votre gare'. But a full-scale technical press conference would, I fear, leave me floundering.It seems strange that having gone to what were obviously enormous lengths to make sure our stay was totally trouble free, they didn't find bilingual chappies who know how to say 'three-speed automatic gearbox' in Japanese and English.Maybe they could and weren't letting on. Maybe I'm a cynical old sod.Certainly, it seems at first that they're being more open than any industry chappy you've ever encountered; not once, for instance, did anyone say 'no comment' or 'I can't tell you that' and they did show us a top secret prototype, but I do get the impression that half the time they don't understand your question and the other half, they just tell you what they think you want to hear. Maybe again.While touring their Shiga factory, I was desperate to see what measures were incorporated to make their damned cars so reliable. There were none. The plant was no more automated than European equivalents, quality control no more strident.There were just a few guys working on machines the size of Coventry that churn out a completed 1.3-litre engine every 28 seconds. There were big digital scoreboards announcing how close to target they were and there was an air of cleanliness. In short, the only thing that stood out as being special were the workers, who behave rather differently from those I've encountered in Europe. They didn't flick V signs at us. Perhaps it's because they were too busy bowing.Then there was the rendition of Johnny Mathis's 'When A Child Is Born' which was playing over the loudspeaker system to commemorate our visit.We were shown every engine being tested to 4500 rpm, and we were shown the camshaft machine which must have breathed a sigh of relief when the engineers announced the new 16-valve engine wouldn't be a twin-cam and we were shown the tropical fish aquarium. No, I don't know why either.We also saw an MR2 being tested and Bertone's name in a visitors' book but still they maintained a sports car is not in the offing. 'We're working on the idea,' said one of the translators.Maybe the reliability just comes because of the workers' devotion to duty. My personal guide hasn't taken a holiday in ten years and is currently owed 130 days off. 'I'm just too busy to go away but I'm working on it,' he says.Maybe it is as a result of there being no women on the factory floor. I dunno but I do know there is no obvious reason why the average Daihatsu is a whole lot more reliable than the average Eurobox.'We don't have hooligans,' suggested one hopeful individual who helps make the cars, but I hardly think that all Rover SDIs broke down because they were vandalised on the production line.After the factory tour it was back onto the bus for a lesson in why Japanese interiors are so universally awful have you seen the interior of the new Toyota Landcruiser? It's disgusting.But it's nothing when stacked up against that bus, which in turn was positively tasteful compared with the innards of a Japanese taxi I've been in a Nissan Cedric and let me tell you that if it were fitted with a tachograph, the damned thing would blow up.They actually like crushed velour seats, antimacassars with scenes of Japan on them, swinging things on the rear-view mirror and gaudy striping to go with the fake stitching. And chrome. Oh boy, they can't get enough of it.To complicate matters, they simply couldn't understand why we all clutched our mouths and went green when presented with this sort of addenda.A problem here is that while they realise the British and the Japanese have different tastes, they seem to think we are like the Americans. I haven't heard such a loud chorus of 'Oh no we're not' since I was at a pantomime back in 1968.Funnily enough, Daihatsu are one of the better interior stylists. God knows how they do it.It's hard, as I said earlier, to form cast-iron opinions after two days of fact finding, but certainly, the Japanese cannot be underestimated.We already know that a great many Japanese cars are equal, if not superior, to their European equivalents but this is not the issue here for a couple of reasons. Firstly, such discussions are getting boring now and secondly, Britain, at least, is protected by import quotas.It's the latter point which is what I'm most concerned about and not just because every Japanese company, including relative minnows like Daihatsu, have either established some kind of assembly base in Europe or are about to do so.No, come 1992 when internal borders between member states of the EEC are broken down, the gentlemen's agreement that currently limits Japanese imports to 11 per cent of the UK market will be worth less than a Lira.Daihatsu admit they expect to sell more cars in Britain after 1992.One day, someone is going to have to get round a table with the Japanese manufacturers to see what can be done; and I don't envy whoever gets this job.He'll feel honoured with all the bowing, he'll be overawed at the politeness, particularly if he's French, he might even feel sorry for them. Certainly, long periods of sitting on the floor will make him uncomfortable and, thus, he might concede more than he might otherwise.One thing, though: he must never be rude. I learned this by telling the driver of a Toyota Crown Royale that his car was very nasty. Luckily, we moved off before his verbal abuse turned into a full-scale kung fu demonstration.We must face facts. In ten years' time, I shall be driving a Daihatsu Charade.If it's the GTti, I won't mind an iota.

Pedal PusherIf the Queen were to have a sex change, one of your eyebrows might shift inadvertently upwards an inch or two. If Mike Tyson were to be exposed as a closet ballet dancer, the other would surely join it.If I announced I had bought myself a bicycle you would faint and probably die.The bicycle was not invented for people with beer bellies like barrage balloons and lungs like Swiss cheese. People like me in other words.Nevertheless, two weeks ago, in a moment of unparalleled rashness, I decided to invest in a three-speed Raleigh Wayfarer.This is why.Platform boots may come and lamps with oily bubbles in them may go, but the White Horse is here to stay.This drinking establishment situated in the heart of Sloanedom, on Parsons Green in south-west London, regularly takes in excess of 4000 a day. And much of this income is my personal responsibility.Since it became fashionable to drink there some six or seven years ago, a host of competitors have opened up, ranging from champagne bars to riverside inns to spit and sawdust pubs resonating with some of that renowned London character.But they've failed and you still can't get a drink in the White Horse without queuing up for hours. Days even.Since I moved to Fulham back in 1984 I have lived within an easy stroll of this cultural oasis, this spiritual haven. And it has therefore been no hardship to drive home from work, abandon the wheels, and sally forth on foot for an evening spent expanding the girth. I do it a lot.The trouble is, though, that I recently moved to a new flat which is simply too far away. I once tried walking but ended up in an oxygen tent. I've tried driving, but tomato juice gets to be as dull as wallpaper paste after 23 pints of the stuff no matter how much Tabasco they put in it. I've even tried finding a new pub but there isn't one.So I bought the Wayfarer.There is a veritable and unplumbed ocean of reasons why no one should ever use one of these antiquated deathtraps for getting around, but the fact remains that, when you're blind drunk, they make a deal of sense. For a kick off, you can't lose your driving licence; but, more importantly, you can't do much damage when you accidentally run into something.In fact, for drunkards, the bicycle is bettered by only two other forms of transport: the pram and the sedan chair.Sure, I considered both these, but was forced to discount the pram idea when I couldn't find one seven feet long, and the sedan chair when my staff inexplicably declined to carry me around in it.So I went into a second-hand shop with 30 and emerged a few minutes later with the Wayfarer in tow.Now before you dismiss me as a damned traitor to the cause of performance motoring, I must stress that I will continue to drive as I always have done: in other words, with no regard whatsoever for those who use the roads without paying tax.I am fully aware every time I mount the mighty Raleigh that I am a guest in the motor vehicle's territory and must learn to get out of its way.So do not expect a barrage of whinges and moans about how the Mamito Honi lot in their rusty Jap boxes couldn't judge the width of their cars if you gave them a theodolite, a computer, a tape measure and six weeks.Nor should you think that this is to be a stream of abuse directed in the general direction of lightly warmed hatchback scramblers, who seem to think that they're going backwards unless movement is accompanied by large quantities of wailing rubber.And I am not about to criticise the Archies and the Sids in their Maggie-wagon taxis who are too busy haranguing their fares about how 'there are too many A-rabs in the country' and how 'Mrs Thatcher Gawd bless 'er has set the country on its feet again' to notice cyclists even when they're 200 feet tall and 60 feet wide like me.I was going to lambast London Regional Transport for their inability to make a bus work without it leaving the sort of smoke screen the navy use in the heat of battle, but what the hell, they've got a job to do. And, like I said, the road is for motor vehicles, not for cyclists on an Alpen trip.I'm not all that bothered, either, about the drivers of artics who need an area the size of Wales to turn left. No, the breed I hate most while astride the Wayfarer are the breed I hate most when I'm driving my car. People in vans.There are always three of them in the front, and while I am an active campaigner for the abolition of all speed limits, I really do have to concede that they travel far too quickly.It seems sensible to make them forfeit one limb for every wing mirror they smash. The fifth offence should lead them straight to the guillotine. I mean, if they can't steer their van through a gap without removing the mirrors from whatever it is they're going between then they should either slow down or get spectacles.Do they not realise that little old me on the Wayfarer is a good deal less stable than a nuclear power station with Ray Charles at the controls? Can they not see that my centre of gravity is higher up than the tip of the CB aerial on their Transit and that, as a result, a sudden breeze or a momentary lapse in concentration could have me veering wildly from side to side like an SDP MP or, as has happened on six occasions to date, falling off?What I've learned to do when I hear the unmistakable sounds that herald the imminent arrival of a Garymobile megabel stereo, graunching gears and 94-zillion-rpm engine is to dismount and walk along the pavement for a while.Trouble is, if I encounter six vans in my mile-long journey, then I may as well not bother taking the Wayfarer out in the first place because I'll spend most of the time pushing it.Anyway, all this is of no moment now because, last week, I came out from the pub and found two padlocks securing my steed to the railings. Since I'd put just the one on, it means that someone out there has a finely honed sense of humour.It took two hours and some seriously sophisticated cutting gear to free the beast, but the effort was to no avail. Last night it was stolen, so now I'm going back to walking.Unless someone steals my shoes in the meantime.

Girls and RubberThe Kings Road, as usual, was at a standstill. There was a gardening programme, as usual, on Radio Four, and Capital, as usual, was playing the latest splurge from Kylie Astley.But things could have been a whole lot worse. It was a sunnyish sort of day, and the Kings Road shopperettes were out and about, competing with one another to see who could get away with wearing the least amount of cloth around their person.I just sort of fiddled with the door mirror to get a better view of the one in the suede mini skirt who'd gone into Fiorucci, and then slumped down in the seat so that I could see the one in the convertible Golf without her noticing the leer that was parked on my countenance.I even beckoned one over and reminded her that five years earlier we'd had a few dances together at a hunt ball. She wasn't all that bothered.Neither was another one impressed when I told her that we'd once shared a table in Puccis.Now, this is one day in the life of the Kings Road. Go down there right now and you will see attractive women, hundreds of them, deliberately being pretty.So, what I want to know is why on earth those who choose models for calendars don't use the location as a hunting ground.Let's face it; a lot of real models are simply not pretty. Worse, a lot of real models look as though they may have spent the last eighteen years head butting bulldozers; yet if you turn to any page in some of the glossier mags you will see them, half dressed in some bizarre fashion undergarment, half not dressed at all.Some of the fat slobs who man the ironmongery stalls in provincial market towns would make better subject matter. For heaven's sake, I could do a superior job with those things you see on the Readers' Wives pages in Paul Raymond's Menshouse Clubnational Only Boy.Only last week, I was in Honfleur in Northern France where they were shooting the sort of picture you'll find in a subsequent issue of Harpers and She.The photographic equipment, all three lorry-loads of it, was set up in a smashing little bar and on a table by the window they'd carefully placed a crushed Disque Bleu packet, a half-eaten croissant, a half-cup of French coffee and a model.Wearing the sort of coat you would more normally associate with a cartoon char lady, she had the figure of a garden hoe and the face of a long-dead turbot.And the problem was compounded because she was wearing bright scarlet lipstick and a layer of mascara so heavy her eyelids kept closing under the strain. Finally, she had a facial complexion and colour that reminded me of unbaked pastry.Thumb through any women's magazine and occasionally you come across the sort of person you'd eat dung for, but mostly they're the sort that would have you leaving with sonic booms.Never has this phenomenon been more keenly obvious than in the 1989 Pirelli calendar.While Unipart and a host of other component manufacturers do their level best to make their calendars sell in the face of fierce competition from the Sun and Penthouse, Pirelli claim to be in a class of their own.Now 25 years old, this titillatory publication was a British invention and, even now, is orchestrated from London. Top models have appeared in it, big-name photographers have been selected to shoot it.And each year since the whole caboodle began, the makers have kept the contents of the calendar a closely guarded secret until publication though from whom, God only knows, so few copies are ever produced.Few, in 1988, means 40,000 which, say Pirelli, is way, way down on demand.Oh yeah? Apparently, liberated 1960s parents are now writing to Pirelli for copies of the earlier efforts to give as presents to 'maturing offspring'.Of course, all this is pure hype, designed to generate mystique and consequently foster a desire to own something which is actually no more out of the ordinary than salt water.Certainly, it isn't 'acknowledged as the most potent status symbol in the world'.I can hear Richard Branson now: 'Oh yes, I own several jetliners, an island in the Caribbean, a collection of beautiful hotels, a couple of boats, a number of fine cars, a hot air balloon and more houses than Barratt have ever built but most of all, I treasure my Pirelli calendar.'And even if he really does get off on past efforts from the eyetie rubber boys, I doubt whether he'll think too much of Possessions which is what they've called the 1989 edition.Firstly, it's shot by a woman. Now, women are forever telling me that I do not understand the bond of motherhood and appeal of babies, so let me tell them something for a change: they do not understand what men want from pictures of naked ladies.We want heaving chests, white beaches, glistening coconut oil and as much subtlety as you get at a Guns 'N' Roses concert.We do not want to spend fifteen minutes searching for a nipple that might or might not be in shot. And we don't get turned on by buttocks, because we have them as well. Well I do anyway.And great store has been made this year of the photographer's decision to use Polaroid film.I cannot tell the difference. You will not be able to tell the difference either.Anyway, what's so great about using a film that always fades to nothing four seconds after you pull it out of the camera and is about as accurate at reproducing living colour as the male half of Peters and Lee.And instead of using months of the year like every other diary and calendar ever made, Pirelli have used astrological signs instead. I do not know when these are. Next year, I will go everywhere either a month early or seven months late.On the 3rd of Capricorn next year, for instance, I am going to a party. When should I go?Finally, there's the women. They're all ugly to varying degrees and one or two don't even have nice figures. One's got nipples like dinner plates.And another has a bottom so baggy it looks just like two sacks of King Edwards.I suppose though that, for the first time, Pirelli cannot be accused of exploiting women. They cannot be accused either of sexism or of favouring those born to stroll the Kings Road.But for heaven's sake chaps, if Beloved can waltz in and order me to pay for two skirts, a packet of stockings and a bedside table, why can't I spend even a few minutes staring wistfully at a decent pair of greased bosoms?

Rat BoyThere are mutants in the sewers. Each night as darkness falls and a clinging fog descends to envelop the city in an eerie and impenetrable blanket, you can hear, if you listen carefully, the manhole covers sliding back.From deep beneath the streets, the hordes, horribly disfigured by exposure to state education, emerge into the silence. Clad in tattered rags, their eyes glint in the oddly transfused glow as they drift into the sodium lighting.Stealthily, they move unseen from street to street in a hunt for the currency of that mutant world beneath the catseyes.Down there, order has broken down and decency has become anarchy. There is no social structure as we know it; everyone is awful. The mutants only trade in two commodities. Ecstasy and car stereos.In order to get the drug, you need the music machines. And in order to get the music machines, you need to emerge into the old world where greed is good, where people wear double-breasted suits they bought in Next and talk into cellphones about how they've moved their wedge from copper to sugar.They watch items on the television called Hot Property and The City Programme. Their success is measured by the initials on the back of their cars.The mutants understand this grading system too. The wise elders say they know it because in the past, they too lived among us in the real world.They know that they will get more ecstasy from The Man if they break into the cars with an 'i' on the back.This is why, in the past two weeks, I have woken up on successive Sunday mornings to find one of my car windows completely reshaped. Go to bed and it's a flat piece of green tinted glass. Wake up and it's many immensely tiny pieces of glass spread over a huge area. Most of them, though, are in the heater vents where they can rattle.Trouble is, I am the sort of person who enjoys confusing the mutants. They break into my car because it looks as though it will sport the sort of stereo that can be exchanged for six or seven tabs. In fact, it is worth, in earth money, about 3.25.Nowadays, they break into my car to laugh at it.The mutants have left me alone for two years but with the emergence of Acid House music, their need for spiritual enlightenment is ever greater. Make no mistake, no one can be safe until the council weld up the manhole covers and pump cyanide gas into the web of tunnels beneath.You might imagine as you sit there in your Next suit that even if your car is broken into, so long as nothing is stolen all is well: if that's the case, you obviously don't drive a Honda.If you don't drive a Honda, you will be able to telephone one of the mobile glass repair outfits that fill 85 per cent of the Yellow Pages and a cheery man in an overall and an Escort van will come and kiss it better.Some say these men are mutant spies who are cashing in on the antics of their blood brothers in the sewers but this is only conjecture. Probably.If you do drive a Honda, you will spend Sunday ringing these people and becoming increasingly fed up with them calling you guv and saying they can do nothing until Monday.You just know they're the sort of people who hold their cigarettes between thumb and forefinger with the hot bit pointing inwards. You know they spent every minute of their state education dreaming of being a taxi driver. They have the banter.Why, you enquire, can they not send round one of their men? Because, they say, Honda will not let them carry original equipment stock.Later, their bosses are more precise. Er, it's not that they won't let us actually. We just don't because the Japanese change their models every six minutes and glass manufacturers in Europe can't keep up.This means those of you who drive a Honda that's been subjected to the attention of a mutant on Saturday night cannot get it mended until Monday morning. And this in turn means you must hope the cardboard you insert in the hole is a sufficient barrier to another mutant attack on the Sunday night.When you do get to a dealer, he will lighten your wallet to the tune of 90 quid. And break your door. Well, he broke mine.So I reckon a two-pronged attack is in order and I am volunteering to the last vestiges of law enforcement in this country as a back-room boffin.First we must look at the root cause of the problem. That leads inexorably to the conclusion that all state schools must be closed down. Never mind opting out of local authority guidance. Close them. All of them. Now.While the teachers with their beards and corduroy jackets are trying to teach the urchins how to do binary numbers and where Africa is, the kids at the back are thumbing through Vauxhall manuals to see how best to get round a dead lock.Then we must attack those who have already moved underground. That means posting teams of heavily armed ex-boxers outside manhole covers, with Uzis, flamethrowers and some of those guns Christopher Walken used in Dogs of War.You probably think all this is a load of rubbish, but before you reach for the headed notepaper, consider two things. Firstly, who are the people that break into cars? Do you know one?No, of course you don't. No one does, so they must come from somewhere else.Secondly, who the hell is buying all the stereos they steal? Where are all the shops that sell them? And if what they're selling is obviously stolen and on offer in such mind-boggling numbers, why on earth can't someone with a firearms licence pay the vendor a call?You can't pay them a call because it isn't a them. It's a he, a sort of Thatcherday Fagin who lives underground, distributing ecstasy tabs with gay abandon.I promise that if I actually catch someone in my car, I will not stop hitting them over the head with something blunt until they are in as many pieces as the glass they broke to get in.

