How Tea And Biscuits Killed The British Car Industry!

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Number 27

Number 27

Жыл бұрын

Why are the no British owned car makers? The British car industry was once the greatest in the world with legendary cars like the E-Type, Mini and Range Rover, but in the 60s and 70s British cars got a reputation for being unreliable and slow. Sales fell and a Government merger and nationalisation failed to make British Leyland viable. This video explores what happened to glorious British manufacturers like Bentley, Rolls Royce, Rover, Morris, Land Rover, Lotus and Jaguar. Was it jus the fault of management and the Unions, or was there more to it..?

Пікірлер: 3 100
@patrickyorke3028
@patrickyorke3028 Жыл бұрын
2004 sale to BMW?
@Number27
@Number27 Жыл бұрын
1994, was a slip of the tongue
@Normanroberts
@Normanroberts Жыл бұрын
They sold an already dead man!
@danjones6279
@danjones6279 Жыл бұрын
I noticed this, BL sold to BA in 1988, and then 6y later... in 2004?? Oh Jack 😂
@geoffreycodnett6570
@geoffreycodnett6570 Жыл бұрын
Ford Halewood, supported by government but Longbridge/ Cowley not?
@samking4179
@samking4179 Жыл бұрын
1994 ... and overall BMW lost $3 billion from the decision.
@Pstaines439
@Pstaines439 Жыл бұрын
Having worked in the uk automotive industry (bikes and cars) in the 90s, having come from New Zealand I was astounded by the poor management of staff in the uk. Workers were often treated like shit, very much a reflection of the English class structure. Two examples; a boss telling me off for walking too slowly across the car park to work, even though I wasn't late to work. Another boss yelling at me for receiving a private email to my work address, saying staff had all been told not to, then admitting to other managers that he hadn't done that, and of course me never getting an apology. Just trivial muscle flexing. It put me off working in the UK.
@rogersmith8339
@rogersmith8339 Жыл бұрын
A very good observation, you could always tell which companies had the worst management by how strong they union was.
@shadeburst
@shadeburst Жыл бұрын
Management were invariably treated like s**t by the workers. It was entirely mutual.
@CaptHollister
@CaptHollister Жыл бұрын
I worked on an IT project in the UK in the early 90s and had the same observation. Coming from a basically classless society (Canada), it was an eye-opener to see how poorly the lowest people on the totem pole were treated.
@DrakeN-ow1im
@DrakeN-ow1im Жыл бұрын
@@shadeburst Indeed, but the justifications can be found in the hands which held the reins - the management, not the workers. "Give a dog a bad name..." Shit treatment of a workforce results in shit product and the distain with which many major employers regard their employees is despicable.
@skillbopster
@skillbopster Жыл бұрын
That class structure is gone and replaced with the liberal professional class.
@michaelarchangel1163
@michaelarchangel1163 Жыл бұрын
I'll say one nice thing about the British car industry - the British motorcycle industry was worse.
@solsol1624
@solsol1624 Жыл бұрын
That was my first thought too. I remember when I used to get MCN back in late seventies early eighties, there was something about the soap opera that was Triumph every week it seemed.
@paullacey2999
@paullacey2999 Жыл бұрын
Sadly BSA,Triumph,Royal Enfield,AJS are all built elsewhere nowadays..Truly Sad..
@darthninja1
@darthninja1 Жыл бұрын
Triumph? They have brought production back to the UK due to soaring demand. Norton have restarted bike manufacture in the UK.
@paullacey2999
@paullacey2999 Жыл бұрын
@@darthninja1 No the Rocket is the only Triumph made in the UK,the rest come from other parts of the world.
@solsol1624
@solsol1624 Жыл бұрын
@@darthninja1 I was posting about what happened 40 odd years ago
@johnvaleanbaily246
@johnvaleanbaily246 Жыл бұрын
I live in Canada. In the early 80's I ran an import company. I contacted the Range Rover management to discuss importing the Range Rover into N. America. I received a terse reply saying studies had shown there was no market possibilities in N. America and Range Rover had no plans to export to N. America... Good move Range Rover.
@spinyslasher6586
@spinyslasher6586 Жыл бұрын
"Handmade in Britain means the doors will come off." - Jeremy Clarkson.
@T16MGJ
@T16MGJ Жыл бұрын
With a well known car channel spannerman's assist with his angle grinder on the door hinges. FACT! They did come off too. His angle grinder was made in the UK though.
