
My fondest memories of childhood were the car trips my parents
took us on during our vacations.
I remember how we would stuff the
dickey with all our bags and leave the roof carrier for the second spare wheel,
an empty jerry-can for fuel and one filled with water — just in case it
got too hot for the car.
I particularly remember how I’d fight
with my brothers about whose turn it was this time, to sit in front between
mummy and daddy.
Our 1.1 litre Fiat Premier Padmini was wonderful
because of what it could do and where it could go and because it never stopped
working. It still holds a special place in my heart, even considering it was
painted in the most peculiar shade of a matt khaki-green that has since then,
fortunately, gone out of fashion.
I learnt to drive in a Fiat and
even won my first race in a Fiat. And this generation will never know the joys
of a rear wheel drive car — especially driving in mud and
slush.
Now I’m not exactly old and wrinkled — this was
just 20 something years ago but I already feel the nostalgia of the good old
days come racing in. I still remember how my mum was often the only woman driver
on the road, how we drove in cars with bench seats in front that made you slid
from side to side and of a time when seatbelts were unheard off!
A
time when the gear stick was attached somewhere on the steering wheel column
and if you wanted to use the handbrake you had to bend down in a peculiar
yoga-like asana and then pull real hard. If you tried this while you were
driving you’d find yourself staring at an oddly placed shelf right between
the dashboard and the floor instead of the road ahead.
I remember
the time when the Bombay-Pune highway was like an expressway — mostly
deserted with only the occasional truck or car and anyone could drive the 120
kilometres in under two-and-a-half hours.
A time when car tyres
looked like cycle tyres, slim and without much grip made from nylon, cross-plays
— when radial tyres were either unavailable or unheard off. Of the time
one had to regularly check the liquid levels under the hood and leave home at
least five or 10 minutes ahead of time — just in case the car would need
some time to crank-up.
And of the time when just owning a car was
considered a status symbol — considering you had to wait anywhere between
five and twenty years to get one.
I’m talking about a time when
if you drove with tubeless tyres you were either slightly soft in your head or
your ‘tyrewalla’ was a crook, when dynamos, jets and carburettors
were not some weapons of mass destruction that the Allies are looking for and of
a time when if you poured coloured water — especially a murky green
— into your radiator you’d be sure to have a dead engine by morning.
We’re a liberated lot now, don’t you think. You can
shop for your car like you’d shop for your everyday jewellery — the
choice is endless and there’s something for every one. All you need is
your credit card but better still get someone else to help you pay for it!
You know what you’re looking for if you’re well
informed. Something that’s affordable, practical, good-looking with good
value for money. One that won’t take much of your time fussing over and
one that you will use till you’re sick and tired of it.
A car
you’re sure you will either sell or exchange or give away some time later,
for something bigger, more glamorous, more comfortable, more functional, more
funky, with groovy gadgets... and naturally more expensive!’’
— Navaz
Sandhu, National Champion Rally Driver
Photograph: Prabhas
Roy
Street Smart