In a FlapImagine, for a moment, the face of an opera aficionado if, halfway through a performance of Don Giovanni at Covent Garden, Bruce Springsteen bounded on stage and began a 120 decibel rendition of 'Born To Run'.Or picture, if you will, the depths to which a prison warder's jaw would drop if Ronnie Biggs appeared at the door of Wands-worth jail asking if his bedroom was still free.Presumably neither Ronnie nor Bruce could be persuaded to stage these feats but if you, like me, enjoy watching innocent strangers in a flap, all is not lost just try letting someone out of a side road in London.It's a relatively simple procedure. Let's say you're in a slow-moving queue of traffic on Baker Street and you see a BMW driver who has quite obviously been waiting for some time to pull out (easy: he'll look like a non-opera buff at a performance of Don Giovanni). Simply stop and with a huge smile on your face, flash your lights, indicating that he may emerge into the traffic stream.After he's looked gormlessly around to make sure you're not waving at a friend, and then peered into your eyes to ascertain there isn't a hint of lunacy hidden within their depths, the flap begins.Once he has assured himself your intentions are genuine, his left hand will dart for the gear lever put in neutral ten minutes earlier because the clutch leg was getting tired. Not only will the hapless hand in consequence drop the cigarette entrusted to it moments before but it will miss first gear anyway, and more often than not hit reverse. Happily, the tired clutch leg will have been slower on the uptake so passers-by will only be treated to an earful of crunching cogs rather than the sight of a BMW lurching unceremoniously backwards into the window of Mr Patel's sandwich bar.Wait a little longer and the kangaroo petrol-powered BMW will be in front of you, complete with a driver equipped for the next month with the best 'guess what happened to me' story any Londoner could wish to relate.Strangers to the city (yes, they exist) will be baffled by this scenario, but it isn't as crazy as it sounds. In London you do not let people in, make no allowances for the elderly or infirm, treat red traffic lights as no more than advisory stop signals and, if you plan to survive with your wings intact, you become bloody arrogant.London is, of course, an exception: to some, horribly frightening; to others, a challenge that needs mastering. There are those who will drive miles to avoid any contact with its streets and yet also those who regard the new traffic lights at Hyde Park Corner as the brainchild of a spoilsport.It is not, of course, only London that offers the motorist an insight into its inhabitants. It works on a worldwide scale. If one encounters a crashed or broken down vehicle in Pakistan, one simply makes a new road round it. In America, one wonders how on earth drivers can direct their huge automobiles through the haze of cigar smoke and the glare from oncoming sports jackets. In France, they haven't yet learned that you no longer yield to the right, and in Italy no one yields to anyone.Nor is the phenomenon peculiar to capital cities. Ignoring London for the time being have you ever been to Reigate? During the day, when husbands are away trying to save the Pound, their wives populate the town centre with VW Sciroccos and massive hairstyles. Their boutiques, bought to discourage them from seeking affairs, occupy their minds to a certain extent but meeting Sally Ann at the Bacchus Wine Bar for lunch is far more important.For these women, the car is no more than a vanity mirror on wheels. If ever you're driving down Reigate's main street and see a car that's about to pull out, for heaven's sake, beware. Although the Laura-Ashley-clad incumbent may appear to be checking her mirror for approaching cars, nothing is further from her mind. In reality, when she glances into a mirror, all she sees is a lovely made-up face, and it probably won't be yours.This is why the Reigate wife likes Sciroccos. Not only is there a very local dealer to be summoned for help whenever she forgets to put that smelly stuff in the tank, but the vanity mirror (rear-view mirror to you and I) isn't ridiculously convex. Such mirrors may improve peripheral vision but they show up every skin blemish and wrinkle.So be very careful in Reigate. Chances are, the car in front has no idea you're there and if its driver suddenly sees someone she hasn't seen'for absolutely ages' last night coming out of Diana's dress shop, she will, without warning, pull up for a chat.Further up the road in Woking, it's an entirely different story. Here, you'll find old couples lamenting the day when the town they had come to know and love was shaken up by developers to become Britain's biggest eyesore. The poor old dears in their pristine Marinas cannot work out for the life of them what a one-way system is and, while going the wrong way round it, can be seen pointing at concrete monstrosities saying, 'Do you remember when the police station was there?'These people, like the womenfolk of Reigate, do not understand the motor car, or indeed any laws pertaining to it. To them, the road is a grey strip and grey strips can be driven on at as leisurely a pace as may be and in whatever direction the driver chooses.Move up to Doncaster and a whole new world opens up. Here, in the heartland of mining, pigeon fanciers and Reliant Robins, driving is an art not yet mastered by the majority of the populace. Ineptitude reigns. It's a town where people take fifteen minutes to park in a space three times the length of their three-wheeler, where they don't pull out onto a roundabout until absolutely nothing is in sight, where you have to look out for apprentice dole queue jumpers in maroon pullovers, desperately trying to woo Dolcis shoe-shop salesgirls by spinning the wheels of their 1972 Capris complete with dice, stripes and two dozen fog lamps.The local police are too busy tracing whippet thieves to concentrate on these young blades with barely detectable moustaches and receding acne, so St Sepulchre Gate closed to those who can read the signs is jammed on a Saturday with a battery of primer splattered Sharon-loves-Garymobiles chewing up the Acrilan-smothered tarmac.Eighty miles further north, amid Britain's most breathtakingly beautiful scenery, the Yorkshire Dales, lethargy abounds and in spite of the availability of some magnificent driving roads, 7 mph is the average speed. Two groups are largely responsible for this pace: the locals who crawl around in corrugated-iron Subarus collecting wayward sheep and mending walls, and the gon-goozlers who flood up there in the summer to break them and scatter them again.Ethel and Albert, too old by about fifty summers for Club 1830 holidays in Benidorm, flock to the Dales to remind themselves of a lifestyle and pace not seen since 1473. Their spotless Maxi ten years old with 900 miles on the clock dithers around on the Askrigg pass with Ethel wondering whether her pallid demeanour is a result of Albert's driving or the dizzy heights, while Albert spends his time worrying about the stopping distance from 6 mph should a sheep wander into view on the horizon.His mental meanderings are inevitably brought to an abrupt halt by either clouds of steam belching from his much-loved engine or a head-on collision with a corrugated-iron Subaru whose driver has been looking at broken walls and not the road. Either way, it's a relief for the incumbents of Albert's eight-mile tailback who are desperately trying to reach the Farmers Arms in Muker before it closes.Birmingham you might liken to one of those 'power' houses that used to be an expensive but essential extra with a Hot Wheels set. You remember, the little toy car could be pushed into the 'house' where two rapidly spinning rubber wheels would shoot the projectile out of the other side. Theoretically, the car would be given enough oomph to complete a circuit of the track and reach the spinning wheels for a second boost before its momentum ran out. Perpetual motion, until the batteries gave up.In reality, the poor car shot out at such a rate it could never negotiate the first corner and would leap off the track to an expensive collision with the coffee table.So, you want to go to the centre of Birmingham do you? Like scores of others, you will leave the M6 where a bold sign says 'City Centre' and you will find yourself on the grand-sounding 'Expressway' thundering towards the skyscrapers under the ever watchful eyes of a succession of video cameras. Presumably, the tapes from these cameras can subsequently be watched by the traffic police amid great hilarity as they're bound to depict scenes of strangers trying desperately to work out which lanes of the 'Expressway' are for northbound traffic and which are for those going south.Anyway, after negotiating a couple of tunnels, you'll find yourself in Kidderminster.So you do a U-turn and head back towards the skyscrapers again, but your perseverance will simply put you back on the M6 again and if you're dreadfully unlucky that could spell an encounter with the infamous Gravelly Hill interchange Spaghetti Junction. Once here, no matter which way you try to enter Birmingham, you will be ejected out of the other side puzzled at how you managed to miss all of Britain's second-biggest city completely.But don't worry, it's not just you. Glance into any other car as it shoots through the tunnels and over the overpasses and you'll see the occupants are unshaven creatures, gaunt and undernourished through lack of sleep and food.If Ranulph Fiennes is looking for another challenge after his dangerous Transglobe Expedition, he could do worse than set out to find Birmingham's city centre without leaving the road system...Where is New Street? What about the Bullring? What kind of people are stuck in this once great city: indeed, is there anyone in there at all? Come on Ranulph, these questions need answering.Why can't Birmingham Council's Highway Department pay a visit to their counterparts in Bournemouth surely the best-signposted town anywhere and while they're at it, could they take along the idiots who dreamed up Oxford's one-way system as well? Whereas with Birmingham, no one can get in, quite the reverse applies in Oxford. Approach it from the east and you'll find yourself at a crossroads where you have to turn left. Do so and you're on the inner ring road with no exits. You're on it till you run out of petrol or sanity.This is presumably why Oxford is a city of cyclists. The crazy one-way system, the labyrinth of bus lanes, and the traffic wardens who, with their little moustaches and greased-down forelocks (even the women) all resemble a famous German leader, combine to make the motor car in Oxford as welcome as Marlboro sponsorship at an ASH convention.Perhaps the powers that be believe, and they have a point, that very pretty girls who have a penchant for wearing very short skirts and riding bicycles could raise accident statistics among male drivers to unacceptable levels.Not too far away, in Cirencester, the danger looms in another form swarms of tweed-clad hooray Henries in Lhasa green Golf GTis who, if asked, say they're students at the agricultural college, though their lecturers wouldn't know them from Adam.Drink-driving laws do not seem to have a bearing in Cirencester, where these students spend 85 per cent of their time with Moet in hand, 14 per cent playing silly buggers in their Lhasa green GTis and 1 per cent at college. Thus the local residents must approach each bend with extreme caution because there's no way of knowing which side of the road Henry will choose to occupy as his blurred vision tells him the strip of tarmac is no longer quite so straight.Happily, much of the sillier stunt work like trying to get the GTi up the college steps is executed away from the public highway but there's always a chance of the brogue-wearing masses being equally daft in the High Street so you can never be too careful.Henry chooses his particular shade of GTi so that; when he careers off the road and he does, frequently he can abandon the wreck without fear of its colour spoiling the countryside, particularly once the rust gets hold. He'll get hold of another GTi from surely the richest VAG dealer in Britain the next day.Henry's elder brother, a stockbroker in the City, also drives a Lhasa green GTi but when he comes off the road, just as frequently as his sibling, it isn't a field of wheat that breaks his fall. It's usually a lamp-post in Parsons Green, London SW6.Here, he has to mix it with Camilla taking the children to school, Reg, Ron and Arthur in the builders' truck, Ahmed in his Porsche Turbo and a whole host of Surrey-based commuters as well. All of these people are far too busy with their own hassles and Mach-4 lifestyles to be bothered with the finer points of driving technique so every street corner in Parsons Green is littered with broken glass a sure sign that Camilla hit Ron and in the ensuing argument, Henry ran into the back of Ahmed.The Parsons Green recipe, however, is nowhere near as dangerous as the concoction to be found on Britain's motorway network. Here, every weekend the whole lot, from Ethel and Albert to Henry, from Sally Ann to Gary, are thrown together in a massive uncertain bond. Suddenly everyone is taken from his or her own particular niche, where everybody behaves in the same way, and is thrown into a six-lane high-speed highway with thousands of others who are used to behaving quite differently.Statistics show motorways to be the safest roads on which to travel. This must be because Sally Ann is unlikely to see a friend with whom she must have a chat, the old dears from Woking can't get unduly confused, Gary has no one to impress, there are no broken walls to be mended or lost sheep to be rounded up, Ethel and Albert are still waiting for the RAC in the Dales, the good folk of Birmingham haven't been seen for years so they can't mess things up and neither can people from Oxford who are still stuck on the infernal inner ring road. Henry is probably sober after a spell on the motorway and surprise, surprise, he's quite a good driver; his brother, Camilla, Ron and Ahmed are exchanging insurance particulars in Parsons Green and very pretty girls, on bicycles, in very short skirts, are a very rare sight indeed.

Sweet White WineOn 15 October this year, wine connoisseurs the world over will focus their attention on a small, riverside village a few miles south-east of Bordeaux.They will hope to hear that the day dawned to a blanket of fog which, during the morning, gave way to gorgeous autumnal sunshine.Each subsequent day for the next few weeks, they will expect to receive reports that such weather conditions are persisting and that not one drop of rain has fallen on the plethora of precious vineyards.If these conditions are met, there's a better than evens chance that we will be treated to a vintage crop of Barsac.Barsac, evidently, is the world's greatest sweet wine. It is produced in comparatively minute quantities and an average bottle currently costs the off-licence punter here in Britain around 8 double or treble that for a vintage Chateau Climens.Now, I must be honest, I don't much care for white wine unless I'm drunk, in which case I don't care at all. Particularly though, I don't like sweet white wines. And Barsac is the sweetest of them all.To the uninitiated (me), it looks like the kind of sample policemen take if you're frightened of needles, and tastes like a pound of diluted Silver Spoon.However, if the figures are anything to go by, my views on the subject are not universally shared. In 1984, Barsac wine producers exported 4263 hectolitres of their 'deep golden nectar', nearly half of which reached the UK. America took a miserable 339 hectolitres which, in a funny sort of way, has to be a feather in Barsac's cork.Generally speaking, if the Americans like something, I don't, and vice versa, but in this instance, grudgingly, I support their apathy.What's more, the British are apparently buying the stuff more and more. According to Catherine Manac'h, PR person to Foods and Wines from France Ltd an organisation set up twenty years ago to promote edible French produce on these shores the average Briton is becoming more sophisticated. Has she seen how many Nissan Micras roam our roads I wonder?She takes her argument a stage further by suggesting that,'Before the war, sweet wines were very popular but ten years ago, Barsac and indeed its near neighbour, Sauternes, were rejected or, at best, merely served as dessert wines.'One only has to talk to people in the trade and read about the trends with Barsac to realise that it is finding favour once more,' she added.Her views are echoed by Cyril Ray in his Book of Wine where he says, 'There used to be a silly, snobbish prejudice against sweet wines but people who know and make them, know better.'He then goes into a state of virtual apoplexy while describing how delicious a glass of Barsac is when served with a bowl of raspberries. Other books on the subject accuse you and I of being 'silly snobs' and cite Barsac as an ideal wine to serve, not only with fresh raspberries, but also as an aperitif, as a cocktail base, with cheese and with fish but only, for some reason, if it's in sauce.In furtherance of this article, you understand, I tried Barsac with a boil-in-the-bag halibut and parsley sauce the other day and it still tasted nasty. It was marginally better with my Dairylea but I wasn't prepared to use my 8 bottle as a cocktail base to experiment in that direction and I shall reserve judgement on the raspberry combination until such fruit is in season.Experts also claim the wine is particularly outstanding when drunk alongside pate de foie gras. It isn't.In fairness though, I tend to get very cross with people when I tell them how marvellous the Peugeot 205 GTi is and they disagree, saying its wing mirrors are the wrong shape.Doubtless, a wine connoisseur would stick his nose in the air just as though he'd encountered a bottle of 'Chateau Sans Jambes' if I fatuously declared that Barsac is awful because it's sweet.Perhaps it's the Bristol of the wine world. Expensive, odd, rare and appreciated only by a few weirdos sorry, enthusiasts. I needed to find out hence my expert knowledge on this 15 October business.You see, Barsac isn't your average wine that just happens to find favour among those blessed with noses and palates more sensitive than Ian Botham on the cocaine issue.Over half the grapes are discarded if they do not meet the standards laid down by their almost ridiculously picky chateau proprietaires who zealously guard their reputations and, to a lesser extent, their status as second-, or in some cases, first-growth vineyards.In the Barsac region, the grapes have to be more than just ripe in order to meet these standards. One has to wait for them to have reached an advanced stage of maturity and for them to have been attacked by a minute fungoid growth with a complicated Latin name that has, thankfully, become known as Noble Rot.Unique in the world to the Sauterne/Barsac region, this mushroom-like fungus would normally be considered a pest, but it is essential in the production of great sweet wine.As this murdering mushroom wreaks havoc on the poor defenceless fruit, the grape begins to shrivel, thus losing in volume but gaining all the while in sugar content.But, the plot thickens. The maniacal mushroom will only flourish if, at harvest time (15 October), there is a soupcon of moisture and plenty of sunshine. It seems to like climatic changes so why on earth does it choose to live in Bordeaux and not Rochdale?Back to the plot: if it rains at all during harvesting and the warring grape and mushroom are subject to heavy moisture rather than just the right amounts contained in fog, the dreaded and utterly invincible Vulgar Rot moves in and any aspirations for a vintage Barsac are lost.Evidently, the noble mushroom is a choosy little blighter which won't do as it's supposed to on every piece of fruit. This accounts for the huge wastage a Barsac winegrower has to endure. Such high standards are simply not found anywhere else but they've helped Barsac to a reputation as a region where quality is paramount and quantity is a dirtier word than Frascati.In pursuance of this quality tag, the Barsac boys widen their individualistic streak still further when it comes to harvesting. Most vineyards send out waves of camionettes during October to round up the great unwashed who are then drafted in for picking.But in Barsac such blanket measures are avoided. Eager children are told exactly what a grape suffering from Noble Rot looks like before they are sent among the vines.If there are insufficient children around, help is sought from the more intelligent Spaniards who flock across the Pyrenees to help out.Whereas an average vineyard probably gets its harvesting over and done with in one fell swoop, the eager children and intelligent Spaniards are sent out day after day looking for precisely the right quality of grape which must be picked at exactly the right time. It sounds like a dodgy business to me.In 1971, it seems the chateau proprietaires were blessed with the right combination of fog, sun and Spanish MENSA candidates because experts claim that was Barsac's best ever year.However, it isn't just the Noble Rot, the climate and the correct time of picking that count toward perfection. As any local down there will tell you, the soil upon which the vineyards rest is paramount too. Any deeper and apparently the wine would be too vigorous. Any more clay and it would presumably taste like a potter's wheel.When the harvest is gathered in, the wine undergoes a procedure familiar to any amateur enthusiast. The grapes are crushed very slowly a few times and the resultant slush is allowed to ferment for three or so weeks in barrels made from new oak. Flavour from the wood seeps into the wine and compensates for the lack of tannin given out by the skins which are removed in the production of white wine. After this period is over, locals claim they can tell whether they have a vintage on their hands or not.When the wine's alcohol content reaches 14.5 per cent, the wine makers decide if fermentation should be stopped and small quantities of sulphur dioxide are added to stop the yeast's activity on the wine whatever it may be.Bottling takes place when the wine has been in the casket for three years but in order that it should reach its peak of fitness, you should wait until its tenth birthday before imbibing.An interesting(?) little booklet called The Sweet Wines of Bordeaux says that by this time, its'oily characteristics, breeding and body should be most evident'. But, it goes on to add that if you decide to hang on, it is vital to check the cork every 20 years. Quite frankly, I have more important things on my mind than remembering to check my corks.And where pray, in the middle of London, am I to find a place that meets the apparently critical storage conditions set out by the booklet: a cool dark place away from noise, vibration and smell where the bottles can be laid horizontally?So there you have it. Barsac. A fussy little wine made from grapes, a fungoid growth, sulphur dioxide and essence of oak tree.No wonder it's supposed to taste so good alongside a pate that is produced by corking a goose's bottom and force feeding it with grain until its liver is about to explode.

Auto FootballUntil a couple of weeks ago, I did not understand what it is about a ball that people find so fascinating.Every Saturday in the winter, thousands and thousands of people turn out to watch men in little shorts playing football, a game that is not exciting. In the summer, many tens of people watch cricket, which is not only unexciting but terribly confusing as well.I have never played cricket; at school, however, I spent two afternoons every week playing football because it was the law. Only once did I manage to score a goal and that was only because their goalkeeper, a chap after my own heart, had wandered off to talk to his girlfriend.I have spent ten years trying to fathom out the reason why people watch sport and I think I now have the answer. They would like to be doing what the people they're watching are doing. People who go to football matches would like to think they could have been good enough to play professionally.The reason I won't go is because I know for a fact that I could never have done it, even on an amateur basis. Octopi and football do not happy bedfellows make.At last however, I have found a derivation of football that I do want to play and that I therefore would go and watch regularly if it were played here.It's called autofussball and it's a cross between figure-of-eight stock-car racing, football and Thai boxing. The first thing you need is a pitch which can be of any size and of any surface. Any old car park will do. A stubble field would be even better.The second thing you need are some old cars. My recommendation is to go for something large with a small engine mounted some considerable distance from the inner wings. A Ford Zephyr? The third thing you need is a 3-foot-diameter, fluorescent ball. And the fourth thing you need is some team-mates, who can come from any walk of life, though I would recommend you find people who walk up and down Oxford Street wearing a sandwich board, talking at length about how they've made a spaceship out of lavatory paper.There are only two complicated rules. If you touch the ball with your hand, your opponents are allowed to take a penalty which they will miss because it is damnably hard.The ball is placed 20 feet in front of the goal and the car must be raced at it backwards. Just before impact, the car must execute a J-turn, swiping the ball with its front wing as it spins and, hopefully, getting it in between the posts.It never happens like that, so touching the ball with your hand is just fine.The other rule is that defence of the goal-mouth is only permitted if an attacker is within 20 feet and in possession of the ball. If you use your car to block the goal when the attacker is outside the 20-foot marker, he is entitled to take a penalty which he will miss. Blocking the goal, therefore, is always worthwhile.The only other thing to remember is that you will not be driving home in the car you use to play.Now, this game is not some kind of fanciful figment of my imagination. I saw it being played in Stuttgart and I have never enjoyed being a spectator so much.To prepare the cars, steel plates are welded to the bumpers and the windows are kicked out. The drivers do not wear crash helmets or seatbelts. When asked why, they spoke in German about their Andrex Apollos.At face value, it looked like the red team, with their brace of Opel Asconas and a VW Beetle complete with a stoved-in bonnet for carrying the ball, had to be deemed hot favourites. The white team, believing nimbleness counted for more than strength, had rolled up with an Audi 50, a Renault 5 that wouldn't start and a Nova.Things looked even more gloomy after five minutes when one of the red Asconas expired and was replaced by a massive Granada estate.And I must confess that I felt the white team had had it when the Renault, having been bumped into life, coughed up blood the first time it went near the ball and retired.But I was reckoning without the genius of the Audi driver who, single-handedly, scored sixteen goals before the Granada completely removed just about all its vital organs, by which I mean its engine, transmission and both front wheels.The Granada, after this savagery, was then accidentally rammed and destroyed by the Beetle which suffered almost no damage whatsoever. Indeed, some fifteen minutes before the final whistle was due, it was the only car left running. That made life really rather easy for its driver who drifted back and forth scoring a goal every 30 seconds or so.Now remember, this is the Germans I'm talking about here, a race that has almost no sense of humour, a race I can best sum up by the response of a girl in the Avis hire-car centre who was trying to sell me the idea of an Audi 80.'Look,' I said, 'my briefcase has more space in it than an Audi 80.'She studied my briefcase for a while before saying, 'No. It hasn't.'Imagine, therefore, what could become of autofussball if it could be developed by the race that brought you the hovercraft and afternoon tea. Imagine, too, if Murray Walker were allowed to commentate.