@thestuff1014
@thestuff1014 Жыл бұрын
I think this applies to the whole country. Great Britain is stuck in the past. I am Polish and when I came to this country 24 years ago. The development of this country used to impress me, but over time it impressed me less and less. Today I am coming to Poland to visit my family and I have the impression that my country is developing extremely fast compared to the UK. New highways, new shopping centers, new housing estates. Everything to measure the current times, modern - meeting current standards. Meanwhile, I haven't noticed any big changes in the UK. The old supermarkets as they were 20 years ago are still the same. The same gas stations outdated and not renovated for years. Stantarts of residential houses straight from the Victorian era. I have the impression that the UK, instead of developing, is slowly collapsing. This country is turning into a Victorian open-air museum.
@jcjko5504
@jcjko5504 Жыл бұрын
Old, tired, general folks getting poor, elite keep to hold on to the old money and thinking.
@foppo100
@foppo100 Жыл бұрын
I came to the UK more than 50 years ago.from the Netherlands.We are at a standstill in the UK.Any sensible young person get out whilst you can.
@T16MGJ
@T16MGJ Жыл бұрын
There has been a massive change in the British people over the past few decades. Now well past my 80th birthday, those many changes seen have saddened me There was a time when just about everybody pulled their weight fully and both they and the Nation benefitted. My Polish and Afro-Carribean friends of thirty years mentioned ages ago that they had seen the changes and decline. They believe that uncontrolled immigration has in fact worsened the overall situation. They are right of course. The nation should have been far more selective in who they allow in. Nothing to do with race as many "activists" want the rest of us to believe, but those who would clearly benefit this Nation with their skills and attitudes would be welcome. Not now. The wide-open door policy clearly allows the good, the bad and the downright harmful to the Nation free access at huge cost to the taxpayers under so called freedom of movement. Nothing to do with the EU IN-OUT referendum as many would have us believe. This was ongoing long before June 2016. That British "Right Stuff" quality which enabled this nation to overcome adversity, survive and thrive has been much depleted in recent decades. Many see our ongoing decline as both assured and deserved. Only in the land of the increasingly self-inflicted. There are now FOUR Chinese built MGs down my street. EVs or hybrids. Neighbours speak favourably of them. Others have reasons to never buy Chinese product. They are usually the ones who have a VW, BMW or other German stuff in their garages. My response. Those German cars were almost certainly built by the grand and great grand children of the German folks who tried to eliminate me and my family in London's East End back in the 1940s. Funny old game folks and cars. I recently drove my friend's good-looking BMW 4-Series coupe. It was OK but I was not impressed. In fact it was nowhere near as a nice a place to be and drive as my now old MG ZEDS. I was pleased to be reminded of this when I got back into my ZT. His previous Stuttgart product cost more to repair than I paid for my MG ZS 120 new back in 2003. There was a time when he reminded me at every opportunity. "You cannot beat German engineering and reliability John" He never does that now. For good reasons. Thirteen thousand of them.
@G96Saber
@G96Saber Жыл бұрын
That's because Poland began from such a low level of development it can easily modernise. Countries like Britain have the issue of replacing old infastructure with new.
@Th3_Gael
@Th3_Gael Жыл бұрын
@@G96Saber indeed, a much slower and costlier endeavour
@robtt997
@robtt997 Жыл бұрын
Production manager for Dunlop told me a few years ago that when a Japanese company were given a tour of their facilities they were appalled to find the machines for making the tyres pre dated WW2 . They were totally worn out and the tyres produced were not true and round ! The Japanese still purchased Dunlop and completely modernised the facilities. I asked the manager where the not quite round tyres went . Guess where ? British Leyland . They took any old rubbish as long as it was super cheap . So there was never any pressure at the time for Dunlop to modernise
@mikethespike7579
@mikethespike7579 Жыл бұрын
I can relate to your comment. I worked in a factory in the 1970s where we had three lathes. The newest one was a 1939 model - it had the year stamped on a plate - and the guys working on them were proud of their age as if it was evidence of British machine tool quality. Their age showed as well, it took a lot of skill to get any precision out of these machines. I later moved to Germany to work there and there wasn't a machine in the workshop older than 5 years. I dared not tell the Germans what we Brits used in our workshops for fear of embarrassing myself.
@CFITOMAHAWK
@CFITOMAHAWK Жыл бұрын
@@mikethespike7579 And i bet the managers were making a lot of money instead of investing in modernizing the company.
@mikethespike7579
@mikethespike7579 Жыл бұрын
@@CFITOMAHAWK Oh, I could till you a few stories related to the behaviour management during my time working in British industry that made me understand the value of unions, even militant ones.
