I am glad I opened this e-mail. Many, many years ago I was contacted about
the Portland (and other West Coast locations) street-cars and troley-busses
imports. The design and many components are all of Czechoslovakian, and
later Czech Republic, origing. Being of Czech descent and knowledgeable
about that industry, I were to play some role in those dealings. The
opposite coast location and being busy with my projects, I soon stopped to
follow the dealings.

The design is Czech, and I enjoyed the cars when visiting Portland.
Concerning metric, I would not have stepped inside the cars had they been
designed by Czechs in inches; a disaster would be imminent. (Anyone who
believes that AirBus planes (the components designed in Europe) are in
inches has no idea how often would those plane been falling due to design,
manufacturing and assembly errors). The expanded drawing show also the
Czech drafting practice which has generally been up-to-date with ISO.

Skoda is the name of the present exporter but the name has changed over the
decades. An armament and heavy industrial equipment incl. large locomotives
manufacturer for some 150 years, Skoda acquired the car and truck
company Laurin & Clement a century ago and then continued production under
the Skoda mark. But the car factory has not been a part of the Skoda
Concern since it was separated at the nationalization of all industries
during the communistic regime after VW2.

With the fall of communism, the car factory was bought by VW and the Skodas
became derivatives of certain VW models. Anyone following Tour de France
cannot escape the Skoda cars there.

The original Skoda Hdqrts and factories had been in the town of Plzen, west
of Prague. The town is better known for its outstanding Pilsen Urquell
beer, and in America, for Patton's army reaching that town a few weeks
before the end of VW2. The army could not continue the 60 km east to
liberate Prague because of the Yalta agreement. Lucky U.S. soldiers -
spending the last few days of war battling Pilsen Urquell and
courting Bohemian girls. (Prague had to wait for the Russian army; it
arrived 2 days after WW2 officially ended.)

I thought you might be interested. The Czech street cars are apparently
popular - I was surprises to encounter them even in Australia.
Stan J.


On Sat, Nov 12, 2011 at 7:04 PM, Carleton MacDonald
<[email protected]>wrote:

>  United Streetcar is a Portland, Oregon company that manufactures two
> models of streetcars.****
>
> ** **
>
> www.unitedstreetcar.com****
>
> ** **
>
> Click on Products, then expand the drawing, and you will be pleased.****
>
> ** **
>
> Carleton****
>

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