The Best ManI am having to practise the art of being boring. I have not been in the pub for a week, I care more for the well-being of my Royal Worcester collection than I do my Alfa and I am now an expert on the subject of vacuum cleaners.Four inches have been hacked from my hair and when I went shopping for clothes the other day, it was to Hacketts and not Jean Machine.Good Lord, as I write it is 2 p.m. on a Sunday, a time when normally I'd be in the White Horse, discussing the week's deals and conquests.But no more. In exactly thirteen days' time, I will be standing at the top of an aisle promising all sorts of things to Beloved and listening to a man with his shirt on back to front talking about how marriage is an honourable institution.From that moment on, I will be dull. I may even grow a beard.The last few months have been hell on earth. Family feuds have been commonplace, the caterer said she wouldn't do asparagus rolls, the vicar said his church wouldn't accommodate the 230 people we invited, folk who hadn't been asked but thought they should have been are now ignoring me, and the whole engagement foundered on rocky ground when Beloved said she wanted the wedding list to be at GTC and I wanted it at HR Owen.Then there was the marquee which was initially ordered with a brown lining, and the honeymoon which couldn't be spent in Thailand because of the weather, the Maldives because of political unrest, Tahiti because it's too far away, Africa because it's full of creepie-crawlies, Europe because it's awash with journalists on car launches or America because it's full of Americans.But the worst bit of it all was getting the right cars for the right bits in the wedding ceremony.This little job was entrusted to me. Any car in the world is just a phone call away, they said.Wrong. The man at Bentley trotted out a ridiculous excuse which, when decoded, spelt out a message indicating that I should go forth and do what I will be spending my honeymoon doing anyway.The small but perfectly formed chap at BMW was offering a 750, but as he'd be there on the day I figured it prudent to turn him down.Jaguar, then. Oh yes, they'd be delighted to help with whatever I wanted but Beloved stamped her size seven down she's tall you see saying she'd rather roll up at church in a Nissan. It was starting to look like she might have to.I liked the idea of a Countach, especially as it would mean leaving father-in-law at home, but protocol put the mockers on this brainwave.I also toyed with the notion of asking to borrow Mitsubishi's hot-air balloon in the hope that the wind was blowing the wrong way and he'd end up in Tunisia. Only joking.Finally came Range Rover. Yes, Beloved agreed this was a good idea. Yes, said Land Rover, they would be delighted to help.'Would a black one do?''No.''How about green?''Yes, that would be super.''It's an SE.''Ooh good.'Then Beloved entered the equation again, arguing that green was unlucky.'What other colours have you got?''Er... brown.''Nope.''Silver?''Yes, yes, silver would be fine.''It's not an SE.'By this stage, I didn't give a toss so long as it was capable of moving an 18-foot father-in-law, a chauffeur and Beloved in a big dress 200 yards from the house to the church.Then father-in-law found out and said he wouldn't go in a Range Rover and why couldn't we use his Volvo? Using the technique I'd learned from the man at Bentley, I managed to swing him round.This left me with the problem of finding something to 'go away in'.I didn't particularly want people to smear lipsticked profanities all over the Alfa, even if it does play second fiddle to the porcelain. Nor did I relish making it work with an exhaust full of shaving foam and a kipper on the manifold.Just in case I had to use it, and it decided to play silly sods at the critical moment, I took the precaution of booking a 75 V6. Just in case.So, reserves in place, the hard work began.Various circuses said they were a little reticent about lending me an elephant. And I failed to find anyone who owns a camel, let alone someone who would let my friends tie some balloons to its testicles.Someone suggested a horse and cart would be a good wheeze, but he is the sort of person who has a velour, button-backed sofa which he calls a settee. So I ignored him. And his advice.A tractor? What if it's raining? A steam engine? How does it get there? A good old vintage Rolls-Royce? Naff, very naff.Then the best man stepped into the fray. He absolutely refuses to tell me what he has fixed up, saying only that it will make everyone laugh.I am therefore frightened. I just know that it will be a Nissan Sunny ZX with side stripes. If so, his colleagues will wonder why he's turned up at work with his head on back to front.

Racing JaguarsThe pundits are predicting doom 'n' gloom time in Coventry. There is to be an XR3i Sovereign and a Daimler Granada. There will be a medium-sized Jaguar with Ford running gear and a Scorpio chassis. John Egan will be replaced by Donald E. Dieselburger junior, and the XJ-S will get tartan seats.Quite aside from product juggling and the Americanisation of Jaguar's board, the economic ramifications must be taken into account as well. Unemployment is to double. Sterling will crash, the stock market will take on bearish dimensions and the government will fall.I, however, know how to prevent all this. If Ford would appoint me as chairman of Jaguar, I would put Mercedes and BMW out of business in ten minutes. A quarter of an hour after that, Toyota would pull the plug on Lexus and Nissan would scrap Infiniti.Let's just say you're a Gieves-and-Hawkes-suited BZW banker. You live in Barnes, are 40 and have a wife and two children aged six and four. Horrid huh? Anyway, protocol dictates that you must have a sober saloon, though the years haven't advanced so much that it has to be a Volvo. Of course, you have a BMW.But it's time for a change. You've heard about Jaguar's sometimes successful efforts in Group C racing. You know there is a JaguarSport division and you keep reading in financial pages about D- and E-types selling for millions.Yes, you reckon, Jaguar are making sporty cars once more. So you tool down to Follets in your 735i and you take a test drive. And you are horrified because Jaguar don't make sporty cars at all. Jaguar are to motordom what Dunlopillo are to bedding. You make a mental note that, when you are 50, you will come back to Jaguar. But for now, those Teuton Futon people at BMW will do just fine.The first new car to emerge from Coventry under my dictatorship will be a standard, manual, 4-litre XJ6 but it will have big BBS wheels, firmed up and lowered suspension, toughened up and speed-related power steering, sports seats, and ever so slightly flared wheel arches. And all its chrome will be flushed down the lavatory.It will sell for exactly the same price as the standard 4-litre saloon and it will have an appeal among 40-year-old BZW bankers from Barnes.The JaguarSport idea is very clever but not clever enough. They should be a wholly owned Jaguar thing. They should not allow automatic cars out of their gates. And they should not make cars that have cream steering wheels. Cream steering wheels, like white socks and beards, are for riff-raff. BZW bankers do not wear white socks. BZW bankers do not like cream steering wheels.And if an American wants a car with a cream steering wheel, he can buy a Lincoln.BMW obviously don't know that I am to be chairman of Jaguar because they recently took me around their Motorsport division, and now I have seen their mistakes.I will not build my JaguarSport factory on an industrial estate next door to an odour-eater factory. And I will not be so stupid as to build it in Daimlerstrasse either. When I am looking for people to work in it, I will not insist they all look exactly like Ian Botham. And I will allow them to spill oil on the floor.I will also make sure that every car which wears a JaguarSport motif is a proper JaguarSport car. Only the M5 and the M3 convertible are 'handmade' in Daimlerstrasse. The M3 saloon and the M635 coupe are 'line' cars.In addition, I will not allow Jaguars to wear JaguarSport badgingjust because they have a spoiler designed by a JaguarSport tea-boy.Most importantly of all, anyone caught driving around with the equivalent of an 'M' badge on the back of their automatic XJ6 2.9 will be visited in the night by my secret service department who will wear leather coats and tall boots.Believe you me, these rules will ensure that JaguarSport cars are very exclusive indeed.The tricky bit is making them better than the astonishingly good M5 with which they would have to compete. Even on this point though, I have an answer. You don't get the best out of a workforce if you promise them sweeties when they get things right. You get the best out of a workforce if you promise to beat them up when they get things wrong. Having Dachau eleven kilometres down the road helps.When all is said and done, I will have the current range of cars selling to the pensioners for whom they were designed. In addition, I will have a range that appeals to everyone else.They will make money too; lots of it. Enough to pay for the racing programme, anyway. And they will help back up the pictures being painted by the Group C cars, the current XJ-Rs and the D-Types that are dominating all Jaguar stories in the newspapers.If Jaguar can stand on their own two (or four) feet, shrugging off competition from Japan, Germany and America like you or I would shrug off a mild itch, Ford will not feel the need to start meddling. If, however, Jaguar plunge along their current course, being so vulnerable that a 0.5 cent shift in the dollar/pound exchange rate can screw the whole thing up, then expect to see Ford Fiesta XJ6s in your local showrooms soon.If that is too awful to bear, simply buy a share or two and vote for me when the time comes.

Non-Sleeker CelicaAny chance of staying awake evaporated when the man said what sounded like, 'We have used organic rice to create neutral sexiness.' Until that point, I had been grappling with waves of boredom, pulling faces like rock guitarists do when they hit the highest note possible on a Gibson Les Paul.But it was hopeless. I wouldn't have been all that interested even if it had been presented in a recognisable language. In a version of Engrish where all the 'l's are pronounced 'r's, sleep was a merciful relief.This was the pan-European press raunch of the new Toyota Celica, a car I had already decided I was going to hate because of its extreme ugliness.Toyota had taken over Cannes for the purposes of introducing it to the press. Here, the massed ranks of Britain's motor scribblers were confronted by several serious-looking German equivalents and a bevy of Danes who seemed to be much, much more concerned with the whereabouts of the nearest bar. Up front there were a bunch of Japanese chappies and an American called Reich. It was his job to act as translator. We shall call him Third.After a great deal of sycophantic bowing and some blather about how hugely grateful they were to us for sparing some time to spend a couple of days in the south of France at their expense, the slide show began. So too did my war with the land of nod.There were the usual charts showing how exhaust interference has been reduced, but stuck in the middle of them was a picture of a naked woman. This, Third claimed, is what the new Celica looks like.No it doesn't. No one will ever mistake it for a naked woman. And nor, despite Toyota's protestations, will it be mistaken for a pouncing cheetah either.The British at this point began to snigger, some at the absurdity of it all, others at the Germans who were still furiously taking notes, and one or two at the Danes who were trying to catch the eye of a barman.Finally, it was a time for questions and answers. Now, I've never understood the point of such an exercise because, if as a journalist you have something you wish to find out, it is always better to do it when no one else is in earshot.This, however, was different. This was an excuse for some serious smartarsery. I asked what evidence there was that people want to buy cars that look like naked ladies.Pleased with my eloquence, I turned to lap up the 'go get 'em boy' looks from various colleagues. But after much debate in Japanese, the panel crushed my ardour with their answer: 'It is a rounded car.'Now, I suppose it would have been sensible to persist, arguing that if they spoke Engrish well enough to deliver a technical press conference like this one, then they should damn well stop pretending they didn't understand a straightforward question. But the Japanese have perfected the art of humility to such an extent that compassion simply bubbles to the surface in even the most arrogant of cynics.The next day I was determined to tell whoever was interested that I didn't like the car one bit; that there are two ways of inducing a bout of vomiting. You can stick a couple of fingers down your throat or you can look at a Celica.Instead, when confronted by an eager-looking Toyota minion who was keen to hear my thoughts, I said, 'Oh, it's quite nice.'When the Germans or the British, or even the French, ask you what you think of their cars, you tell them straight. When it's a Japanese man, he manages to park an expression on his face that's doe-eyed, hangdog and sweet all at once.Last year, I went to upwards of 60 beautifully organised, well-presented press introductions and I came home, aware that I could hit the word processor afterwards and say what I wanted.There's the nagging doubt with the Celica that if I say it's not very good, and it isn't, several engineers on the project may be ordered to fall on their pencils. Or more likely, they will scurry around and have a replacement lined up in the time it takes people at Austin Rover to scratch their backsides and organise a meeting to discuss things.I have a plan, and judging by what the man from the Daily Mail said about the Celica, he has it too. This plan will redress the balance of payments, bring down interest rates and ensure that Mr Kinnock is kept out of Number 10 for another five years.We scribblers must say the Celica is an excellent car and that you should all go out and buy one tomorrow, or even this afternoon if you have time. This will lull the Japanese into a false sense of security and they will not start work on a replacement, thinking all is well.You, in the meantime, will believe everything we've written and will take a test drive. But you won't buy the car because it is ugly, there is no space inside and you can't see out of it properly.It will take months for sales figures to show the Celica has fallen on stony ground, precious months that the Europeans can use to finish scratching their backsides and get on with things.The Japanese will learn, hopefully when it is too late, that the Dunkirk spirit is alive and well and living in Fulham.

Green MachineThe woman in the hotel was most insistent that the coastal path from Wadebridge to Padstow was absolutely level.It mattered. It mattered because she had suggested we hire bicycles and go for a ride. She talked about how we'd enjoy the fresh air and how we'd be ready for a pint at the other end. She talked about the herons that we'd see and how the countryside was some of the most beautiful in Britain. And, she maintained, it was as flat as a pancake, as level as a crossing.She was half right too. We paid our four pounds each for the 18-speed Dirt Fox 'hogs' and, after a five-mile ride, arrived in Padstow, surprised at the ease of the journey.Sure, we all wanted pints badly and sure, I was grateful for the company of the O'Tine family and their son, Nic.Over a game of dominoes in the London Inn near Padstow's harbour, we talked in a New Year's resolution sort of way about how it might be a good idea to have bicycles in London, how they would keep the dreaded DR code from our driving licences and how we could get fit at the same time... fresh air... bulging muscles... reduced congestion... blah... blah.As we spoke though, some idiot was moving the countryside around. Basically, he tilted it so that the aforementioned completely level path became something not that far removed from Porlock Hill. After half a mile on the way back my legs hurt like hell. Not long after that, the hips started asking the head what the hell was going on and then the lungs just stopped.In a futile bid to pacify these striking bits, the brain started to think a little more seriously about the bike's eighteen gears. But it was hopeless. In first my legs spun round like a washing machine on its final rinse cycle and, in everything from second to eighteenth, it felt like I was towing a 16-ton weight.I swore, right there and then, that I would never ride a bicycle again. It is my New Year's resolution. Last year, my New Year's resolution was never to set foot in Spain again and, accordingly, I have just turned down Ford's invitation to the launch of the four-wheel-drive Sierra Cosworth in Barcelona.Riding a bicycle can't possibly do any good whatsoever. Had I not dismounted and walked the last two miles, I would now be dead the most unhealthy thing I can think of.The bit of London where I live is pretty flat but getting to my favourite watering hole in Wandsworth involves a bridge. That means an incline must be tackled and that, in turn, means a heart attack. Plus, I have been reading recently that cycling in London now does you more harm than good because you are in among the traffic, breathing in the resultant fumes more deeply than ordinarily might be the case because it's all so damnably strenuous.Now, I'm as green as a screen and will willingly drive to the bottle bank, resplendent in my ozone-friendly armpit spray and recycled jumper. As I struggled up that Cornish mountain, I was scarcely able to believe that I had actually considered only a moment or two earlier the notion of buying the ridiculous two-wheeled contraption that I was now having to push.My mind was consumed with hatred. Hatred for the man who'd made me pay for the privilege of hiring his horrid bike. Hatred for the woman who said the path was flat. Hatred for the meddler who moved Porlock Hill. Hatred for Walter Raleigh, and his silly tobacco plant.Darkness had almost fallen by the time I arrived back in Wadebridge. And it was almost morning before ACAS had sorted out some kind of settlement with the striking legs, hips and lungs. No one has ever been able to talk about how it feels to be that ill because anyone who has been that ill is now dead as a result.I was brought back to life on the way home with a thought that should come as a crumb of comfort to all those who like their motoring more than their bicycling. Sane people in other words. I was driving, at the time, an Audi 90 Quattro 20V which, like all Audis, has a catalytic converter shoved up its jaxi. And I know enough about cats to know that they make cars very nearly as clean as bicycles. Cleaner, in fact.Sure the Audi still produces a teeny bit of nitrogen oxide, a little carbon monoxide and some carbon dioxide which would be turned into oxygen by the trees if only cyclist types would stop chopping down forests to fuel their environmentally friendly wood-burning stoves.But now look at the bicycle which, unlike the galvanised Audi, will one day rust away and be discarded to mess up the countryside.I don't know for certain but I'd make a big bet that there are more old bicycles on the bed of the sea than there are old Audis.If you cycle from Wadebridge to Padstow, you will pollute the air with obscenities as you go, you will arrive dead and your bicycle will be tossed into the estuary where it will pollute the river and very probably snare one of the herons. If you drive an Audi from Wadebridge to Padstow, especially if you drive it with the windows down, the herons will wave cheerily.You might not want a pint quite so badly when you get there but if you have to drive back again you couldn't have had one anyway.Reasons for buying a car 8Reasons for buying a bicycle 0.