@T16MGJ
@T16MGJ Жыл бұрын
Many moons ago, a Japanese friend came to the UK on a visit, Built like a Sumo wrestler, the suspension in my MG nearly maxed out when I picked him up. He had a factory tour of the admirable Soichiro Honda's Complex. He noted some of the machine tools there were manufactured in the UK's Black Country. Back in the day, some of the now well-known Japanese Motor Cycle manufacturers started making nut and bolt copies of British Motor Cycles like my BSA Super Rocket and others. Today, you can still buy a new Royal Enfield Motor Cycle, formerly arms manufacturer based in Redditch UK. Made in the Indian Sub-Continent now. Also modern day versions of the BSA Gold Star which do not look very Gold Star like to my old minces. Saw one parked in my local supermarket car park. If I were younger and fitter, I'd be very tempted to ride again.
@glen1555
@glen1555 Жыл бұрын
In one of the machine shops were I worked in the 1970s were machines with registration plates attached that said "property of the Ministry of Aviation Supply" they were given to the company during WW2 when it was a shadow factory making parts for Spitfires and the like. Also there was one machine which had a plate that had the manufacturers name and address of "Adolf Hitler Strasse, Berlin", so that would have been bought before 1939 and still in use in 1974
@AllenManor
@AllenManor Жыл бұрын
I worked in the UK for about a year in the late 1990s. The experience I had as a North American working for a British company was fine but this is what I remember all these years later: 1. The office (almost literally) shut-down around 2:00 pm for a tea break. As a non-tea-drinker, I observed this daily ritual with no small amount of amazement. Every day a different employee was designated to make the tea and the rest of the staff would socialize during the 15 minutes the tea was prepared. When the employee returned with a tray of cups of hot tea and milk/sugar, there was always an exclamation of genuine delight from the waiting staff, like they were bringing in a birthday cake. Then the tea-drinking and socializing commenced. This entire process was usually 30-40 minutes and while enjoyable, totally ended whatever momentum had been going on in the office. From 3-5 pm, production slowed noticeably. 2. British workers were punctual at arriving and leaving the office. At 5 pm, the office was completely empty regardless of deadlines. I never saw any midnight oil being burned in that office. 3. A class system was definitely in place, based largely on where you were from, what your accent was, and where you went to school. As a North American I was kind of unaffected by it but it was very clear that if you didn't speak right/have the right background, you would only go so far in the company and society in general. 4. There were several staff members who had very little to do. I am not saying they were lazy -- the work just wasn't there. So they came in ready to work but there was little to do. Nevertheless, the management seemed to want to avoid the awkwardness and bad feeling of firing them so they never did. This company no longer exists. If that company was representative of the typical British company, then I am amazed that anything gets done in the UK at all.
@AllenManor
@AllenManor Жыл бұрын
@@mybrotherkeeper1484 I agree, brother!
@edeledeledel5490
@edeledeledel5490 Жыл бұрын
@@mybrotherkeeper1484 Why should your little imaginary friend have anything to do with it?
@edeledeledel5490
@edeledeledel5490 Жыл бұрын
@@AllenManor Please don't encourage people who are suffering from mental illness
@AllenManor
@AllenManor Жыл бұрын
@@edeledeledel5490 How do you know this person is suffering from mental illness?
@edeledeledel5490
@edeledeledel5490 Жыл бұрын
@@AllenManor Belief in god is evidence enough for me to deduce that they are mentally incapacitated in some way.
@foxpop5969
@foxpop5969 Жыл бұрын
in the 80's, I remember taking my 10 yr old mud brown Morris 1100 to the mechanics with an electrical problem. He had a look over the circuits, trying to find the fault. "What about the fuse box in the boot", I asked. "Could that be the problem?" "What fuse box? There's no fuse box in the boot!" So I took him around and pointed to the brown-painted box at the back of the boot. "That one", I said. He grabbed a screwdriver and started to prise the box away from the surface and then I spotted it on the underside; "Players Please" Not a fusebox but a ten-pack of cigs (there were still two inside it). Someone left them in the boot and the next guy just spray-painted over them!
@kingkobra1956
@kingkobra1956 Жыл бұрын
😂😂😂
@stonehobson2487
@stonehobson2487 Жыл бұрын
Friggin' hilarious !!
@ishamkader2696
@ishamkader2696 Жыл бұрын
🤣🤡😂
@robertmitchell8630
@robertmitchell8630 Жыл бұрын
My uncle had a 70's Morris took us to elementary School Ran well had it for over thirty years
@onastick2411
@onastick2411 Жыл бұрын
I've heard that story a few time, the car differs and the time, but never the manufacturer. Allegro wasn't it?
@jontheodore8450
@jontheodore8450 Жыл бұрын
When I worked at Ford we were all told the story of the Austin Mini and how Ford could not understand how Austin could market the car at such a cheap price. Ford brought one took it back to their Headquarters were they striped the car completely and priced every part down to nuts and bolts at manufacturers prices to their surprise they worked out Austin were selling every Mini at around a £250.00 loss per car, which might explain the downfall of the Mini
@garethonthetube
@garethonthetube Жыл бұрын
That's one of the reasons Ford took so long to get a small car to market. They finally worked out how to make a profit and released the Fiesta.
