That brings a smile to my face just imagining clunkers. I am aware of a few clunkers or bangers or beater vehicles. As it pertains to old ratty vehicles which are on their last legs, usually rattling as they go down the road if they can even get on the road. Those vehicles may not be as slick and smooth as the newer ones of today or as innovative and magnificent as they once were, they have history.
Something you can get out of an old clunker that new ones do not have beside history is prestige and value. I know it may not seem like it. Frequently these vehicles are called old beater vehicles or bangers meaning that they are banged up with time and great to putter around the community.
There is a certain mystic about those old “classics.” Yes, another name for them. They offer us a glimpse into history and into our past. There is a charm about them. They bring us to a foregone era. One in which times were simpler.

Let’s rewind back to 1940’s when this vehicle was first built. This truck is humming down a back country road with your grandfather and his honey bunch, your grandma, with the windows down perhaps accompanied by children in the back or just the two of them with a picnic basket. They are listening to the birds chirping and the crunch of gravel beneath the vehicle’s tires. They are heading to that old fishing hole where everyone goes to have a fun time.
Now fast forward to today. There is that old clunker sitting out there in the field being unloved as it once was. That truck has history. It saw WWII, the Great Smokey Mountain National Park being dedicated, Ted Wiliams end the 1941 season with a batting average over 0.400, the 1943 race riots in Harlem and Detroit, the first UN meeting and computer (ENAL) in 1946, and 1949 NATO being created as well as Captain James Gallagher completes the first nonstop flight around the world.
You decide that you are going to get this babe running so that you can give your grandpa a ride in his old truck once again. Walking around the vehicle you notice that there is no radio and a/c. You are going to have to put new tires on it and tear the motor apart. You have never worked on a stick shift. You mean to tell me that he drove a standard. This is going to be a challenging and an exciting adventure.
The vehicle in the picture is not mine. It was sold by Classic Cars.com You can go here to purchase an older classic.
https://weeklyprompts.com/2024/08/28/weekly-prompts-wednesday-challenge-clunkers/


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