Democratic PartyIt's funny, but for ages I've been under the misapprehension that Britain is a democracy. I suppose I concluded this from our electoral system. Two parties present their manifestos to the nation and after we've studied these and compared Thatcher to the Welshman, we vote. The party with the most seats is judged to be victorious. It all seems very fair to me.Democracy works in all sorts of other ways too. As a shareholder in many companies, I am forever being asked to vote on takeover bids. If 55 per cent of Ford workers want to go on strike, they will be called out on strike. If six in a group of eleven want a burger and five want a pizza, everyone goes to a local McDonald's and not into one of those Pizza Huts.I do not want a Labour government to achieve power, but if a majority of voters goes completely bonkers and allows that Welshman into the hot seat, I will accept the decision, albeit with bad grace, and move to a country with some common sense. Democracy works. Majority rule works. So how come we in Britain are obsessed with the interests of minorities?If I were to approach my local council for funds to start a theatre group, they would turn me away, arguing that I was too middle class and far too apathetic about Mike Gatting's rebel cricket tour. The money would go instead to someone who has a predilection for members of the same genital group and a definite intention to employ at least three whales.Now, if the majority isn't affected by a minority's aspirations, then it doesn't really matter all that much. It must be part of living in a caring society, I suppose. But when a minority wants something that is deeply offensive to a majority, then it must be told to bugger off. This is why every one of London's 5000 buses should be burned and their drivers put to death.Each weekday, 9.3 million people move about the capital in cars or taxis, but there are just 3.3 million 'bus users'. For sure, this is a big majority but it's bigger still when you remember that if you take a bus to work, you sure as hell have to use it to get home again. That means the 3.3 million 'bus users' becomes 1.7 million. Then there are those who commute on the bus and use it at lunchtime.Even London Regional Transport admit that only about 1 million people use a bus each day. This means that there are nine people in cars for every one on a bus. On that basis, it should be nine times harder for a bus to get around on our roads than it is for a car.However, this is not so. There are 45 miles of bus lanes in London which, at certain times, cannot legally be used by cars. A majority, therefore, is squeezed into the resultant traffic jams and has to watch a minority whizz by in acrylic coats and plastic shoes.To hammer the point home, buses are now to be seen carrying advertisements on their rumps telling car drivers that the bus lanes are London's arteries. 'If you drive your car in one, you're a clot' proclaims the tag line.So, I pay 100 a year for the privilege of sitting in a jam, caused by a bus lane which is being used by people who pay a few pence. That is certainly not democratic.Even when the buses aren't working, you aren't allowed to use these lanes, and the police, displaying their usual common sense, emerge in force to hammer this point home.And who the hell do bus drivers think they are? As soon as the last pensioner is aboard, they pull out into the traffic stream, oblivious to the fact that I might be alongside at the time.Only the other day, the avoiding action I was forced to take nearly resulted in that silly stolen baby being taken off the front pages. And in the ensuing discussion, the driver had the audacity to use the f word while explaining there was a poster on the back of his bus telling me to give way whenever he wants to set off. Why should I? I am young, with a living to earn and a mortgage to pay. His passengers are old or unemployed and cannot therefore be in much of a hurry.To prove that buses do nothing but clog things up, you should look at what happened when they all went on strike last year. Many left-wing radio stations predicted chaos would result as everyone took their cars instead of the bus. This is rubbish because people who use the buses don't actually own cars.In fact, I have never seen the traffic in London flow so well, which is hardly surprising when you consider that huge, red oblongs, each of which is bigger than my flat, weren't stopping every few yards. A great deal of effort is used to dissuade people from stopping their cars, even momentarily, at the side of the road; yet it is fine for vehicles three times larger than even the biggest Mercedes to stop whenever and wherever they damn well want.As a result of that day, I am of the opinion that the biggest cause of traffic congestion in the capital is the public transport system.One of these days, someone is going to have to get tough; someone is going to have to explain that buses must go, that they are the principal cause of traffic jams and that they have no place in a democracy.Unless this happens soon, I will move to Moscow where special lanes are reserved for rich and important people such as myself, and not the proletariat scum in their trams.

Cat LoverI have chopped the word 'free' off one of those trendy stickers they give you in garages so that it now says 'I love lead'. It is in the back window of my Alfa and it is meant to be a joke. But I'll tell you something: people who won't eat meat have no sense of humour.Now look. I have green armpits and each morning, I wipe my bottom with recycled lavatory paper. Whenever it's humanly possible I buy unleaded petrol and I make all the right noises about elephant hunts and Japanese whaling fleets. I even stopped buying tuna after one of those tabloid newspapers said that each time a bundle of tuna is trawled in, a whole load of dolphins are killed.But this, according to my vegetarian friends, is simply not enough. I was even described as a half-wit the other day because I wouldn't give those anti-nuclear idiots at Greenpeace any of my hard-earned money.I simply wondered out loud how, on the one hand, they could want the CEGB or whatever they call themselves now to stop burning fossil fuels and, on the other, campaign for the decommissioning of nuclear power stations.What do they want us to do? Get the cows we don't eat to work treadmills? Power our CFC-free fridges on manure? The computer I'm using at this moment runs on electricity and I really don't give a stuff how it gets to the plug just so long as it keeps getting there cheaply, efficiently and, if it's at all possible, greenly too.The trouble is that the loonies who get taken in by this environmental crap lose all sense of reality. And with it goes their sense of humour. Forgetting to take a plastic bag to the supermarket becomes a life or death struggle. Making jokes about the Irish or religion is considered to be acceptable but woe betide anyone who dares to appear on television and poke fun at the greenhouse effect.What staggers me is how damnably knowledgeable everyone is about the trendy, vegetarian matters of the moment. We all know the name of every Mexican trawlerman who has killed a dolphin; we know exactly how much rainforest is being destroyed each hour; we know how hard it is to recycle supermarket carrier bags; and we know just how much effluent there is in the North Sea.But people who can trot out the number of elephants slaughtered a week last Tuesday don't seem to have the first clue about what the difference is between unleaded petrol and catalytic converters.What with her Greenpeace sweatshirt and her penchant for going on and on about nuclear disarmament, the girl who called me a half-wit is easily the greenest person I know. But when I asked why she bought a Toyota MR2 which doesn't have a catalytic converter, she said, 'I don't need a catalytic converter because my car already runs on unleaded petrol.'Now, I sat her down and tried to explain that although her car does not produce any lead, it still chucks out 78 lb of unburned hydrocarbons, 50 lb of nitrogen oxides and more than 1000 lb of carbon monoxide in one year. If she had bought an Audi 80, which does have a catalytic converter, then she would be responsible for just 7 lb of hydrocarbons, 8 lb of nitrogen oxides and 30 lb of carbon monoxide.And do you want to know what her answer was when presented with these remarkable facts and figures? Would you like to guess? She said, and this is verbatim, 'That's all very well but the Audi isn't very trendy, is it?'Somehow, someone is going to have to get through to people like this and explain what the cat business is all about.A massive advertising campaign seemed to be getting the message about unleaded fuel across, but along came Esso and messed it all up with their Super Grade Plus or whatever it's called. Even I don't understand what that ad with the white Orion going green is all about.Saab's elegant campaign with the Green Wellie headline was a masterstroke but they spoilt it with a reference, in the body of the text, to a little-known fact that most of their cars are recyclable. More than a couple of people have rung me to ask whether 'these reusable catalytic converter wotsits' are worth the bother.And that Audi television commercial with the man rushing in his catalysed 90 Quattro to see his wife have a baby prompted Beloved to remark that if he hadn't had the cat, he would have got there in time for the big moment! Audi rarely cock up their adverts but, my God, that one was a real mess.Basically, there's no concerted marketing effort with cats, and some people think they're an alternative to unleaded petrol, while others reckon they take the form of a ball of cotton wool rammed up the exhaust which prevents the car from reaching a speed of over 10 mph. Most, however, have never heard of them.If and when the message ever does get across and we're as well versed in the functions of rhodium as we are in the antics of Brazilian bulldozer drivers, let's not get paranoid.I tried to tell a farmer the other day that the funniest news item I had ever seen was that mad cow doing the hokey-cokey. For some extraordinary reason, he did not appear to agree. If the earth does suddenly implode, I'll be the one at the back giggling.

Goodbye to All ThatLast night, Robert Dougal, the ex-news reader, stole my car. I came out of the house in the morning and found it had gone but, strangely, this didn't bother me unduly. I simply hired a cab.Even more strangely, when I arrived at work the car was parked outside the office. All day I sat on the telephone telling people that there is such a thing as a considerate thief.But then, in the evening, it had gone again. Now this time I was angry and set off on foot to look for it. I stomped about for a few hours and eventually wound up in a swampy wood full of mangrove trees and mist.A car tore by. My car. The roof had been cut off and the seats replaced with chairs from a 1.3L, the pretty alloys were gone and every remaining panel was smashed.There were four people in it, jeering and shouting as it sploshed through the water and careered over the mangrove roots. Then it crashed. I ran over and was horrified to find Robert Dougal trying to extricate himself from the driver's seat. Then the Today programme came on the radio, I got up, got dressed and went to work. Puzzled as hell.Mystic Meg has never once addressed me. Week after week, she fills her page in Sunday magazine with messages from beyond the grave and up and down the country people called Brian rip up their sofas looking for the missing millions.I don't pay any attention to Doris Stokes because I believe that when you're dead, you are a piece of meat which rots and makes a funny smell.I also don't believe there is such a place as heaven, and anyway, even if there is, Christianity is based on the concept of forgiveness so I shall simply roll up at the Pearly Gates and tell Pete that I'm sorry.And never mind death, I can't really grapple with the concept of strange mind-bendery when we're alive either. I don't believe in ghosts, the Bermuda Triangle or spoon bending. But what about dreams? There are as many people out there who try to read something into what goes on between our ears at night as there are people trying to read things into what goes on between our legs.If we dream, it is simply an active mind not shutting down properly. But that said, just recently I have been a tormented soul between the hours of one to five. And I'd like to know why.Last night I moved house, which would have been a peculiar thing to do as I did it for real only last week. However, before going to bed, I had just watched The Chain, so that might have had something to do with it.Regularly I can fly, and it's really special, soaring over London's proletariat who point and gawp quite openly.Hell, I have even played table tennis against myself and every time I missed a shot, a piece of purple velvet was pressed by an unseen hand against my face, giving me an electric shock.I think I might like to have met Sigmund Freud so that he could have explained what it was that made me mad. But as I can't I guess his granddaughter will have to do.And believe me, I am mad, because this is my last column for Performance Car.I began writing for the magazine shortly after it underwent the metamorphosis from Hot Car, and that was nearly ten years ago. Since then, there have been two changes of ownership, three editors and countless staff alterations. But I really do believe that, right now, it is a better magazine than at any time in its history and more, that it is a better magazine than any of the others.I love the way that it flies in the face of current namby-pamby thinking and I constantly use its blossoming sales as back-up in arguments with hideous and spotty vegan types who decry the car along with meat and the free market. Furthermore, these ten years have been happy times. Without Performance Car, I would never have been to Iceland. I would never have been in a stunt plane or a Class One powerboat. I would not know how to drive round the Nurburgring or where the heated-rear-window switch is in a Countach. Perhaps most important of all, were it not for Performance Car, I would not be on Top Gear.So why am I going? Well, last month a Richard Morris of Walton-on-the-Hill in Surrey wrote a letter to PC, arguing that I am unfunny, unobjective, insulting and self-indulgent. He went on, for some considerable time, and ended up by saying that I should give it up. Well, Mr Morris, you win. I am all of the things you say, and I'm leaving. If anyone out there disagrees with him, just contact the magazine who I'm sure will be happy to put you in touch.Before I go though, I would like to thank the following people who have helped make me rich. Jesse Crosse, the very first editor of Performance Car and the man who took me on; Dave Calderwood, for keeping me on when he took over and Paul Clark the current obergruppen fuhrer who obviously disagrees with Mr Morris.Then there is Peter Tomalin, the deputy editor who seems to understand what it is I've been trying to do, and John Barker, the road-test editor, who doesn't. But then he never seems to mind.On top of all this, there are countless motor industry PR figures who have been tirelessly supportive, even when I've ridiculed their products: John Evans of Mercedes Benz and Peter Frater of Daihatsu, Ferrari and Chrysler lead the charge, with Chris Willows of BMW, Tim Holmes of Nissan and Colin Walkey of Land Rover in hot pursuit.I cannot forget Jonathan Gill, my partner and Frances Cain, my other partner, whose level headedness has ensured I've yet to see the inside of a libel court.Finally, there is you lot, the people who have read this column over the years. I did my best and I guess it's just a shame Mr Morris had to go and spoil it all.That then, is that.

Down, RoverRound about now, the Rover board will be sitting down to decide whether it is a good idea to start work on a two-seater sports car. A new MG, in other words.It isn't.Enthusiasts throughout the land are running around, starting campaigns along the lines of 'kill an Argie, win a Metro' to make them build it. Great bores of today are pointing angrily at the Mazda MX-5, saying that it should be an MG and that if Rover weren't so completely hopeless it would have been.The fact is, Mazda spent six years developing the MX-5. They started with a piece of paper so fresh it was still a tree and they invested billions of yen and millions of man hours to make sure it was right in every detail. Only the engine has been 'lifted' from current production lines.Rover could not have started work on such a car six years ago. Back then, under government ownership, they couldn't take the top off a biro without having 23 eight-hour meetings to discuss the implications. They had sod all money and as a result, they were to the world of motor manufacturing what Paddy Ashdown is to politics completely and spectacularly useless.If they had started work on a two-seater soft top then, it would have emerged at the right time but it would have had an Ambassador engine and an Allegro-style quartic steering wheel.There is no doubt that Rover are much leaner these days, but it's too late to start thinking about putting one over Mazda. Besides, lean though they may be, I'm still not absolutely certain that they'd get an affordable sports car right.The problem is, they are too small to invest what Mazda invested and too big to make a go of it on a TVR or Lotus scale. In order for economics of scale to work, they would need to make thousands of so-called MGs a week, which means they'd have to be cheap. And if they were going to be cheap, then they would have to be fashioned from whatever is lying around in the parts bin.That means front-wheel drive, whether they base it on the CRX or the Rover 200. And although I couldn't give a stuff whether a car is front-, rear- or four-wheel drive, I do believe that people who want a sports car prefer the busy end to be behind them.Then there's the engine problem. Yes, the K series is a good effort but it's hardly a ripsnorter is it? A turbo version perhaps? No no no. Turbo engines are crap. And don't get excited about the possibility of a 3.9i V8 just think of the torque steer. So it has to be the CRX engine.But if they do this, the MG purists will be running around, waving their arms and pulling their beards, whinging about how Rover have sold out. If they use the CRX engine and the CRX floorpan, George Simpson will probably end up like Georges Besse. Beardies have the most awful temper, I've always found.The Rover parts bin is filled to overflowing with some lovely items, but trying to make them into a sports car is like trying to make an origami ice-breaker out of six-inch nails. And if they do the decent thing and design the car from scratch, it will end up being more expensive than the Koenig Testarossa drop head.The worst thing is that even if they get the green light now and use the best bits they can find, it won't reach the Rover showrooms until midway through 1993 at the earliest.No one can say for sure what motordom will be like then, but here are a few fairly safe bets. The roads will be chocabloc. Kinnock will be taxing cars like they're going out of fashion. Which they will be. Anything even remotely sporty will be prone to vandalism by marauding gangs of environmentally aware Islingtonites. All in all, it will be a lot more difficult to enjoy a soft-top sports car than it is now.For heaven's sake, even the Tories are doing their level best to make sure we don't spend our disposable income. Labour will ban anything even remotely hedonistic. Soft tops are a fashion accessory and fashions change.Now, if Rover could squeeze a car in very fast before the Welshman gets into power and before Sizewell B blows up, maybe they'll make some money out of it for a couple of years. How about lopping the roof off a CRX, fitting an MGish interior and applying some new badges? It would be a pretty horrid effort, I'm sure, but the badge, the engine and the looks would ensure that Mazda had a run for their money in the UK at least. Perhaps in America too.I'm fearful, though, that if they do go for this type of thing, it will be the new Metro that has the can opener taken to it and not the CRX. I'm also fearful that a not very good convertible would be a lot less desirable than a faster, cheaper and infinitely more practical hot hatch.The MG of old wasn't a very nice car then, and because of all sorts of things that are way beyond Rover's control, a modern version probably wouldn't be a nice car now. And even if it was nice, it wouldn't be appropriate.I have a message for George Simpson don't build a new MG now because you've missed the boat, but the next time an opportunity looks like presenting itself, for heaven's sake, walk around the building, shouting a lot. For now, though, go down to the market research department and ask everyone in there what the bloody hell they were doing six years ago.

History LessonBefore administering a weekly beating, my headmaster usually took the trouble to sit me down and explain why he felt it necessary to burnish my bottom. I never listened to a word he said. This is because the chair I had to sit in, and subsequently bend over, was quite simply the most comfortable piece of furniture in the world.And not only that; the room itself was exquisite with oak-panelled walls, 40-watt standard lamps, Chinese wash rugs and exquisite antiques. Being beaten in winter was especially pleasant as there was usually a huge log fire too.I daresay that if I'd been educated in the comprehensive system, the whippings would have been really rather unpleasant, but at a 450-year-old public school, they were a joy.Now the reason why I enjoyed my weekly visits to the headmaster, indeed the reason why I would deliberately get into serious trouble, was that his study, his whole house actually, felt absolutely right. From the moment that big front door creaked open, you were in a world of great taste. There was a sense of history and even the smell was right.This is probably why I like being in a Series 3 Jaguar XJ12. Again, the smell is right; again, it's tasteful; again, there's a sense of history.No one will buy a car if they do not feel comfortable with it, and by that I do not mean comfortable in the literal sense of the word.When the door closes, the interior has to feel good; it must be an extension of a person's personality. And when he drives past a shop window, the reflection has to show a man at ease. I do not enjoy driving past mirrors in a Yugo Sana. I will not drive past anything in a Nissan Sunny ZX Coupe.Now, of course, everyone has different tastes and this, of course, explains why one car with an interior that I consider to be perfectly horrid will appeal to someone who has purple back-lighting in the recesses on their fireplace.This whole issue was brought to light by a drive in the new Lexus. It was a drive I could not enjoy. Make no mistake: this is one hell of a car, what with its cold cathode ray instrumentation, its quite superb 4-litre V8 engine and a ride that, in Germany at least, was unparalleled.Anyone who buys a car for its technical sophistication will undoubtedly covet the Lexus a lot. But I wonder; do people buy 35,000 luxury saloons for their technical sophistication? Or do they buy them because they 'feel' right?The Lexus has been six years in the making and it shows. Just about every single feature has been very carefully thought out indeed, where all the features from Rolls-Royce, Mercedes and BMW have been harmonised in one stately, if not terribly attractive, body.Yet, to my mind, it does not feel right in the way that a technically inferior Jaguar does.Toyota unashamedly admit that during the Lexus's development, engineers carefully studied the competition. Good ideas were aped and there's nothing wrong with that. Where others had compromised for whatever reason and Toyota felt they could do better, they did.But you can't copy a feeling. You can't endow a whole new marque with a sense of history. If you try, and Toyota have, you end up with something that smacks of being nouveau riche. This is a motorised equivalent of someone with a whole lot more money than style. A millionaire urchin. George Walker. Mickie Most. Frank Warren.Do not, for heaven's sake, take this as a criticism of the Lexus. There's just as much new money in this country as old money. There will be just as many people who will like the pop-out plastic drinks holder as there are who'll hate it. I hate it.No question that Lexus is a better car than an XJ12. No question that the Jap car's electric seatbelt-height adjuster is well sighted, no question that its thinking four-speed switchable overdriven auto box is so much smoother than the cast-iron three-speeder of the Jaguar.But if I had to drive past a shop window, I would ensure that I was in the XJ. Gary Lineker, I'm sure, would prefer to be in the Lexus.The odd thing is that I quite like being seen in a Sierra 4 4 yet I can't get into a Granada without feeling acutely embarrassed. I'll happily swan around in a Volvo 740 estate but need a Balaclava helmet before I'll set foot in a T-series Mercedes.I'll pootle about all day long in a Lancia Y10, wearing a smug 'I know something you don't know' expression. Yet in that little funster, the Charade GTti, I have to have a sticker on the back window telling passers-by it's not my car.I cannot come to terms with Land Rover Discovery because it has stripes on the side and a blue interior, and I simply will not try a so-called special edition. And could you honestly drive around in a Nissan Bluebird Executive? Of course not. Not unless you had a box on your head.The point of all this is very simple: people should, and usually do, buy something with which they feel comfortable, irrespective of how clever it may be.Every single road test report on the Nissan 200SX will tell you just what a great car it is. They will talk of the power and the sophistication of that rear-wheel-drive chassis. They will talk too of the svelte looks and of the great precision in the build quality. But they will not dismiss it out of hand, as I do and you should, because it has brushed nylon seats.