@shadeburst
@shadeburst Жыл бұрын
VW strategy is to sell the car at a loss and clean up bigly on spares.
@krisholmgren8883
@krisholmgren8883 Жыл бұрын
@@garethonthetube curiously, I own a running and driving 1980 Fiesta in the USA! Not many left....LOVE that little thing!
@MrOiram46
@MrOiram46 Жыл бұрын
@@garethonthetube idk, those old Ford T models are pretty small
@andrew_koala2974
@andrew_koala2974 Жыл бұрын
Jon Theodie FORD not Ford Ford was the man who started the FORD MOTOR CORPORATION Another Ford with the given name of Gerald became a President of The UNITED STATES OF AMERICA Inc. You have failed to educate yourself and learn that ALL CORPORATE names are in the ALL CAPS iteration. You were successfully programmed to be a ZOMBIE and not pay attention to detail ZOMBIES have eyes but cannot see - ears and cannot hear. Study where the word CORPORATION comes from. Undertake extensive reading program to better educate yourself. You can educate yourself at minimum cost. You can do it when you are not mentally lazy. Start paying attention to detail.
@Bowl_of_roses
@Bowl_of_roses Жыл бұрын
Running car companies with accountants (e.g. Lord Stokes) rather than engineers was bound to fail. It would be interesting to look at decline of US car industry too.
@andrewpreston4127
@andrewpreston4127 Жыл бұрын
The original Mini was an engineering and design marvel. I don't recall that Lord Stokes was an accountant, I thought he was a marketing/sales guy. Famously, Ford are said to have pulled a Mini apart, worked out the Bill Of Materials, and concluded that Austin/Morris/BL lost money on every Mini they sold. So they ( Ford ) continued on selling cars with cart springs on the back, that made a profit.
@jamesstuart3346
@jamesstuart3346 Жыл бұрын
US story is pretty much the same: too many brands, bean counters running the show. Only difference is government did not make things worse
@brambram6147
@brambram6147 Жыл бұрын
Don't know, bmw is doing pretty good
@steverock4329
@steverock4329 Жыл бұрын
Running ANY company with accountants would be a disaster!
@vikrammgokhale
@vikrammgokhale Жыл бұрын
@@jamesstuart3346 you are absolutely spot-on. Lack of focus on engineering (making money by cutting-down on costly bits) - led to the collapse of once-well-known brands like Cadillac
@gs547
@gs547 Жыл бұрын
Visited UK in the 1970s. I experienced bad employee attitudes. Our flight was delayed. The bus driver, who was supposed to pick us up, walked off work without telling his office at the end of his work day. Our tour leader had faxed the bus company from New York to forewarn them of our delay, but we were left out to dry. The bus company did not know the driver was MIA, so they just kept telling us that our bus would arrive sometime soon. After waiting at Heathrow for over 2 hours, our tour leader had to call another bus company to pick us up.
@veryoldnavy2186
@veryoldnavy2186 Жыл бұрын
What went wrong? Well, let's see. Back in the 1970's I was a bit of an odd duck among my friends. While they were buying Mustangs, Cameros, and various and sundry other muscle cars I was completely enamored with English roadsters. My first Spitfire was used and was a real dog. Remember, that at that time, Triumph's sales slogan for the type was, "You always remember your first Spitfire." I will certainly always remember mine. Especially the way it looked, all torn down to pieces parts on the floor of my garage as I rebuilt the engine, transmission, and of course the electrical system. But, hey, it was used, so, I thought, I must have simply inherited someone else's problem. Right? Well, after a couple of years, I dumped it and picked up an MGB. That car was the epitome of reliability. No matter what you did, that car could be relied upon to leave you stranded on the side of the road. So, after a couple years of spending more time under the "Bonnet" than behind the wheel, I dumped it and bought a brand-new Spitfire. It was sexy, seductive, and promised great performance, and it delivered on all of that. It was, indeed, sexy, seductive, and had great performance, both days of the week it was running. Within two weeks of driving it off the showroom floor it had so many problems that I finally took it to a Virginia vehicle inspection station and paid to have it run through the inspections. It failed miserably. Only with the failed inspection in hand could I get the dealer to finally admit that there was an issue with the vehicle and make the necessary repairs sufficient to license the thing as safe to drive on the road. But once the repairs by the dealer were complete, I must say that I could completely depend on that vehicle. From Virginia, to Florida, to California, to Texas, to Rhode Island and finally to Maryland (I was in the Navy at the time and moved a lot) I could completely depend on that car to break down in the middle of the hottest desert (Death Valley to be specific), the coldest blizzard (Donner Pass, no kidding), the wettest weather (Hurricane Frederick, look it up) or at the most inopportune time, like in the middle of the Oakland Bay bridge at rush hour. Side Note: I spent 23 years in the Fleet, and never heard obscenities, and blasphemies so masterfully hurled about as when the residents of the whole San Francisco Bay area slowly worked their way around my sexy, seductive and lifeless Spitfire that evening. So what went wrong? I'm not sure about tea and biscuits, but perhaps the fact that the vehicles being turned out by the British industry at that time were rubbish had something to do with it. Still, at this moment I have a '78 Spitfire in my garage, in its natural state, i.e., torn down to parts, and scattered all over the floor. I suppose after all these years I can only surmise that owning a British roadster is like being in a destructive relationship. You know that they are no good, but they are so damned sexy and seductive.
