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THE WANT FOR MORE
Motoring World
|September 2025
A morning with the SS80 and BE 6 shows how much we've gained — and what we've quietly lost

I've never really been a classic-car guy. I can respect them, but I don’t melt at the sight of chrome bumpers or wooden steering wheels. What I do appreciate, though, is the ingenuity that crank-started mobility in the first place. Think about it, the first cars in the late 1800s weren’t glamorous machines. They were noisy, unreliable, and in many cases, slower than the horse they were meant to replace. But they offered something no animal could — independence. No feeding, no stabling, no manure to shovel. Just crank it, curse at it, and if you were lucky, it moved.


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