Ski's the LimitWhen you are getting on for seven feet tall and you have size nine feet, there are all sorts of things you should not do. Tightrope walking over the Niagara Falls is one of them. Skiing is another.Manfully, I have been to the mountains twice a year for the past three years in a desperate bid to become good at getting around with planks on my feet. I even bought a primary-coloured anorak.But until April of this year, I have always failed. In 1988 at La Clusaz, I broke my thumb. In January 1990, at Val d'Isere, I tore the ligaments on the inside of my right knee and buggered up my cartilage for good measure as well.What makes this chapter of disasters even harder to stomach is that I'm so careful that if I ski on a glacier, it gets to the bottom of the mountain faster than I do.You cannot begin to imagine how vigorous my snowplough schusses are. You have never seen such fantastically tight step turns. I am capable of getting from an easterly traverse to a westerly one without being on the fall line for more than .003 of a second. I can ski for half an hour and only be three feet further down the hill than when I set off.And when you remember that I have to stop every fifteen minutes for a cigarette, it doesn't take a professor of pure mathematics to work out that it takes me 1026 hours to do a mile. That's 42 days.All this has changed now, though. On my last trip to the Alps, to the summer resort of Hintertux in Austria, people gawped in awe as I sped by. Two girls offered me their bodies. A child called me Franz and asked for my autograph. Even the Germans, amazed at the sheer length of my skis, parted like the waters of the Red Sea to allow me on to the chairs and T-bars without a wait.Cubby Broccoli has just telephoned to ask if I will do the stunts for Timothy Dalton in the next Bond extravaganza, 007 Kills Some Arabs Because the Russians are OK These Days.So how, you may be wondering, has this extraordinary metamorphosis come about?What happened was that every company in Europe that begins with the letter 'S' got together to organise a late-season skiing trip for members of Her Majesty's Press Corps. Saab provided the cars. Sealink came up with the boats. Salomon handed out the equipment and Servus, the Austrian Tourist Authority, paid for accommodation expenses.Also on hand were a brace of chaps who coach the British Olympic ski team. I was allocated to John Sheddon, who said it didn't matter how I skied, because there are only two types of turn left and right and skis are implements to get you from A to B. My kinda guy. There was none of this 'Benzee knees' nonsense you get from those peroxide poofs with tight red all-in-one suits and six pairs of socks shoved down their underpants.Sheddon gave me the confidence I needed to make slightly less dramatic turns by telling me to imagine that I had a steering wheel between the skis. He explained, too, that while skiing, my legs were doing the same job as shock absorbers on a car, keeping the skis on the snow. And he told me to steer the skis like a rally driver steers a car on gravel, setting up the skid prior to the turn and powering through to the next turn in full control. By likening skiing to driving, it all began to make a lot more sense.But not half as much sense as when the man from Salomon poked his Lancastrian nose in.Now, I have always laboured under the misapprehension that an amateur skier such as myself could not possibly tell the difference between a pair of Ford Cortinaesque rental skis and a pair used by the cream of downhill racers. In the same way that my mother could not possibly know the difference between her Audi and a BMW 750 iL, I figured that switching to a pair of 375 slalom planks would make bugger all difference. For only the second time in 30 years, I was wrong.Not only was it possible to tell the difference between my Ford Cortinas and the Salomon jobbies, but it was fairly easy to spot behavioural patterns on the three big-league affairs.The 1S ski, a gigantic 207, was so stable that it was possible to file your nails while doing 40 mph straight down a mogul field. This is cast very much in the Mercedes 560SEL mould.The 2S is very much the Golf GTi, being reasonable in a straight line at a cruise but capable of holding its own in the twisty bits.Then there was the 3S, about which I know very little because I kept falling over. It was dreadfully difficult to handle and quickly became known as the Toyota MR2 of skidom more so because the Salomon chappie insisted that it was only a handful if it was used ineptly or by cynical journalists.And even more astonishingly, each one of the three different types is available with a wide range of what Salomon calls power references. An individual calculates his own by scoring a certain amount of points for weight, ability and style.Howard Lees, the most fearsomely competitive man in history and the deputy editor of this magazine, went for the 8 rating, while I was honest and selected a 7.The difference was that he spent a day skiing like Killy and I looked smooth and in control. And yet he still won a four-star British alpine ski award, while I could not get past level three. This was only because my right leg was still encased in a RoboClackson-style brace to protect the smashed ligaments. Lees's legs were fine. Very very thin indeed, but fine.It was in Belgium, on the way home after Lees announced that I had to average 110 mph if we were to catch the 12.30 a.m. boat back to England, that we both decided that everyday skiing is quite a lot more exciting than everyday driving.So goodbye. We've decided to go to work for Performance Skiing.

The One That I WantA few Fridays ago my horoscope said, and I quote, 'If you think the world is a safe and ordered place, you're in for a shock.'For once, it was about right.9.00 a.m. I opened the post to find a court summons telling me I had no car tax. Frankly, I didn't need officialdom to remind me of this.11.00 a.m. my grandfather died.12.30 p.m. a major television contract that seemed like a safe bet fell through.5.30 p.m. my wife announced she had a crush on a friend of mine and left.The only reason why my hamster didn't shuffle off the mortal coil that night was because he had done so a couple of weeks earlier.A lot of people call days like that character building and, do you know, they're right. There are three things that I now know which I wouldn't have done had that Friday been vaguely normal.One: marriage isn't necessarily for life. When ex-Beloved stood at the top of the aisle promising to love me till death us do part, what she actually meant was that she'd love me until someone with peroxide in his hair, white socks and a crotch the size of a bungalow came along.Two: Greece isn't so bad after all. You know how you get all your best ideas at four in the morning when you've had two bottles of Australian fizz? Well you'll just have to take my word for it.Anyway, new Beloved was going on holiday the next day and wondered if I'd like to go too. Seeing as it only meant cancelling two business trips, a dental appointment, a weekend house party and work for the week, I readily agreed.Twelve hours later, we were on a BA767 to Athens and thenceforth in a rental Fiesta en route to a place called the Peligoni Club on an island called Zakynthos. It's some place.You live in one of six cottages in the olive groves and, during the day, congregate at the club which is so close to the sea that if there's one more inch of coastal erosion, it'll be in it.I have never seen such a spectacular bit of Mediterranean coastline either. You can keep northern Majorca and the South of France.Furthermore, I didn't see so much as a gram of feta cheese and there were no Union Jack shorts, no discos and best of all, no lilo shops. There weren't even any CCs, and if you want to know what they are, broaden your mind and send an SAE.It was at the Peligoni Club, however, that the most astonishing revelation of all unfurled.Three: you don't need an internal combustion engine to go bloody quickly on water. I always figured my Fairline Phantom was pretty good fun until I had a go on a Class One offshore powerboat with a boot full of eight-litre Lamborghini engines. And even that was tame compared with a Yamaha 650 Wave-runner. But all three pale into insignificance alongside a Hobie Cat, two of which are available to guests at the Peligoni.It looks like something those smiley Blue Peter people make out of sticky-backed plastic and two bananas every Monday and Thursday.What you get are two pencil-thin hulls joined by a piece of canvas and some struts. It is powered by a sail so big that if it were laid on the Isle of Wight, everyone would suffocate.I shan't bother going into all the technical details about turning and so on because, truth be told, I don't really understand them. If you gybe, it turns very fast indeed, so fast in fact that the boom takes your head off and it capsizes. If you go about, it sticks its nose into the wind and stops dead, hurling you into the water about 50 feet in front of it.Experts seem to know how to circumnavigate these small foibles but I'm buggered if I do. What I do know is that, in a straight line, it is quite simply staggering.With a force six creaming the wave tops into what we sailors call white horses, it will whistle along at an easy 18 knots. This would unquestionably be frightening were there not such a lot to do.You stand on one of the hulls, clip yourself onto the trapeze and, holding the rope that controls the front sail I think it's called a jib and a long pole which moves the twin rudders, lean right out with your arse touching the water.This has two effects: firstly, it stops the whole caboodle from being blown over and, secondly, if you're into S&M, you'll make a mess in your harness.Get it right and the sensation of speed is awesome. I had it right for about a minute but then, with Albania looming large on the horizon, things went rather badly wrong.Some say I lost my footing and fell forward, thus pushing the nose of the boat down. Some say there was water in one of the hulls and it sloshed forward of its own accord. I like this explanation best.Either way, the nose of the boat burrowed into a wave and the back end reared up in a prelude to what became a gigantic somersault.Forward momentum, as far as the boat was concerned, stopped abruptly. But from my point of view, the world was still whizzing by at 18 knots.Well, it was until the wire which attached me to the trapeze brought me to a halt. The problem was that the wire was fastened to my harness which was a little tight around the old dangly bits.Now I'm no scholar of physics but I'll tell you this. You don't measure the pressure involved in bringing a 15-stone male to a dead stop in the space of one inch in pounds per square inch. It's tons per square millimetre. And all of it was borne by my crotch.And do you want to know what my horoscope said that day? Well I'll tell you anyway.'Romantically, you're finished for the time being.' Once again, the little sod was about right.

Global WarmingDo please feel free to drool. Last week, as the temperature in Welwyn Garden City reached 102 degrees Fahrenheit, I had at my disposal a Lotus Esprit Turbo SE, a BMW 325i convertible, an Audi Quattro 20-valve turbo mother ****** and a 2-litre Ford Sierra.In any normal week, you can be assured that the Ford would not have turned a wheel. In fact, it turned all four of them several times.Yes, I know you can run a Lotus off its 170 mph clock, that you can get a Quattro to generate more than 1.0 g in bends and that, when the sun is shining, there are few better means of transport than a solidly made BMW soft top.But the sun wasn't shining. There was a haze made up of all sorts of choice ingredients: cloud, exhaust fumes, power station emissions, deodorant spray and so on. The heat was allowed in, and most of it finished up in my armpits, and it simply wasn't allowed out again. The smell was terrible.And the trouble with the sort of heat we had in the first few days of August is that there was no escape. It was not the sort of hot where you could sit in the shade to escape because it was that permeating, all-pervading hot that got everywhere.And because Britain can only cope if the weather is 55 degrees and drizzling, the country fell apart. In the same way that every snowplough breaks down just before their drivers go on strike every time it looks like snow, everything designed to keep us cool went west in August.The fridge in every corner shop was only able to bring Coca-Cola down to the sort of temperature found in the manufacture of glass. British Rail was forced to slow down its trains to 50 mph because the rails had all gone wonky, petrol pumps packed up, roads melted and old women the length and breadth of the land keeled over and died because they'd spent all their hypothermia allowances on two-bar fires and wouldn't turn them off.And then there was me. The office, so cosy in winter, was a hellhole of fire and damnation and pestilence mostly as a result of my armpits and there wasn't even any fornication to liven it up.Regularly we see that it gets above 100 in Luxor, but let me tell you there's a world of difference between 100 in Africa and 100 here. In Africa you starve. Here you sweat. I prefer starving.I needed to get home to a cold bath but I didn't want to get into any of the cars outside. I had no way of knowing just how hot it was in the Esprit but there was no way of holding the steering wheel without wearing Marigolds. The Audi, all 33,000 worth of it, had a lift-out roof but the metal was simply too hot to touch; although Audi gives you a spare can to cope with a dearth of unleaded fuel stations, it doesn't provide oven gloves.I have described the 20-valve Quattro mother ****** as the greatest all-round car in the world. It isn't. It has better ventilation than any Audi currently made but it can only blow hot air out of its vents on hot days.And the BMW had leather seats which, after three hours in the heat, were capable of melting a pair of Levis at 400 paces.The Ford, which let's face it can't quite match the competition for outright speed or handling, was provided with a sliding sunroof with a cover for when it's too hot and a windscreen that isn't raked so much that it allows the sun to heat up the wheel to a point where it becomes oval shaped.It also had air conditioning. Now this was not the best system I've ever encountered, but, nevertheless, it was capable of sucking hot smog from the outside and turning it into cold smog for the people inside.Rolls-Royce says the air-conditioning plants fitted to its cars have the power of 30 domestic fridges. Ford's has the power of one, but one is better than none. So, all last week, I was the berk in the blue Sapphire with the windows up and the coat on.And I've been doing some thinking. If the weathermen are to be believed, Britain is going to get warmer and warmer as each year strolls by. I read a report last week which said that, in twenty years' time, temperatures of 107 degrees will be entirely normal during the summer months.Now, some will say that as the motor car with its infernal catalytic converter is partly to blame, motor-car drivers must be made to sweat. But this is a vegetarian stance.As a red-meat eater, I see it the other way round. If motor manufacturers are going to heat up the world on the one hand, it is their duty to cool the people who live in it down again.The air conditioning in my Sierra wasn't standard. After a few minutes' research, I have found that the cheapest car in Britain to come with it, whether you like it or not, is the 13,000 Hyundai Sonata.The only other mass marketeers to include this life-saver as standard on humdrum boxes are Ford, which sticks it on the Sapphire 2000E, and Nissan, with the Bluebird Executive. And let's face it, these two aren't that much better than the Sonata.Can it be a coincidence that three of the nastiest saloons you can buy get one of the best extras provided as standard? Maybe not.What I would like to know is why someone hasn't fitted it to a cheaper car yet? Why, when the trend is towards smaller, faster, more luxurious cars, is the air con ignored? Why can we have a Metro with leather seats, a Charade with a 100-bhp, intercooled, turbo engine and four valves per cylinder, a Renault 5 with PLIP central locking and a Mazda 121 with an electric sun top when we cannot have a small and convenient car that doesn't poach its occupants?When I asked a Rover spokesman if such a thing might be in the pipeline, he said there was always one rainy day a week in Britain, that there was no demand, and that the standard of living here was about to fall, that two-thirds of Rover production went to the UK and that it was hard to fit air con to the K-series engine.In other words, no.

People's LimousineNow that Nissan and Rover are making some half-decent cars, the motoring headline writers have turned their big guns on Ford who, it is said, wouldn't know what a decent car was even if one jumped out of some bracken and ate the chairman's leg.Not unreasonably, car buffs are asking how on earth, after spending the best part of a billion quid on it, Ford managed to get the new Escort so hopelessly wrong.This can be answered very simply indeed. It looks like Ford blundered and built a car that people want.Instead of getting qualified engineers to sit around a conference table hammering out what is feasible in a family car these days and what is not, they got a whole load of hairy-arsed students to mill about in High Wycombe, doing market research.It's a fairly safe bet that if BMW had used such a technique, the Z1 would be five times faster and ten times less fun. When asked what they would like to see in a car, people are not in the habit of asking for drop-down doors.However, Ford felt Mr Average's opinions were important enough and did ask what features he would like to see on his next Eurobox. They then compounded the mistake by actually designing the car around these findings and now make no secret of the fact that appearance, quality and price were cited as the most important issues.Just 14 per cent of those questioned reckoned that performance was important, while handling, according to a spokesman, either wasn't a consideration or, if it was, didn't interest anyone enough even to register on the bar chart.Irrespective of what may or may not have been technically possible in a car like the Escort, it seems Ford's besuited marketeers went back to its engineers with these findings and told them to design a new car around the results. This means we now have a reasonably attractive, well-priced and quite nicely built car that doesn't handle and can't pull a greased stick out of a pig's arse.And now, of course, the headline writers are jumping up and down, foaming at the mouth and saying that Ford should have broken the law of averages and given us more. A lot more.They're quite right too. The Escort is not as spacious as a Tipo. It is not as satisfying as a Rover 200. It is not as nice to drive as a 309 and it is powered by a range of engines so nasty that even Moulinex would not accept them for use in a Magimix.The trouble is that people outside of motoring magazines will never know just how horrid the Escort is because (a) they will never drive a rival and (b) even if they did, they'd not spot the differences. People, remember, don't care about performance and handling.I have a Zanussi fridge. I do not know whether it has any CFCs in its engine. I do not know how many horsepower its motor develops and, even if I did, I wouldn't know whether that was a lot or not. I do not know if the light that comes on is ellipsoidal or even if it goes off when the door is shut. I do not know whether it is made out of aluminium or carbon fibre and, more than that, I do not care.If I were to be stopped tomorrow by a hairy-arsed student with a clipboard and asked what features I would most like to see on the fridge of tomorrow I would tell him that it should keep my milk from becoming cheese, that it should fit under the work surface and that there should be enough room inside for 24 tins of Sapporo.I do not know if it would be possible to have a solar-powered titanium job that could double up as a food blender cum orange squeezer so I would therefore not talk to the market researcher of such things.Similarly, a man in the street would not know of radar parking aids or variable valve-timing technology and, as a result, he would not be able to tell Ford's market researcher that he wanted both of them on his next Escort.Even though it might have been possible for such items to have been engineered in, Ford has obviously made them very low priorities, concentrating instead on value, appearance and quality: things people think the people want.Of course, people want these things but they want a whole lot more besides. It's just that they don't know what they want until someone gives it to them. My grandfather never used to sit around wishing that he could have a remote-control television set because, in his day, such whizzkiddery was the preserve of sci-fi writers.My great-grandfather didn't wander through his garden on a hot day wistfully thinking about how nice it would be if someone would invent a white box that would suck in hot air and turn it into cold air, thus keeping his Sapporo cold. And that's not only because he hadn't got a clue what Sapporo was.You can't want what you don't know exists. I think Sinead O'Connor had some sort of anarchistic viewpoint in mind when she eloquently entitled her album, 'I do not want what I have not got' but the sentiment holds water on a commercial basis too.It's fair enough to target existing Escort drivers, asking them what features of their current car are annoying. It is fair enough to act speedily on information received, but it is entirely irresponsible to let ordinary members of the public, most of whom went to state schools, decide what the cars of tomorrow should be like.I can't think of one great breakthrough that has been achieved through market research. Isaac Newton didn't use a single clipboard to find out if we'd like gravity or not. Alexander Fleming didn't commission MORI to see if we all needed penicillin. And NOP had nothing whatsoever to do with the theory of relativity.The question Ford should have asked itself is this: how can we trust the views of a nation that, according to the market research in which we place so much faith, looks set to let a red-headed Welshman into Downing Street.Questioning people in the street is only useful if you want to compose a silly article in a silly women's magazine about underarm deodorant.

Radio DazeIf you think that fertiliser is interesting, that Gary Davies is a decent chap and that opera is music, then you will probably argue that Britain's national radio stations do a good job.However, my idea of the perfect garden is one that needs hoovering once a year. I do not like Gary Davies and I would rather listen to a pile-driver than Placido Domingo.Traffic jams are now part and parcel of any journey in Britain and, if you get as bored with your tapes as I do, the radio should provide alternative aural entertainment. But on a five-hour journey from Birmingham to London the other day, it became more and more obvious that the airwaves in this country only cater for my mother and Stock, Market and Bankerman. They used to keep Percy Thrower happy too, but he died.Radio 1 is slick, 'Our Tune' is a good laugh and Steve Wright is a funny man, but it plays sheer, unadulterated rubbish between the chitchat.If you are more than twelve, there is Radio 2 with its comfortable disc jockeys in woolly pullies and Vera Lynn. Radio 3 does a good job if you enjoy being shrieked at by a fat tart in a tent and Radio 5 is OK for those who want to know what sort of cake the cricket commentators are eating while the turkeys on the field take tea.That leaves the worst of the lot. Radio 4 only has three programmes: Gardeners' bloody Question Time, which is fine if you think that greenfly on your clematis is more important than Green Jackets in the Gulf, the shipping forecast, which is of no earthly use to anyone, and The Archers, who live in a farm-subsidised world and think postage stamps are fascinating.I wonder if David Mellor, broadcasting minister, has ever considered the plight of thirtysomethings who want the Doobie Brothers interspersed with informed comment; a sort of cross between Q magazine and Channel Four News, where Peter Sissons does the interviews and Joe Cocker does the singy bits.At the moment, we either have Radio 1 which occasionally plays an old Beatles song or Radio 4 which, if it can find time between the weather in Dogger Bank and the state of Stefan Buczacki's stupid rockery, squeezes Clement Freud in for a quick joke.Largely, local radio is terrible too, but in London, where there are twenty stations, we have something called GLR which broadcasts, if ever you're down here, on 94.9FM. Conceptually, it's excellent.Before it began in 1988 we were teased with a test transmission tape featuring non-stop Led Zep, Bob Seger, the Doobies and Steely Dan.My appetite whetted, I tuned in on day one and found the disc jockeys were every bit as good as the music. When the radio alarm went off, I was treated to a man called Nick Abbott who rang up public figures every morning and insulted them. They had Tommy Voice, Johnny Walker and Emma Freud too. It was a damn good station.But, systematically, the decent presenters have been shunted into late-night slots or ejected altogether. Their replacements, complete with horrid regional accents, are bad enough, but chief horror is Janice Long who, along with a sidekick called James Cameron, does the morning show.Cameron is supposed to play at being Peter Sissons while Long spins the discs. Unfortunately, she can 't go for more than a minute without sticking her left-wing nose into the news items.Every day, I leave Balham rubbing sleep from my eyes and arrive in Fulham half an hour later spitting blood and screaming blue murder. Yes, the traffic on the Trinity Road is partly to blame but worse, much worse, is that woman. I even dreamed about her last night. Things are getting bad.I listen to her for two reasons. Firstly, there is no alternative for all the reasons I've already outlined and, secondly, I simply have to know how far to the left you can lean on a major radio station without falling over. It has now become a battle of wits: will she get fired before I go barking mad?A spokesman for the station described her as an 'Earth Woman', saying she is a veggie and a bit left wing. He even admitted that the finger had been wagged at her after an interview she did with that actress woman who wants to be an MP but won't ever make it because she's got bosoms like spaniel's ears.If Long wants to harp on about organic vegetables, then why doesn't she buy a psychedelic bus and move to Glastonbury where I'm sure the audience would be more appreciative. There is no place for an 'Earth Woman' on a station which is aimed right at the jugular of 25- to 40-year-old 'discerning' listeners.I wouldn't mind but her brand of socialism has rubbed off on the news staff too. Only the other day, one, probably another 'Earth Woman', was reporting on a demonstration in Wandsworth, home of the lowest poll tax in Britain.She claimed she had talked to residents who would willingly pay more for better services. Were these interviews broadcast? Were they hell. Did this woman really expect me to believe that there are people who want bigger poll-tax bills just to keep the Janice Longs of this world in odd-shaped carrots.Then the reporter had the audacity to claim that Wandsworth was at a standstill because of the huge demo. Well, I was there at the time and I've never seen the one-way system flow so freely. The 'huge' demo she was referring to involved six people. Three were women and four had beards.It seems GLR's traffic reports are politically motivated too. Certainly, they're usually pretty inaccurate. One day soon, Mrs Thatcher will be blamed for the weather.GLR is still on trial. Apparently David Mellor doesn't like it and unless the audience figures improve soon, the BBC's Board of Governors will close down the only radio station I know that gets close to making life in a traffic jam bearable.