@BWo-bb1yw
@BWo-bb1yw Жыл бұрын
A yank here, you have seen a lot and driven thousands of miles. From thousands of feet high at Donner, to dropping down into death valley, wow! For a navy man you do get around.
@baronvonschnellenstein2811
@baronvonschnellenstein2811 Жыл бұрын
That was quite an enjoyable and well told story. Thank you 👍 Sorry to hear that you spent so much time stranded, due to breakdowns, though!
@lorenzoboyd6889
@lorenzoboyd6889 Жыл бұрын
This reminds me... In the mid 1970s a chap in a neighboring apartment had a Triumph GT6. At least one day each month he had to give it a wrench massage. When he moved, he left the car behind.
@mike_oe
@mike_oe Жыл бұрын
hahaha, that was an entertaining read, thank you!
@ExtroniusAttributes
@ExtroniusAttributes Жыл бұрын
Sounds just like my experience. In 1978 I bought a nine-year-old Spitfire Mk III. It was pretty rough (backs of seats ripped out, what looked like a line of bullet holes down the side, etc.) but it was cheap and it was fun to drive when it ran. After a year, I decided I really liked driving the car but needed one that was more reliable, so I bought a brand new 1979 Spitfire 1500. That's when I discovered the problem with my '69 was not that it was an OLD English car, but that it was an old ENGLISH car. The new one was just about as bad, though in different ways. Never mind labor or management, this car suffered from terrible engineering. I will mention two things in particular: first, some genius had put the catalytic converter right under the carburetor, which meant the fuel boiled (and the car sputtered and died) whenever I was stuck in slow-moving traffic. Second, the electronic ignition system developed a seizure disorder shortly after warranty ran out: it couldn't take the heat (the module was located inside the distributor housing), and after an increasingly short distance there would be no spark, the electric tach would drop to zero, and I'd try to coast to a safe place until it cooled. I took it back to the dealer, who offered to sell me a replacement module... but he warned that they ALL failed that way after a year or so. Instead, I traded it in at a Dodge dealer close enough to my home that the car would get through his trade-in test drive without having a seizure. These problems were not the fault of labor, and really not of management either; these were just terrible engineering decisions. And they were things that should have been obvious to the people designing the cars. Sigh. The Spitfires (especially the second one) were seductive and sexy, and I still miss the way the transmission shifted in the second one. I still kinda miss mine.
@Tacko14
@Tacko14 Жыл бұрын
I’ve always put it down to culture. Britain seems to be great at inventing stuff in a shed, but terrible at transforming it into a healthy business model. In a philosophical sense, I can only applaud that. Arts and crafts, yea! In an economical sense, ouch. Very much ouch. And why would it be otherwise? Here is a young chap, some Colin Chapman, engineer and inventor, suddenly CEO of a car making factory, burdened with marketing issues, HR management and factory planning. Yeah. That’s his talent alright. He just wanted to make exciting little runabouts. It’s basically the Syd Barrett story: he just wanted to make music, and there came the industry
@shadeburst
@shadeburst Жыл бұрын
I knew a guy who had started his career working for Morgan. The factory was a number of sheds. Mechanics pushed each chassis from one shed to another for the next stage of manufacture. The factory was located on a steep hillside and... the production flow was from the bottom shed to the highest.
@Tacko14
@Tacko14 Жыл бұрын
@@shadeburst Aston Martin used to be something like that, until the early 90’s. Scariest ride of its lifetime for any Aston was the engine being ferried on a trolly, to meet the chassis in a building across the road. I imagine they had lollypop ladies
@bobburnitt5761
@bobburnitt5761 Жыл бұрын
That happens every where every time.