Horse PowerObviously, in this green and caring land of hope and glory where man s best friend is a dog, one has to be a little careful when advocating the slaughter of an entire species.But let's face it what possible good are flies? Have you ever tried to sunbathe when a bluebottle has designs on your arm? And why, when you've wooshed him off 30 times, does he still try to land? Worse, have you ever tried to sleep when there's a fly in the room? Bzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz bump. Bzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz bump. Bzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz bump. If evolution has rendered the mole blind and turned the seal from a land-based mammal into a furry fish, why can't a fly get to grips with windows?And what the hell are flies full of? What is that yellow stuff that splatters all over your car windscreen when a wasp decides to headbutt your car?There are countless dangerous, ugly or just plain useless species which serve no purpose whatsoever; David Attenborough finds a couple of hundred every week. But worst of the lot worse than an electric eel, worse than a bluebottle, worse than a rat is the horse. Unless of course it's first past the post in the 3.15 at Doncaster with ten of my pounds on its nose.When it was fashionable to wear armour, the horse was as important to personal mobility as the Ford Escort. But thanks to the Ford Escort, we do not actually need horses any more. I know they did the Boers a big favour and Custer would have been even more buggered without one, so maybe we do owe them a small debt of gratitude, but in a world of modems and faxes, the only use I can think of for the common or garden horse is as an ingredient in glue.Things wouldn't be so bad if horsey types were all from the land-owning classes so that at least when they took their stupid animals out for a ride, no one else would be inconvenienced. Unfortunately the middle class, as usual, has stuck its nose in.And because the idea of land to the middle class is a lawn, it is forced to exercise its infernal pets on roads. That's bad enough but there are some professional bodies which do the same.If the army has enough money to transport an entire division halfway round the world, if it can afford to buy nuclear weapons which, let's face it, are not cheap, then how come the Blues and Royals are given horses to move around London on. What's the matter with motorbikes?It is absolutely absurd that I should be held up every morning by one of the world's most respected, feared and best-equipped armies as it plods through Hyde Park on animals that, in the modern world of warfare, are as pertinent as a bow and arrow. I am no military tactician but if I were to be given the choice of a nag or a Challenger in battle, I just know I'd take the tank.The army aren't the only operation in London to use horses either. One of the breweries I forget which and I'm certainly not going to bother finding out and give it advertising space in the process delivers its beer on horse-drawn drays.Even though it is pulled by two magnificent shire horses of a size that would keep Evostick in business for months should they ever be melted down, it has a top speed of 1 mph.And don't give me any claptrap about the environment on this issue because I would far rather breathe 0.00000001 mg of nitrogen oxide than slither about in a sea of manure. And if you reckon that the dray holds up 2000 cars a day for an average of five minutes each, that's the equivalent of one engine running at its most inefficient speed for one week.Commercial operations that use horses on the road are antisocial and as environmentally friendly as the Rother Valley and there can be no excuse. It's just a cheap publicity stunt. But what of the people who ride their horses on the roads when they aren't even advertising anything? Perhaps Evostick should consider melting the owners down too.The other weekend, I went for a ride on a horse so big it was a bison. Described as a bit frisky, which turned out to be like calling Cannon and Ball a bit not funny, we spooked and skipped our way round some Scottish back roads for an hour.Most passing cars slowed down by some margin but even when the steel dragons were crawling along at 20 mph, the demon horse jumped about like it was limboing up for an assault on the non-stop pogo dancing record. It was worse if the car was a bright colour and worse still if it went through a puddle while going by.My leading rein explained that some horses are worth ,20,000 and that because this figure was way in excess of what the average Scot spends on a car, drivers should get out of her way.She pointed out that horses are nervous beasts, rejecting in the process my suggestion that they're daft, and the slightest sign of something out of the ordinary may cause them to bolt. Christ, if they can't cope with a car going through a puddle, I sincerely hope that when the Martians do arrive, they land at Hickstead.If it were left to her, and others of her ilk, we would all have to buy Toyota Camrys and if we did encounter a horse while out driving, we should do a smart about turn and find an alternative route. I even noticed that the back window of her car sported a warning that she slowed down for horses. When she breeds, and horsey people do, frequently and with much vigour, doubtless she will have a baby-on-board sticker too.I have to go now because I'm due at Lingfield this afternoon.

Non-Passive SmokingI like gambling. Just the other day, I relieved a colleague of 10 when he discovered that Eddie Jobson did, at one time, play for Curved Air. Later today, I will win another 10 when I prove to someone else that Tom Stoppard wrote The Russia House.My new wager is a tad more risky. I have bet a leading figure in the motor industry that by 1999, Audi will outsell BMW by two to one on the British market. For the record, BMW currently outsells Audi by the same margin.My reasoning is simple. Audi is responding to changing public demand better than BMW. Audi was the first to get a baby in its television advertisements, Audi was the first to get catalytic converters standardised across its entire range, Audi was the first to use nothing but galvanised steel and Audi is first off the marks with Procon Ten.Performance, handling and sheer macho thrustiness have been eschewed by Audi in favour of trees and flowers and having horrid accidents without dying. Audi is on the ball.BMW is not. The filofax is dead. Nineteen-year-olds on 200,000 a year are no more. Estate agents, praise be to the Lord, are in the mulligatawny up to their scrawny necks and we laugh at people with double-breasted suits and mobile telephones.So why, if all these have gone, should we expect the car that went with them not to go too? Bye bye BMW. Hello 10.This probability became a certainty when I noticed, among all the hype about performance, handling and macho thrustiness in the blurb on the new 3-series, a small but vital point. You are able to buy these new cars without any ashtrays.Well that does it. In recent months, I have become increasingly fed up with the drivel bandied about by hairy-bottomed do-gooders who want us all to take up jogging. And not even jogging on a horizontal basis either, which it seems renders us likely to catch AIDS.I may however catch cancer or thrombosis or angina or any number of nasties that my packet of Marlboro insists are a virtual certainty should I choose to indulge in the contents.My simple answer to this is so what? If I choose to cash in the chips early and shuffle off the mortal coil at 60 or so, you clean-living types should be grateful.I will never buy a pair of those fur-lined boots with zips up the front and I will never get in your way in the post office, failing to get my mind or my arthritic fingers round the hard ECU or whatever currency has replaced Sterling by then.I will never demand money from the government every time it drops below 70 degrees and I won't clog up the roads in my ten-year-old Maxi with 600 miles on the clock. Dying before you're an old-age pensioner is the most socially responsible thing you can possibly do.And if you manage to kill yourself in such a way that the treasury benefits, so much the better. On this front, you have two choices: fill up with four star and drive over Beachy Head or, and this is the option I've chosen, smoke 40 cigarettes a day for 50 years.In today's money, I will have given the chancellor 30,000, thus paying for a hospital ward that I will never use. Now THAT is public spirited.Also, I will give tobacco companies about 20,000 which helps keep unemployment down and motor racing alive.At this point in the debate, earth people like Janice Long usually pipe up with the age-old argument about passive smoking and how they, full to overflowing with organic vegetables, do not wish to inhale somebody else's nicotine.Well, I find football offensive. I do not see why that Paul Gascoigne person has to take up so many pages of my Sun every day and I do not see why large areas of Fulham are virtually closed off every time 22 men feel the need to charge around Chelsea kicking an inflated sheep's pancreas at one another.In my opinion it would be better if they could be persuaded to indulge in this curious pastime at an out-of-town stadium. Football fans, however, point out that they enjoy the game and wonder, out loud and often, why on earth they shouldn't be allowed to enjoy it in a convenient location.Of course they should. Nice though the concept is, I don't have the power to ban football or socialism or lots of other things I don't like. So who gave the likes of British Airways, LRT and Pizza Express the power to ban smokers smoking?Just recently, I went for three hours without a cigarette because some Finnish bus company provided a no-smoking coach which took us to a no-smoking shopping centre. From there, we went to a no-smoking airport and on to an internal SAS flight which is also no smoking. It deposited me at Helsinki which, as far as I can work out, is a no-smoking city. And people wonder why Scandinavia has the highest suicide rate in the world.By offering the new 3-series without an ashtray, BMW must take its share of the blame for job losses in the tobacco industry and big third-world debt problems in tobacco-producing countries. Tax lost from reduced cigarette consumption will be applied elsewhere and the NHS will be swamped with incontinent pensioners who'll live to 150. The suicide rate will spiral and slaughter on the roads will become wholesale as people can't find a way to keep calm in traffic jams. The Tories will be ousted, communism will take its place and how many cars do you think BMW will sell when we all have to call one another 'comrade'.And what is BMW's reasoning? Well, a spokesman said a car that has never been smoked in fetches more on the second-hand market than one which has a nicotine bouquet.Someone at Audi should explain to him that these days, quality of life counts for a little bit more than saving a few quid.

S-ClassyPrivately at least, the new Mercedes-Benz S-Class has caused a murmur of discontent among certain motoring journalists.People who can be found running around their offices making gear change and tyre squeal noises have been heard to mutter that the S-Class in general, and the 6-litre V12 in particular, is a rather unsavoury and tasteless exercise in frivolous excess.Now, I don't understand this. For years, these people, who can be distinguished from normal people by their Rohan trousers, have argued that all cars should have 5-litre turbo engines and suspension systems that are harder than washing-up a Magimix.So that they have something new to talk about loudly and often in pubs, they want each new car to be bigger and faster and better and more exciting than anything ever before made by anybody.Mercedes has done that but instead of handing out credit where credit is due, they point to its 2.2-ton bulk, saying that in a world burdened with dwindling resources, there is no place for such a monster. What's more, you even get the impression when talking to Mercedes engineers that if they had begun to design the car yesterday rather than back in the early 1980s, it would not be as it is.I have never seen such a defensive press pack. Way before you get to engine specifications or that brilliant rear-axle layout there are literally pages and pages of bumph about how environmentally aware Daimler-Benz is.It even says, and this is the best bit, that only 80 per cent of the car is galvanised because it is trying to conserve the world supplies of zinc. That is called reactive public relations.So let us work out how the S-Class might have looked had it been designed in the 1990s rather than the 1980s. First, it would not have been blessed with a V12 engine a lighter, more efficient multi-valve six would have done the job, albeit not as silently or as effortlessly.It may have been fashioned from thinner, lighter steel or even composites and it may have been built with less integrity to save a few pounds of both the lb and variety. Also, if it were built less well, the cabin would be less airtight and consequently, self closing doors would be an unnecessary waste of time. Double glazing would have been thrown out as the whim of a madman.Air suspension, however, may stay as this uses lightweight electronics and fluid rather than bulky and out-of-date metal. There would be no drop-down vanity mirrors in the back and surely a nice Richard Grant tail fin would do the job of those complex aerials which pop out of the rear wings to help shorter drivers see where the rear of the car is while reversing.In addition to all this, it would have been smaller by some considerable margin. And cheaper.In other words, rather than being a jaw-lowering masterpiece which sets new standards in every single area, it would have been just another executive car which, in all probability, would have been no better than a Citroen XM.When you're talking about the S-Class you can, in all honesty, call it the 'best'-handling big car, the 'fastest' limo, the 'most' comfortable saloon and the only complaint you'll get is from your computerised thesaurus which just won't have enough superlatives in its memory bank.How can journalists berate Ford in one breath for letting the accountants have too much control over the engineers when, in the very next moment, they are lambasting Daimler-Benz for saying to its engineers: 'Get on with it boys. Show those Oriental chappies that we can grind them into the dirt when push comes to shove. Sod the money, go out there and build the best car in the world.' Or something like that.Had one eye been kept on the abacus or the Greenpeace newsletter, the 600SEL would have crept on to the market, as big a leap forward as the potato peeler.If I were in Merc's shoes right now, I wouldn't be crawling around, half apologising for the masterpiece my back-room boys had created. I'd be on the roof at Canary Wharf, hailing it for what it is: the best car in the world.The whole point is progress. No one jumps up and down with foam at the corners of their mouth when Ferrari introduces us all to another extravagant sports car. In the real world a Renault 5 GT Turbo is very nearly as fast as a Ferrari but that doesn't mean Fiat should close Maranello down.Yes, an XM is very nearly as comfortable as an S-Class but that doesn't mean the whole project should have been scrapped, as some heavily bearded people are now saying.No one seems to mind that we're all expected to replace our album collections with CDs even though the qualitative difference is actually quite small and no one cares two hoots that we have to replace perfectly serviceable clothes each year because something better and more fashionable has come along.So why the hell should we worry that Mercedes has gone that extra mile to make a car that is head and shoulders above everything else? And damn it all, 85,000 is not expensive when you look at the price tickets in a Rolls-Royce showroom.I can't help feeling that Rohan-trousered journalists are up in arms about the timing of the S-Class simply because they can find nothing to moan about the car itself. I will admit that the 600SEL has emerged at a rather inconvenient moment but I will never be party to criticism of it as a result.The brontosaurus met a premature end because it came along at the wrong time but let's face it, the Natural History Museum would be an altogether duller place had it never existed at all.

Would You Buy a Used Alfa from This Man?If it turns out that a Malaysian customs officer cannot be bribed, I shall renounce Christianity and move to the Orkneys, where, I'm told, everyone is Lucifer's best mate.Selling a beautiful Alfa Romeo at a fair price ought to be easy even though Glass's Guide shows a 1986 GTV6 to be worth 34p whereas I know 7000 is not unreasonable.I chose to advertise it in one of those Classic Car magazines; written BY people with beards FOR people with beards, and the response was good, with five calls on the first day.Two hours before man one was due to arrive, I decided to make sure the thing actually worked, something that is never guaranteed with a GTV6 especially when it has been sitting in a vegetative state outside my house for nine months.I pumped up its tyres, cleaned away the cobwebs, ran a hoover over the carpets, topped it up with oil and water, attached some jump leads and crossed my fingers. And it burst into life, the exhaust signalling this emergence from hibernation with a melodious bark.Man one duly arrived and we stood, poring over the service history and discussing various rust spots for ooh, about ten minutes before deciding to go for a test drive. Yes, it started but no, it would not go into gear. The clutch, after such a long rest, had welded itself to the fly wheel and would not, even when enticed with a 10 per cent cut off the asking price, dislodge itself.Man one buggered off.Man two arrived ten minutes later and buggered off five minutes after that, saying that I had wasted his time, and that I was a nuisance. Only he didn't say nuisance. However, he DID say I should call him back when it was working.Over the next few days, I consulted colleagues like Jeff Daniels and LJK Setright and Citroen's spanner-man, Julian Leyton, to see how a clutch could be unstuck without resorting to brute force or a 500 visit to Kwik Fit.There was a lot of umming and aahing but in effect, they said it couldn't.But they were reckoning without my mop. After it had held the clutch pedal down for three days, there was a boinging noise and the GTV6 once more became a fully functional motor car.Man two came round again, took a test drive, and said he would very much like to buy it but could not until he had sold his own 2-litre GTV. I expect to see him again but I shall be 52 years old.Man three was an Australian and didn't turn up. I now have 342 reasons for saying that Australia will be the last continent on earth that I visit. And that includes the Antarctic.Man four worried the life out of me. One, he sounded foreign on the telephone. Two, he was from Essex and three, he said he wanted the car for his wife.Face to face, things did not improve. His claim that he drove a Lotus Carlton was at odds with both his demeanour and his 'friend' who wore an earring. Alarm bells rang. Even if he had offered cash, I'd have been suspicious but he launched into a remarkable tale about how the piece of paper he was waving under my nose-end was a building society banker's draft. For all I knew, it could have been a dog licence. Now, the BBC is forever getting letters from people who have been diddled when selling cars. I just knew that whatever deal I did with Mr Dodgy, I'd end up on That's Life!So I refused to budge by so much as 1p on the price and he went away.Then I entered the Malaysian phase. It began when an Oriental chappie rang from Denmark, where he is currently engaged servicing rigs, to see if it would be all right to come over and look at the car. He arranged to catch the Friday-night flight and we'd meet on the Saturday morning.But on the Friday afternoon, way after it became impossible to stop the Malaysian Dane from coming over, man four turned up complete with salivating chops and a bundle of wedge. He wanted the car and would pay full price. DILEMMA or what?You know that scene in National Lampoon's Animal House where the spotty youth is presented with an available, if slightly unconscious teenage girl at a party? On his left shoulder is the devil advising him to 'go for it' while on his right is an angel, advising him not to on account of her tender years etc.On the one hand was my moral fibre. On the other, was an overdraft which is not being helped by 100 a month premiums on the car I now had an opportunity to sell.The Devil said screw the Malay-Dane. My public-school education and sheer Britishness said don't... and won. Man four went off in a huff.The Oriental Viking duly arrived and we spent the whole of Saturday with an Alfa Romeo specialist who pronounced the car to be fit and well worth 7000. This had nothing to do with my advice to the said specialist that if he wasn't forthcoming with a result of this type, I would write about his operation in a derogatory manner every hour, on the hour.It transpired, after all was said and done, that you can't import a car to Malaysia if it is more than five years old and my GTV6 is, by one poxy month.Our Tropical Nordic friend is, as I write, trying to grease the palm of a customs official in the hope of getting round this idiotic legislation but holds out little chance of success.If I had listened to the advice of Satan, the car would have been sold already and I'd be seven grand better off. Because I waited for the Malay-Dane, I feel extremely righteous.But I can hardly tell the bank manager that my overdraft has not been cleared due to extreme righteousness because he'll think I've gone mad.Which I have.