@sylviam6535
@sylviam6535 Жыл бұрын
Syd Barrett fried his brain with psychedelics. Also, the success of Pink Floyd probably came from his replacement with David Gilmour, who pulled the band away from the space rock direction. Be Careful with that Axe Eugene vs. Shine on You Crazy Diamond.
@WiiNV
@WiiNV Жыл бұрын
@@shadeburst Industrial madness as highlighted by Sir John Harvey-Jone's Troubleshooter TV series!
@Jefchang1
@Jefchang1 Жыл бұрын
John Surtees the champion rider of the 1950s and 1960s told the management at Norton Motorcycles that he felt he could win the world championship on a Norton with company support. The answer after a couple of days was that yes they thought he could do that but the problem would be that he would then earn more than a director of Norton. He then rode for MV Agusta in Italy.
@wallacegrommet9343
@wallacegrommet9343 Жыл бұрын
How many races did the director win……
@irvhh143
@irvhh143 Жыл бұрын
I think most of the trouble with motorbikes was that they were building their own scaffold. The engineers, mechanics, and riders put their best efforts in to make the bike faster. The end result was that their young hero was killed in a crash. Might as well join the hippies.
@disillusionedanglophile7680
@disillusionedanglophile7680 Жыл бұрын
Honda was at a GP motorcycle race. They needed a different gear ratio. A new gearbox arrived overnight (with the correct ratios). It would have taken a British factory team 6 months to change a gear ratio. It may have been Surtees who told that particular story.
@jcjko5504
@jcjko5504 Жыл бұрын
@@disillusionedanglophile7680 Ya, if this happens in Canada, former British colony, it will take 6+1 months.
@magnemoe1
@magnemoe1 Жыл бұрын
@@jcjko5504 I say this has more to do with how the system is set up. If you have an machine shop for racing and experimental stuff and racing has an priority I imagine you can modify an gearbox fast. For production lines 6 months is reasonable. Now many car companies don't make their own engines, guess the same is true for gearboxes, in that case again 6 months is fast Do you want an cheap engine, an fuel efficient who don't pollute much or an powerful one. Yes thank you, I want all three, it has an cost as in billions in development and this is an recurring cost because you keep improving.
@ericeven4090
@ericeven4090 Жыл бұрын
I worked in the UK for 8 years. The phrase that stood out to me on the production floor was "good enough". It was like a mantra for them.
@gregkerr725
@gregkerr725 Жыл бұрын
My family lived in England from 1954-57, where my Father was a U.S. Army engineer whose unit was involved in lengthening runways at air bases in order that they could handle strategic bombers like the B-47 and B-52. Dad would become really irritated when they were conducting a concrete pour and the civilian British concrete truck drivers would just stop and have tea when the pour was right in the middle of completing a section and it was important to pour the entire section while the concrete was wet so that it would bond and set well. Dad also bought a Morris Minor mini station wagon while we were there. He did have a few problems with the car and he said there was no sense of urgency among the repair people to get the car on the road. The car was shipped back to small town Oklahoma, where at one point it made the local news when Oklahoma State University students asked Dad to let them see how many people they could cram inside the car...........Believe it or not they got 17 people inside that car...not children either!
@thedwightguy
@thedwightguy Жыл бұрын
in 63 there was a derelict MM wagon in a yard next to our park in S. San Gabriel and my dad, a lifelong mechanic that could get ANY vehicle going, took a look at buying it. And turned away!
@T16MGJ
@T16MGJ Жыл бұрын
Given the average size of modern day 'Mericans, seventeen now would not be possible. PAAAAARP! ... 🤣
@nilakantsharma7635
@nilakantsharma7635 Жыл бұрын
Yes I had a morris minor it was a sturdy british car could handle a lot of load, n good running.
@GuinessOriginal
@GuinessOriginal 9 ай бұрын
Your dad loved that car so much he paid to ship it back to the states? Wow
@beatglauser9444
@beatglauser9444 Жыл бұрын
I never forget the smartest history professor I ever had at university. She made a bold statement saying: "After WW2 the infrastructure in Germany was completely destroyed. That forced the Germans to built the entire industry from scratch (a thing the Marshall plan made possible). In the meantime the British could and did produce things in more oldfashioned and often outdated factories. This turned out the be a disadvantage on the long run. Factories in Germany were much more modern and efficient. And one heavy factor was of course the loss of the colonies that had made Britain a strong and rich empire" .
@ngw1976
@ngw1976 Жыл бұрын
This explanation a good one, yet I feel it is only partly true. Just look at the Soviet-occupied zone in Germany that would become the German Democratic Republic (GDR) in 1949: The Soviets dismantled numerous industrial plants in their occupation zone that were undamaged or partly damaged and relocated them to the USSR. This was done as part of the reparation programme, so the GDR after 1949 had to build industrial plants from scratch to get their industrial production going again. This lead to the interesting situation that in the 1950s and 1960s the plant-based industry of the GDR was doing well, even by western (capitalist) standards, but the inherent flaws of the socialist/communist centrally planned economy meant that, as time went on, more and more funds had to be channeled into maintenance and modernisation to keep the plants going, money that the GDR didn’t have, which meant that modernisation of existing plants in many parts effectively came to halt. Yes, modern equipment is important, but equally important is, you has got to have money to modernise and keep your means of production up to date, otherwise your factories that were once state of the art are going to be outdated after a couple of years.
@martinrichardhorrocks9869
@martinrichardhorrocks9869 Жыл бұрын
@@ngw1976 Agree. It seems simplistic to say that Germany and Japan were funded into a position where they could take advantage over the actual winners of WW2. Italy was also in the same position and did equally well 1950-1980 (then lost its mojo). There were a good 15 years when that wasn´t the case and UK was still massively ahead of the game. If you think Coventry and London got bombed, take a look at cities in Germany. Japan didn´t even have roads, let alone a car industry in 1945. This without talking about massive psychological effect of living in a world where your beliefs have been shown to be criminal lies. In most manufacturing sectors, UK has failed to invest since WW2. Large family-owned businesses have been sold off with nothing for the workers or communities who built the companies or communities in which they where based. Compare that with VW, where the local state has ownership and a veto, or ZF where the F is for Friedrichshafen´s continued role in the company. They depend on each other. BMW & Daimler have their basis still in the ownership of families who will not sell, the huge Japanese companies which include the car sector are similarly based on ancient family businesses and local loyalty. There are still car factories in the UK, but as we have seen, foreign ownership means that UK plants are more vulnerable to closure than home plants. Even the marketing importance of being perceived as British isn´t looking great for long-term futuer of Cowley plant.
@ngw1976
@ngw1976 Жыл бұрын
​@@martinrichardhorrocks9869 Agree. Regarding the British car industry, I'm inclined to think that the decline set in when, under pressure from foreign car companies trying to gain a foothold in the British car market, British Leyland was established. The idea, if I'm not mistaken, was that by forming one "happy company", the various brands like Jaguar, Rover, MG, Austin etc. would remain competitive and profit from synergies in the field of technical development and part sharing. What looked good on paper turned out to be disastrous. You, no doubt, are more familiar with this "malaise era" than I am, but my family witnessed the "build quality" of BL cars first hand. My dad owned a 1978 Jaguar XJ6 4.2litre. Even nowadays he is regaling me with tales of how unreliable that particular car was. Design-wise the XJ II series looked - and still looks - great, but the electrical systems were shoddy and the engine had a tendency to overheat, especially when he driven at high speeds on the German autobahn. We always had a 10l canister of water in the boot to refill the cooling system, and our holiday tours to Bavaria where my grandparents lived were always planned with making sure which places along the route had BL dealerships/garages. Ah, "merry" auld times. 😁 After the XJ II my father bought a XJ40 which was considerably better, but in 1999 he switched to a BMW 740i (E38), which he kept for a 17 years. Wonderful car, the best-looking 7 series in my opinion, and the car never let us down. 😉
@thatisme3thatisme38
@thatisme3thatisme38 Жыл бұрын
@@ngw1976 gdr didn't get Marshall plan funds...big difference
@George-vf7ss
@George-vf7ss Жыл бұрын
Just another excuse. The Brits still had a 10 year head start. The workforce is generally lazy, envious, and too class conscious. Everything they touch turns to shit.
@alantunbridge8919
@alantunbridge8919 Жыл бұрын
I worked in the British motor industry from 1969 to 1973, for a component manufacturer,we also had a factory in a depressed area at Resolven in South Wales ,a former mining village, frquently problematic as a lack of a suitable workforce. The Leyland problem was largely as you identified complacency along with aggressive unions, incompetent management & government interference simultaneously. It should also be taken into account that Donald Stokes was a Marketing man & a Labour supporter contraindicated for an engineering concern, additionally there was infighting amongst the various inherited companies & the company was never properly restructured,it had 45 plants in the U.K alone,additionally it neglected its overseas subsidiaries. Michael Edwardes was little better as although his family was in the motor trade,they had a successful motor repair business in Port Elizabeth ,South Africa.I doubt that would help much in a manufacturing environment . Iworked a further 20 years in the motor industry in S.A. & met many people from the U.K. motor industry who often had interesting stories to tell.