A Question of SportsAway from the world of motoring, just about the only thing that ranks as 'really puzzling' is why on earth anyone votes Labour?Within it, so many things are really puzzling, you'd need a whole bank of Cray supercomputers to work them out.For example, just what is that car on the cover of Peter Gabriel's first album?Then there's Ligier and its sponsorship deal with the French government. How come a budget that could finance a small nuclear war or a vast conventional one is not big enough to get one point in Grand Prix racing?I shall go on. Why is the standard of driving so uniquely atrocious on the M1 just near Leicester? Why isn't there a motoring programme on ITV? Why do some people, usually those with bosoms, find it so difficult to park? Is it true the Celica was designed by a horse? How come Robin Cook is so ugly? That's not really a motoring problem but it needs answering nevertheless.Then there is the small question of depreciation. Why does anyone buy a BMW 750iL knowing, with absolute certainty, that in a year's time, they'll be twenty grand worse off? If you really must have such a car, why not pop into a casino on the way to the dealer and plonk 20,000 on red? If it comes up trumps, you can cover the certain loss that lies ahead and if it comes up black, you can relax knowing you'd have lost it anyway and that you've saved 100 on road tax.And that's another thing. Why do motorists have to pay 100 for road tax when 70 per cent of it is spent on ethnic lesbian theatre groups and poison to kill doggies?Is it true that Stevie Wonder designed Oxford's one-way system? Why do multi-storey car park stairwells always smell of urine? Why do buses have to be so big? Why is it that whenever three men get into a van together, its throttle jams wide open and the brakes fail? Do dustbin-lorry crews get a bonus every time they knock off someone's wing mirror? And how come Vauxhall is allowed to claim the top speed of an Astramax van is 90 mph when, in fact, it's twice that.Why do the drivers of all BMWs in south London refuse to turn their headlights on at night and why do all Austin Maxis have tissues and cushions on the rear parcel shelf? It sure as hell can't be anything to do with 'naughtiness' because the drivers are all old and the naughtiest thing an old person does is cheat in a beetle drive.I'm afraid there is no point trying to work out answers to any of the above because they're all imponderables. It's like trying to establish where on earth mucus comes from or why people have babies or why your toast always lands on the carpet butter-side down.However, the one imponderable I've been having a stab at just lately is why Toyota sells more sports cars in Britain than anyone else?And the answer I've come up with is that no one else actually makes sports cars. Which leads us on to another imponderable. Why not?Yes, I know Lotus, Morgan and TVR will be jumping around at the back now, waving their arms and pointing to Elans, Plus 4s and S3S, but these, let's face it, are small fry compared with the MR2.Whereas the MR2 is designed and backed up by the world's third-largest motor manufacturer, the TVR S3, frankly, is not. It's a lovely car, you might even call it a great one, but it will never outsell the MR2 and that's the end of it.However, what I want to know is why Ford or Vauxhall or Peugeot or Fiat do not make a sports car and I don't mean a rebodied rep-mobile with electric windows and a spoiler that wobbles about; I mean a real, get out of my ****ing way, sports car.The usual answer trotted out is that there's no demand. Oh yeah, so how come Toyota makes such a success of it? Or they'll claim that one-off projects are not viable. Oh yeah, well how come Toyota did it not once, not twice ladies and gentlemen but, if you count the Celica as a sports car which, grudgingly, I will, three times?Toyota made the MR2 to be just as popular in Detroit as it is in Nidderdale or the Australian bush or Egypt or Modena or Dublin or La Paz or anywhere, for that matter, where Toyota has an important operation. Which is just about everywhere.Both GM and Ford are bigger than Toyota but they seem to be incapable of grasping the concept of a world car. Toyota has proved that if the car is right, it will sell everywhere. You don't need one version for the States, one for the Far East and one for Europe. You can make the economies of scale work.I sometimes wonder if the Western big boys are frightened by the MR2 but I've just spent a week with one and I reckon there's no need for such lilyliverishness. After all, how does anyone know whether it's good or hopeless when no one else makes such a thing?Maybe, if everyone made a budget-priced mid-engined two-seater, it would be to the class what the Escort is to Euroboxes or what the Croma is to executive saloons.I am beginning to despair of the European motor manufacturers. Where is the investment? Where is the initiative? Where's the bloody pizzazz?If Toyota was run by Europeans, its range would include the Starlet, the Corolla, the Carina and the Camry. And that would be it.But Toyota is run by people who can see their ears and, as a result, there's also the Previa, the MR2, the Celica, the Supra, the Land Cruiser and a whole host of other stuff it doesn't export to Europe because of import restrictions.Which brings me on to the next ?really puzzling' thing. Why is everyone involved in Western automobile manufacture sound asleep?

Volvo ShockBefore reading beyond the first paragraph of this story, ensure that you are sitting down. Also, loosen all items of clothing, take off your spectacles and remove your dentures.Volvo has made a good car.It still has typical Volvoy looks but they disguise the fact that it goes like stink and handles like the sort of dream where you spend six hours making love to Daryl Hannah AND Patsy Kensit.It is called the 850 and it will be appearing at a Volvo dealership near you early next year. Price-wise, the GLT version I drove should cost about 18,000.So, you've read this far and you've seen the photograph and doubtless, you're wondering how on earth a car that looks pretty much identical to the old 700 series can be demonstrably better than almost anything else in its class.Well, for a kick off, it has front-wheel drive. Yes, Volvo has used the expertise gained by making the 400 series and applied it to its new machine but to make sure it all works properly, a new rear suspension has been developed.It's so complicated that the press conference needed to explain everything went on for six days. All you need to know is that it's the subject of a Volvo patent, that it works and that it's called the Delta System.On the devilish piece of road Volvo calls its test track, mid-corner bumps, hideous adverse camber and awesome pot holes failed to unsettle the 850 in any way whatsoever, though a Spanish journalist did manage to turn one over. It has extraordinarily high levels of grip, stunning turn-in, no torque-steer worth mentioning and a ride comfort to rival all but the Citroen XM. You want more... good, because there is some.And it comes in the shape of a new engine. While Ford is busy telling us that you need eight years to develop a new power unit, Volvo is out and about proving this assumption wrong. Just after the introduction of a new 3-litre six with four valves per cylinder, which, incidentally, took four years to get into production, comes a development of that engine a 2.5-litre, 20-valve five cylinder engine which took even less time to get from the drawing board to reality.There are no signs, however, that even hint at an abbreviated or rushed development. It's a gutsy unit which produces lots of that stuff real road-testers call torque and which you and I call grunt. Moreover, most of it is available from just above tickover.Power-wise, even the most ardent BMW aficionado is left gasping. In a body that weighs 300 lb less than a similarly priced 24-valve 520i, there is a transversely mounted engine which develops 170 bhp that's twenty more than the Bee Em.It equates to excellent performance, 0 to 60 takes, we are told, 8.9 seconds and on Volvo's high-speed test track, I reached an indicated 216 kph (135 mph), with the sunroof open. In more normal conditions, you can expect 25 mpg from the catalysed motor unless of course you go for the clever four-speed auto.The other good toy, of course, is air-conditioning which rounds off a pretty impressive list of gizmos. Even the dash, a traditional Volvo weakness, looks solid and tasteful. It even has an LCD computer.But, when all is said and done, it is a Volvo and that means safety. To that end, there is a new B pillar and a door design which, in a side impact sends much of the energy, that would ordinarily be used to kill those inside, down to the floor.Knowing this new system was in place and knowing it was backed up with anti-lock brakes and an air bag, I dispensed with the usual Clarkson reserve and found the Volvo to be great fun. And you've never read that much about such a car before.The new engine sounds more like an Alfa V6 than a humble 'five' but it is the quality of power of delivery that impresses most. The whole car feels like a fluid extension of your limbs, responding to driver input like all performance cars should.It even excels in town where good visibility, a stupendous turning circle and well-defined corners come into their own. The seats are pretty damn comfortable too.Equally useful in day-to-day life is the rear seat's armrest which can be converted into a baby seat and the passenger's front seat which, like those in the rear, can be folded down enabling long things to be carried around. It's a simple idea and one that leaves you wondering why no one else has ever thought of it.Mind you, less clever, is Volvo's product policy. It keeps introducing new cars without deleting anything. This means we now have to choose between the ancient 200, a large estate car, the 700, a large estate car, the 900, a large estate car which looks just like the 700, or the new 850 which, one day, will be a large estate car even though for now, it's only a saloon.Not only are they all the same size but the new 850 is indistinguishable from the 900. I just cannot understand why Volvo's stylists did this and, having talked to people in the company, it seems, neither can anyone else.But we can't moan because here at last is a car that looks like a Volvo, feels like a Volvo but goes and handles like a BMW. And that is so astonishing that it just has to be reported.

No Free LunchIceland, Norway, China, Finland, Sweden, Denmark, Germany, France, Spain, Portugal, Hong Kong, Maui, America, Japan, Italy, Sardinia, Sicily, Cyprus, Chad, Niger, Austria, Switzerland, Belgium, Holland and Luxembourg.In five years, I've been to them all and it's cost me the grand total of no pounds, no shillings and no pence.There isn't a car you can buy I haven't driven and that small feat didn't cost anything either.Tomorrow, at Castle Combe, I shall be playing with a Countach, a Miura and a Diablo and then I shall come home in a helicopter. And the bill? Zero.I have stayed in the Carlton Hotel in Cannes and the Hyatt Regency on Kanapali Beach. I have jet-skied in the Pacific, snow-skied in Italy and skidooed in Finland. I have drunk Mouton Rothschild on the shores of Lake Annecy and Barsac with foie gras.You name an expensive restaurant in Europe, and I mean so numbingly expensive you would be struggling to pay for a lettuce leaf, and I will have eaten lobster in it. Think of your dream hotel and I'll have been there already.I have been in the sharp bit of a Cathay Pacific Jumbo and helicopters have taken me round the Alps, into the Grand Canyon, from Nice Airport to the Loews hotel in Monaco and over the queues you sit in to get to the British Grand Prix.Day after day, week after week, year after year, I live a champagne lifestyle that would quiver the shivery bits of even the most hardened Fleet Street gossip columnist. Compared to me, Joan Collins is like a walk-on extra in Coronation Street.I redefine excess. Princess Stephanie is to me what a Fiat 126 is to a Bentley Turbo, what a Peter and Jane book is to Othello, what a plankton is (get on with it Ed.).But do not despair because all you have to do to join me on this caviar and Krug roller-coaster is find a newspaper or magazine which, each week, will give you a column inch or two to write about cars.Then, motor manufacturers will compete with one another to ensure you write about one of their products rather than someone else's.It is motor manufacturers who pay for the first-class travel and the helicopters and the fine wines and the foie gras and the Carlton Hotel and the trips to China. And then to make sure we all remember our trips, it is motor manufacturers that give us all going-home presents: telephones, briefcases, jackets, fish, whisky and so on.There are 56 million people in Britain. Excluding those who are too young and those that have begun to wear fur-lined boots with zips up the front, that leaves maybe 40 million. Then take out those that can't read or write and you're left with six. And I doubt there's one who wouldn't sell their children into slavery to do what I do for a living.Or is there? According to an organ produced by the Northern Group of Motoring Writers, this job is not all it's cracked up to be. More than that, it smells a whole lot worse than an anchovy's wotsit.It seems that some of my northern colleagues are angry because first-class travel, Barsac and the Carlton are just not enough.One of their number, who claims to write a column in the Pig Breeder's Gazette (no, I'm not) suggests in a recent edition of the Group's newsletter that it is a bloody disgrace that he is unable to get a Ferrari to test for a week. Diddums.But this little snippet is small fry compared to the front-page lead which begins thus: 'The tendency among PR departments to expect journalistsespecially north of Watfordto attend product launches at their own expense is a growing and worrying trend.'He cites a recent BMW launch, saying that some members had to get up at 5 a.m. and drive for up to 90 minutes to get to an airport. He goes on to add that lunch was too brief and concludes with the astonishing revelation that many members had an 18-hour day!So let's look at this 18-hour day shall we. Our man wakes and after a pot of piping-hot coffee, climbs into that week's press car, a Rover perhaps or maybe a Calibra. Either way, it has a tank full of fuel paid for by whoever delivered it. He drives to an airport and boards a plane to Scotland, using a ticket sent to him by BMW. At Glasgow airport, he climbs into a waiting 325i and drives through breathtaking scenery for an hour or so, arriving at Inverlochy Castle. There, he wolfs down some salmon before driving a 3 18i back to the airport for the plane home.I don't know how he survived. Ranulph: forget your Transglobe Expedition, forget walking to the North Pole. Just you try being a Northern motoring journalist for a day or two.This front-page expose suggests that the manufacturer should pay for petrol to and from the airport (though why the newspaper can't do this is beyond me), that it should pay for car parking and that overnight stays should be incorporated if it looks like being a long day. I thought Northerners were supposed to be gritty.But the best bit I've saved till last. Our lead writer says he was invited to London by Pirelli for the launch of a new tyre and that to get from Lincolnshire to the capital would have meant a 70 experience on the train or a 120 plane ticket.It is up to an editor to decide if a new Pirelli tyre is news. If he says it is, he must pay for his motoring writer to attend the launch. If he decides that the good people of Grimsby are able to get by without knowing the tyre exists, then the motoring writer cannot go.The notion that Pirelli should pay 120 so that half a dozen Grimsby-ites can read all about their new tyre is nonsense.There is only one thing in the world worse than a whinger and that's a whinger with a Northern accent. And to think I was born there. Eugh.

Are Cars Electric?I wonder whether history will be kinder to Karl Benz or Councilman Marvin Braude. The man who invented the motor car. Or the man who killed it?At the Frankfurt Motor Show, the world's motor manufacturers and assorted secretary birds showed off no fewer than 24 cars powered by electricity.Ford, Chrysler and General Motors announced that they had joined forces to spend half a billion dollars of their own money and another half a billion from the US Treasury on research into advanced battery design.And the talk was not of Toyota's new factory in Derby but of the new Chloride plant in Manchester.The latest Japanese concept car and the usual crop of hopeless Italian design studies were completely ignored. All anyone talked about were electric cars, sodium sulphur batteries, fast charging and other assorted pieces of what bulls do.Believe me, in twenty years' time, you won't be reading Performance Car and even if you are, we will not be writing about how fast the new Nissan goes from 060 mph but how fast you can recharge its power pack and how far it will go before such recharges are necessary. And the most important of all, how many miles you can do before you need to spend 2000 on a new set of batteries, and whether it's worth leasing them from the LEB.And Councilman Marvin Braude is to blame.Marvin lives in Los Angeles. Marvin is a city councillor in Los Angeles and Marvin doesn't like the fact that children are not allowed to play on his streets because of the smog.Marvin places the blame for this smog squarely at the door marked Detroit. Apparently, Marvin is fed up with excuses from Motown so a couple of years ago he instigated the LA Initiative whereby companies large and small from all over the world were invited to design an ultra low-emission car which could later be converted to zero emission. He said it must have freeway performance, i.e. a top speed of 60 mph, that it must have a range of 150 miles and that it should be a quality product aimed at the lower luxury market.The prize was a sackload of cash from the city of Los Angeles who would also market the car, guarantee big sales and ensure that charging points would be installed throughout the city to cope.The competition was won by a British-designed vehicle which has a range of 50 miles if you use the electric motor only or 150 miles if you use the 650 cc petrol motor as well. This has two catalytic converters and produces less bhp than a Kenwood mixer.It has a top speed of 70 mph and 0 to 50 mph takes 17 seconds. It is therefore about as advanced as a Ford Anglia, circa 1961.Having shown Detroit that such a thing could be achieved, the State of California announced that by 1998 any manufacturer wishing to operate in the world's seventh-biggest economy must ensure that for every hundred cars sold, two must produce no emissions. And that means battery power.If I was a car manufacturer, my knee jerk reaction would be to pull out of California and let them use the bus but sadly, we can be assured that what happens on the west coast of America today will happen in the rest of the US tomorrow, and in Europe next year.There is no escape. Every manufacturer has to make electric-powered cars. And to make sure the simply enormous costs can be recouped, they have to be desirable. They have to sell which means they'll have to be as good as a petrol-engined car or significantly cheaper.Now while every car firm in the world is scurrying around trying to make hitherto untouched technology as desirable as the internal combustion engine, which can trace its roots back to the last century, you can bet your bottom dollar that the amount of investment in the kind of cars we've come to know and love will dwindle to diddly squat.Take Jaguar for example. Every penny it has must now be poured into the development of a battery-powered car. You can kiss goodbye to the notion of a new petrol engine because there won't be one. The oil industry can pull its hair out until it looks like Telly Savalas but we are facing, right now, the beginning of the end of the internal combustion engine.And Marvin is to blame.Now when the world's third-biggest industry is forced into a corner by technology-forcing legislation, you can rest assured that technology will come, and fast. Eventually, we will have cars propelled along by dylthium crystal batteries, cars that can perform just as well as the S-class Merc of today, cars that will go for 20,000 miles between recharges and cities with power points at every parking meter.And as a result, the air will be cleaner and cities will be quieter, and we'll wear flowers in our hair and not eat meat.Or maybe not. You see, charging up the millions and millions of electric cars that Marvin hopes will one day roam the roads, will require a lot more effort on the part of power stations which, at present, are responsible for 90 per cent of 'greenhouse gases'.By running an electric car, all you are doing is displacing the pollution from your exhaust pipe to a power station somewhere else. Even the LA goody-goodies admit this by stating that 64 per cent of the city's power is not generated in the LA basin. In other words, we clean up our act and to hell with those who'll suffer as a result.Now I don't dispute that LA has a dreadful smog problem because I've been there and I've seen it. Nor do I dispute that motor vehicles are to blame but why is LA's smog worse than anyone else's?It seems that the prevailing winds from the Pacific are blocked by the mountain range behind LA. Consequently the smog doesn't get blown away.Rather than make all the world drive around in milk floats, surely Marvin would have been better off seeking the advice of a demolition team. He's already said he doesn't mind pollution so long as it isn't in LA so why doesn't he simply blow up the mountains?In the prologue to Look Stranger, W. H. Auden said: 'Far sighted as falcons, they looked down on another future; for the seed in their loins was hostile.'Marvin probably thinks he's being a falcon but it might be a good idea if he had a good look between his legs.

Cruel to be KindI find myself wondering whether the new Archbishop of Canterbury, the good Doctor George Carey, has ever been scrumping.Without wishing to sound like Frank Muir, to scrump is to break into an orchard and steal apples.I used to do it. My father used to do it and I'd bet a wedge of Melvins that old George cannot put his hand on his heart and say that, at one time or another, he hasn't climbed over a wall and helped himself to the odd bit of somebody else's fruit.However, times have moved on and this is what George and all the other weirdos who go on television to talk about 'social issues' fail to understand.In the fifties, people would queue for hours to see Way to the Stars, a dreadful black and white film where people said 'bother' if they trapped their thumb in a door and, apart from people trapping their thumbs in doors, nothing much happened.Today, youth is not satisfied unless strange metal aliens chop whole limbs off. Furthermore, those who do get de-legged do not say bother.Then there's sex. In the fifties, the merest hint of an ankle would have the censors reaching for their scissors whereas these days no film is complete unless it features at least six panty hamsters.Translate that sort of progress into the real world and it becomes a damn sight easier to understand why the modern-day equivalent of scrumping is ram-raiding.We do not need hairy social workers and do-good churchmen looking for complicated reasons why the youths of Newcastle and Oxford want to steal cars, because it's patently obvious to anyone under the age of 100. They do it because it's bloody good fun.Why do you think rock stars throw televisions into swimming pools? Why can I not walk past a stack of beans in Safeway without getting a sometimes uncontrollable urge to push it over?Glass makes a satisfying noise when it breaks but I bet it makes a hell of a more satisfying noise when you've just driven a Range Rover through it.And I absolutely cannot think of anything which would be more fun than racing a Golf GTi round Woolworths.George Carey has the bare-faced effrontery to claim that the recent spate of rioting is because of 'social deprivation'. His sentiments, inevitably, are echoed by various beardies who have been invited to wax lyrical on Newsnight in recent weeks.But ram-raiding has as much to do with social deprivation as pork pie. What it does have a lot to do with is risk.I would steal apples because if I was caught, and the chances were slim, the worst I could expect was a pair of boxed ears. And I reckoned that the thrill of nicking a Granny Smith easily outweighed the possible consequences.The youths of Newcastle drive Range Rovers into electrical wholesalers because if they get caught, and again the chances are slim when you remember Plod spends most of his time and manpower trying to catch you and me speeding, the worst they can expect is some magistrate applying a metaphorical blackboard rubber to their knuckles.However, I am not prepared to leave it at that.Even if the police did begin to understand that speeding is not the most heinous crime and that they are wasting precious resources trying to stamp it out, they still would not be able to patrol every shop, in every town, every night.And anyway, they've let the youths get away with it for too long. When, as a child, I was told to stop doing something I'd been doing for ages, I'd have a tantrum; that was the way in the 1960s. Tell them to stop ram-raiding and there'd be a riot.So how do we tackle it? Well, we have to ask ourselves what differentiates those who steal cars on a Saturday night with those who don't.We have to ask ourselves, also, why scrumping is the preserve of pre-pubescent schoolboys who stop doing it when they get older?Why don't I nick a car tonight and do some handbrake turns outside the pub? Why don't you hot-wire your neighbour's Cavalier and go for a spin in Currys at the weekend? Why doesn't George Carey nick fruit any more?We don't do these things because we are intelligent. We understand about the notion of ownership and we can see that if we steal and destroy things, insurance premiums will rise, pushing up the cost of living and thus increasing the chances of a Labour victory in the next election.Those who do indulge in ram-raiding and hotting handbrake turnery of a Saturday night are incapable of logical thought like us because they are stupid.And how do you stamp out stupidity? Simple; you don't allow dim people to breed.What I propose is that at the age of sixteen, everyone has to take a simple IQ test. If they can't name four cabinet ministers, three American rivers and two characters from Cannery Row, then it's vasectomy time.For sure, we won't reap the benefit for a number of years but eventually, when Britain is freed from the shackles of having to support a whole bunch of stupid people, ram-raiding will cease to be. So too will the Church and British Rail.Carey and his mates at the DSS believe in giving these kids what they want. They say that if a child won't stop nicking cars, he must be given a car and the opportunity to race it at weekends.Yeah well, I want a boat in the South of France, a flat in Paris, a house in California and while you're at it George, a jet.

An Able FordYou will never have stayed at the Prince de Galles hotel on Avenue George V in Paris because it is too upmarket, but I was there last weekend, and so was Brigitte Nielson, and yes, they really are as big as they are in the photographs in Hello.Can it really have been a coincidence that the three films available to guests on the pay-as-you-watch video channel were Tango and Cash, Rocksy IV and Cobra? I think not.Over the course of the weekend we ate in two restaurants that you will not have been to because they are far too expensive and we saw England absolutely stuff the French at a game called Rugby.But all this is by the by because the best bit is that we drove to and from Paris in the most coveted car sold in Britain.It was not, however, a Ferrari or a Lamborghini, as you might imagine, and nor did a flying 'B' embellish the radiator grille. And no, it was not an Audi S2, which as you all should know, is the best car in Britain.I am talking about the Ford Sierra Sapphire 2.0i Ghia, complete with air conditioning and compact disc player.Of course, all of us want a Ferrari 348 in the same way that all of us want a million in the bank, a mansion in the country and a nymphomaniac in one of its bedrooms. But, not to put too fine a point on it, none of us will ever achieve even one of the above. We can only strive for what is achievable. That which is not is a fantasy. Thus, a 348 is a fantasy while a Sierra Ghia is a goal.If you are a divisional sales manager for one of the major food manufacturers and each day you ply the motorways in your Sierra GL, you can dream all you like about owning a Ferrari, but it will not happen. And nor will you get home that night to find your wife has been transmogrified into a salivating teenage sex machine.You can, however, strive for the Sierra Ghia because you know that if you could only find a supermarket manager who would return your calls, you'd meet the targets, get the promotion and thus, get the Ghia. It's a hell of a depressing way to go through life, I know, but that doesn't stop thousands of people from doing it.And as there are more people out there driving humdrum Fords than anything else, there are, logically enough, more people out there striving, day in and day out, to make it to Ghia status than there are people striving to get a Volkswagen Corrado or a Mercedes.Now, those of you with cars from outside the Ford stable will, by now, be howling with derisive laughter at the small-minded nature of our reppy brethren. You will dismiss the notion of a Sierra Ghia with a casual wave of the hand as you seek to explain that your Corrado will out-corner and out-perform any jumped-up sample-transporter.Indeed it will, but then the ventilation in your Corrado is not that brilliant is it? And when you put a biro on the front seat, it always slips down onto the floor behind, doesn't it? And there aren't that many places in the cabin where you can store maps and chocolates and cans of Coke and fags and so on, are there?You see, with a Corrado as with all other performance cars, only three things matter: How much does it cost? How fast does it go? Can I pull birds in it?But repping requires a specialised tool. Over the course of my weekend, I drove the Ford for more than 500 miles and it did not irritate me once. I have never, and I mean never, encountered a better heater, and the driving position is even more perfect than lovely Brigitte's bits.Now sure, the rev counter should be red-lined at 3000 rpm and if you attempt a corner at anything like breakneck speed, you will probably crash and break your neck. But handling is of no concern to the man whose boot is filled with precious samples.Go round a corner too fast in a car that must double-up as your office and your cassettes will fly off the dash, your briefcase will fall over and your can of Coke will tip up, spilling its contents all over your polyester suit. Your wife will then be cross with you, reducing still further the chances of her becoming some kind of Lolita.Same goes for performance. On the rare occasions when you take your Corrado out of town, sure, give it some wellie, but if you drive for five hours a day, five days a week, and you're always giving your car some stick, you run the hugest chance of losing your licence or crashing so often that whatever chance you may have had of promotion evaporates, along with the chance of your Ford Sierra Sapphire 2.0i Ghia.You can, of course, take a colleague out to lunch in your Corrado, but with the Sierra you can take two of his friends as well.And though it is of no concern to our friend in the suit-of-man-made-fibres, the Sierra is easy to service, easy to mend, cheap to operate and, if rumour is right, pretty reliable as well.Now don't think the leopard has changed his spots and that all of a sudden I'm about to claim Ford makes the best cars in the world, because of course it doesn't Audi does but I believe that we performance car fans ought to remember that the average car is made up of some 15,000 parts and that the chassis is only a few of them.On an RS2000, it is probably the most important bit, but on a Sierra Ghia it is less crucial than the upholstery. If you were told you had to drive for 25 hours a week, your major concern, above all else, would be ease of operation.Stack the Sierra Ghia against any of its rivals in a Performance Car group test and it would lose, hands down. But in the real world, it should be, and is, a winner.So would I ever think about running one? You have got to be joking. 'Hey bird, do you want to come for a play with the heater in my Sierra?' does not sound quite so endearing as 'Hey bird, ever been up a back street at a hundred and forty?'Does it.

Train StrainEach Wednesday, I have to make a 120-mile journey from Nairobi, South London to Bombay, near Birmingham.If I leave at 7 a.m., I am onto the M40 before the London rush hour begins and then I arrive in Birmingham ten minutes after its rush hour has died down.En route, I can ring people up on a new device I have just bought called a mobile telephone, I can mount huge excavation projects in one or both of my nostrils and I can listen to the radio, or if Greening and Nicholas are on one of their left-wing crusades, play a compact disc instead. It's all very civilised.If I stick to this schedule I never encounter anything which could be described as a jam but even if I don't there are only three places where things get sticky and, even if they're at their most glutinous, I only need add twenty minutes to my ETA.However, like the good citizen I tend not to be, I have taken of late to dispensing with the motor car and using public transport instead. Thus when the token veg-head at a dinner party begins to harangue me for promoting death, I can explain that I do my bit for congestion and pollution. Then we all play party games, seeing who can get the fork, which I have inserted into her eye, out again.But here's the rub. In the last fourteen weeks, British Rail has failed to get me from London to Birmingham, or back again, on anything even approaching time. Yesterday, I'll admit, it was only six minutes late but the week before I was stationary for one hour outside Coventry and consequently arrived at the terminus a staggering 94 minutes behind schedule.A man kept coming on the public address system, presumably to explain why the train was not moving, but as he had not mastered the art of speaking English, his message was a trifle garbled.The women who rush up and down the aisles, dispensing salmonella and bashing into your elbows, said they didn't know what was going on and that we should ask the ticket collector, but he was in a terrible temper and explained rather brusquely that it wasn't his fault. Also, his uniform didn't fit.If this was a one-off, caused by a mad Mick with a bit of Semtex, you might put it down to bad luck and be understanding, but it happens with the regularity of a freshly wound metronome.The awful thing is that even if it didn't, even if the train was as punctilious as the Queen's Christmas message, it would still take 40 minutes more than a car to get from my front door to the door of my choosing in Barmyhom.Then there is the cost. Getting to and from Birmingham in a car that costs 15p a mile to run sets you back 36, while if you use public transport there are two 5 taxi bills and British Rail has the bare-faced cheek to charge 44 none of which it spends on cleaners.I smoke, quite a lot, and that means I am wedged, with the most disgusting bunch of old fleggers, into half a carriage where the ashtrays are all missing, the windows are caked in nicotine and if you stand on the carpet for more than a minute, you stick to it.If smoking is going to be allowed, why the hell can't someone pop into the relevant carriage once in a while with some Flash? Same goes for the lavatories, which ought really to have a sign advising passengers that excrement should be ejected in the general direction at least of the small porcelain receptacle without taps.Even if I could afford first class, I would object to sharing my carriage with people in polyester suits shrieking into mobile telephones. And let's face it, the staff are still just as rude and the train is still just as late whether you have an extra tad of leg room or not.I have also noticed that, in first class, I always feel sick whenever the train's speed exceeds 100 mph, which thankfully isn't very often. Mind you, this is better than the 'thrifty' carriages, which shake so much the print in your book blurs and your coffee goes everywhere except down your mouth part.What is required is a class in between first and second (second, apart from being uncomfortable, is also full of mutants). Yesterday, on the way up, a fat girl plonked herself next to me and talked incessantly about retirement homes, thus preventing the massive nose diggery scheme I had planned. On the way back, the man opposite was shamelessly reading the Guardian.A couple of weeks ago, a girl said she was educated at a public school called Abbots Bromley and that she was 29. Yet she claimed not to know any of the thirty 29-year-old ex-Abbots Bromley girls I fired at her. Either she was, in fact, 46 or she did not go to AB at all and she was educated in the state system; like most liars.The class I'm proposing would not be based on ability to pay but on breeding. Smoking would be compulsory because, in my experience, the only people worth talking to get through at least twenty a day, all the sandwiches would have meat in them, polyester would be banned and so would the Guardian. Basically, before being allowed in the carriage concerned, M15 would have to check your background, you'd be tested on certain U and non-U expressions and you'd have to be proposed by me.However, in Major's classless society this is unlikely to get off the ground, which means that those of us wishing to be green will get black as we talk to reds.So why don't I just give up and use the car? Well, the thing is that, for about five miles, the train runs alongside the M1 and even if it's being as asthmatic as ever, it always manages at that moment to be going faster than the traffic.This gives a false impression of speed and efficiency and for a glorious moment you tend to forget that British Rail couldn't get its leg over in a brothel.So here is an appeal. If, on a Wednesday, you are heading North on the M1 just near turn-off 17 and you see a train coming up alongside, please, please, please put your foot down.And make me a very happy man indeed.

Cruising SoundtrackLast night I returned from America with a cricked neck and sunburned feet to find that someone had thoughtfully left a Jaguar XJS for me outside the office.Ordinarily, one has to reverse cars to the main road some 200 yards away but, because of the broken neck, I had to make a 67-point turn in a street that is just two inches wider than the Jaguar is long.This was a nuisance. It was also much, much colder than it had been in Florida. There wasn't enough headroom. The leather seats were like blocks of ice. I knocked my cigarette end out while twirling the wheel. I had jet lag. All in all, the Jaguar XJS, pretty new rear windows or no, was lining up alongside VD in the suitable companion stakes.And as the very raison d'etre of the XJS is comfort, I began to consider the notion of abandoning it and using a taxi.But then, as I finally accomplished the turn, the CD player began, seemingly of its own accord, to fill the cabin with the strains of 'Nimrod', Elgar's most moving excursion to the very furthest-flung corners of jingoism.And, as a result, I stopped likening the XJS to an enema and began instead to think of it in the same breath as lobster thermidor and, er, second helpings.I do not consider myself to be especially musical. You're reading the words of a man who fainted while attempting to learn the flute and who reached grade four in piano, but only after failing grades one, two and three.Yet music is capable of inducing strange mood swings. It can soothe away the aches and strains of a busy day or it can drive me nuts. I even have a compilation tape which I play when I want to get somewhere quickly because all the songs on it, from Bad Company's 'Feel Like Makin' Love' to Bob Seger's 'Long Twin Silver Line', are designed specifically to make me drive much faster than is usual.I have another tape, well I have a lot of other tapes actually, but there's one in particular I play when the day has been especially awful and the traffic is being especially bad and the pavements are full of horrid working-class people queuing up to spit on me as I drive by. They do this a lot these days.This one features such songs as Albinoni's 'Adagio in G' and Pink Floyd's 'Time'. There are those who recommend John Martyn and Leonard Cohen, but these guys take things a bit too far. I mean, they go beyond calming you down; they lower you so low you start to hallucinate about gas ovens and vats of Valium.On the other hand, Katrina and the Waves' 'Walking On Sunshine' or Haircut 100's 'Fantastic Day' prompt a grin bigger than Cheshire. If either is on the radio, I'll even let people out of side turnings. Yet play me anything by Billy Bragg and I'll throw a brick through the Labour Party's nearest HQ. And 'Bat Out Of Hell' makes me dribble.I don't like foreigners at the best of times, but whenever I hear even so much as a snatch of Elgar, the mild dislike becomes a deal more pronounced. And believe you me, the best place to be at such a time is behind the pencil-thin wheel of a Jaguar.If you sort of half close your eyes, you can imagine that deeply sculptured bonnet is the prow of HMS Victory, the nose of a Spitfire, the protruding snub of a Challenger tank.If I find myself listening to Elgar while driving along in, say, a Mercedes, I have to get out and sit on the grass verge until it's finished. When you're in a Mercedes, you can only listen to Strauss or Wagner or something that makes you want to bludgeon your way around the Soviet Union, smashing it into small pieces.You also cannot listen to Elgar when you are driving around in America, because it sounds silly. When you are in America, you absolutely must listen to American music.A cruise down the seventeen-mile drive south of Monterey in a convertible Mustang to the accompaniment of six spotty youths from Manchester banging on about life in a tower block is just plain daft. Even Squeeze, whose tunes are fine on a wet Wednesday in Clapham, are wholly inappropriate. No, you need Don Henley wailing on about 'Boys Of Summer' and the Doobies with 'China Grove'.From time to time, I get to air my views about this and that on Top Gear, the motoring programme, and while all of it is a giant ego trip, the best part as far as I'm concerned is choosing the musical interludes, the dream sequences where a car is seen whizzing hither and thither to the strains of whatever song we happen to feel is suitable.Having explained that the Lamborghini Countach was a fairly terrible car, it seemed right that we should play Bad Company singing the song called 'Bad Company'. Similarly, having decided that the Ferrari 348 is just about the finest car made, Tina Turner was drafted in to give us a 30-second slug of 'Simply The Best'.In the new series that should have begun by now, you will be treated to a seven-minute item about the Ford Mustang. Because I can't think of enough words to fill in for such a long stretch, much of the soundtrack will be down to Andrew Strong and 'Mustang Sally'. Nice of him that; in the same way that it was nice of Prince to do 'Little Red Corvette', and Mark Cohn to do 'Silver Thunderbird'.We will never be stuck when it comes to choosing music for bits about American cars because American singers find them a source of lyrical romance. 'Cruising in my Mustang down the 15 to New Orleans' is always going to be a better line than 'Strugglin' up the A1 to Rotherham in my Maestro'.A few weeks ago, a columnist in a rival magazine argued that one tends to make one's mind up about a car within five seconds of getting into it. This is almost certainly the case, but what he didn't say is that whether you like the car or not is dependent on the music that happens to be playing at the time.

BigSo, do the needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few or is it the other way around? Certainly, the needs of people who are disabled, be it through a physical or mental malady, outweigh the needs of those who are able-bodied.It may cost a business a thousand quid or more to install lavatories big enough to take wheelchairs, but this is something that must be done. If I was disabled and found a shop, hotel or restaurant which did not provide such a facility, I would crap on the floor. On purpose.However, I am unable to think of any other minority group whose needs should be allowed to inconvenience the majority.Thus, I have no sympathy whatsoever with these so-called action groups that hang around outside embassies and council offices, waving placards and getting their beards wet.I do not understand why my poll tax bill in Fulham should be nearly 500 a year when I just know that a huge chunk of that will be spent on weirdos. Like most people, I want my bin emptying, the street lighting on, the schools open and the police doing some arresting. And that's about it.What we have instead is pot-holed roads, council officials who won't answer the telephone, rampant truancy and a police force which can never get to the scene of a crime because of all the dog turds on the pavement. Oh and some immensely wealthy Cypriot lesbians.This is absurd. If you happen to be a homosexualist Cypriot, you cannot expect everyone in the whole borough to finance your perversion. The council should let us decide whether we want to spend our money on gay Eastern Mediterranean types or not. Me, I prefer beer.I like to smoke while eating, but if I am at a table peopled entirely by non-smokers, I will try to limit any cigarettery to periods when food is not in evidence.So why then do vegetarians expect demand even special attention whenever I have them round for dinner? If I am prepared to give up smoking for them, they should damn well be prepared to eat cow for me. It's all give and take in this world and, if you're in a minority, you should bloody well do the giving.Now, against this sort of a background, I was approached the other day by a chap from something called the Tall People's Club of Great Britain who would like me to become a member.For two reasons, alarm bells immediately began to sound. First, this is a club and clubs are for the insecure who thrive on the company of the like-minded and like-bearded.Down at the local golf club, they all give one another idiotic names and abbreviate everything. And they all treat the chairman with some kind of divine reverence, forgetting that he only got the job because (a) he has the woolliest pully and (b) he'd been on the committee for longest. The same goes for the Freemasons. And the Guild of Motoring Writers. And the infernal Round Table.Secondly, the alarm bells were ringing because this whole 'tall' thing smacked of minority interest behaviour. We've had the race relations board to tackle racism and the equal opportunities commission to bop sexism on the head. I was fearful I was being lured into something which would set its stall out to fight something that doesn't even exist heightism.Yes, I'm 6 ft 5 in but some of my best friends are midgets. My girlfriend, for instance, is just one inch tall.Neither of us has ever been abused, physically or verbally, because of our height and neither of us has ever found it to be a particular problem. What, then, if there is no such thing as heightism, is the point of a Tall Person's Club?Maybe we'll all get together once in a while and call one another Lofty or other amusing names. Maybe it would be a chance to meet tall members of the opposite sex.But no. Apparently, the idea is to lobby various manufacturers, convincing them that they must start taking us into consideration. Or else.The club wants taller door openings. But I was brought up in a seventeenth-century farmhouse and it never bothered me. The club wants higher kitchen units. Why, for Christ's sake? Find a sink that comes above your knees and the last excuse you have for not doing the washing up has gone.And, needless to say, the club wants more space in cars. Well, at 6 ft 5 in, I'm just about at the very edge of reasonableness and yet the only car I absolutely cannot drive is a Fiat X19. Again, no bad thing.Sure, in an F40, my head is on the roof and, in a Renault 25, my knees have to adopt a position which is most unladylike, but not at all unreasonable for a man. Come to think of it, not unreasonable for a woman either.What I'm trying to say is that of the 750 cars on sale in Britain today, all will accommodate someone my size. Indeed, most will readily accommodate those of an even taller disposition. I even saw Herman Munster in a Mercedes 190 the other day.Now, fair enough, some people are more than 7 ft tall and I would imagine that finding a car when you're that big is just about impossible.And I'm afraid that it will stay just about impossible because car manufacturers simply cannot be expected to organise an interior for a seven-footer.Or, if they did, can you imagine the problems of fitting the necessary equipment to make the same interior suitable for someone like my girlfriend, who, as I said, is just an inch tall.If you are born long and freaky, then by all means join a club but don't expect it to answer your prayers for an easier life. Because it most certainly won't.Far better, in the current environment, to move to Fulham where the council will give you a specially converted Cadillac limousine. Or two, if you have a predilection for members of the same genital group.

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