@Comakino
@Comakino Жыл бұрын
What a story. Did you work for BMW in SA? I know they made a few cars there
@alantunbridge8919
@alantunbridge8919 Жыл бұрын
@@Comakino No. l worked very briefly for Datsun/Nissan (a bad mistake), then for just over 20 years for VW. I did look at BMW ,but was not impressed by their methods. All the manufacturers her in those these produced shoddily made vehicles. I bought a 1971 built Rover 3500 shortly after arriving here. I spent the next 20 years sorting out build problems on it,Leyland’s build quality was appaling. I still have today in running order.
@martinrichardhorrocks9869
@martinrichardhorrocks9869 Жыл бұрын
That´s a fair analysis, Alan. And you´ve not said everything.....
@robincook3367
@robincook3367 Жыл бұрын
Good story. I would disagree regarding Michael Edwardes though, he was experienced in running big companies by the time he became BL Chairman. He brought in a lot of reforms that at the time saved the company, though some were not popular. There were cheap and quick fixes (e.g. turning the Princess into the Ambassador and the Marina into the Ital) to buy time until the newer models came out and rationalised/streamlined the model range. He also stood up to the unions, and focused on the core car/vehicle making business by getting rid of companies in the group like Prestcold (a refrigeration business). Had he been given longer by Maggie Thatcher, it would have got better still. His book is well worth reading.
@alantunbridge8919
@alantunbridge8919 Жыл бұрын
@@robincook3367 I accept that Michael Edwardes did achieve some improvements. I believe he came from Exide batteries ,but the manufacture of these is simple compared to something like a motor vehicle. My point is that to manage a company producing an engineering product it is a requirement to understand engineering. I worked in the motor industry for 25 years & saw the results of this & I maintain that it is the main reason the German companies are successful. A classic example of a company failing through lack of an engieering orientated head is General Motors, John De Lorean predicted this in his book when the first finance man became head.
@heronimousbrapson863
@heronimousbrapson863 Жыл бұрын
I've always felt that Britain's labour troubles were a result of its absolutely crippling class system.
@thevikingwarrior
@thevikingwarrior Жыл бұрын
I come from Britain, and we pride our selves in being a democracy and an example to the world in this manner. But we have this caste system, kind of like they do in backward nations such as India. We have to get rid of the royal family and much of these ridiculous systems of authority and reconstruct everything for a TRUE democracy. We otherwise are a flawed democracy. I hate living in this stupid country, and I drink coffee and not eat! But I loved the European Union, until the Brexit-tards fucked it all up for us; the EU was the best democratic system in the world by far!
@paulm2467
@paulm2467 Жыл бұрын
Absolutely, bad management, bad decisions, bad government, bad industrial relations, it’s all down to the class system, this government is following the same ideologically driven pattern and it’s having the same results. The Japanese have been manufacturing in the UK for 30+ years without industrial problems, it’s clearly British management that is the problem.
@lifeintheolddog5768
@lifeintheolddog5768 Жыл бұрын
It’s always been who you know not what you know unfortunately. See the Oxbridge chumocracy at top of politics on both sides- there are more classics graduates in Parliament than qualified engineers (and probably scientists if you discount medics) and when they talk about ‘business’, they mean finance or commercial legal services, not making stuff. Maybe we need an Elon Musk to come in and shake the tree.
@heronimousbrapson863
@heronimousbrapson863 Жыл бұрын
@@lifeintheolddog5768 Perhaps not Elon Musk. He's apparently not as smart as many people think.
@lifeintheolddog5768
@lifeintheolddog5768 Жыл бұрын
@@heronimousbrapson863 Probably not, I'm thinking an outsider, probably non-brit, who doesnt give a four letter word starting with F for politeness and 'this is how we do it round here'...
@ervsavord4985
@ervsavord4985 Жыл бұрын
I had a triumph spitfire during my college years. Problem #1 lights, electrical shorts that had to be painstakingly followed, corrected and then reoccurring in a different circuit. #2 Right front wheel knock off hub mounted on the left front. Eventually this caused the left front wheel to unwind and fall off. Then no front wheel hub in North America. The company in England stated that none were available in their warehouse. They would be making them soon. One year later and with 2 months shipping time a repair could be made. I learned my lesson, but I enjoyed the brief driving experience. Happiness is driving a spitfire but true joy is trading it in.
@AutomotiveEvangelist
@AutomotiveEvangelist Жыл бұрын
The Japanese had huge success with automotive manufacturing because Edward Deming went over there after the war and helped them streamline their production (he was a brilliant Industrial Engineer and developed most of the Just In Time manufacturing methods used today.)
@silectric
@silectric Жыл бұрын
Out of the Crisis, Deming's book. Great read.
@capmidnite
@capmidnite Жыл бұрын
Deming was responsible for statistical quality control. Toyota pioneered Just in Time in the 80s.
@silectric
@silectric Жыл бұрын
@@capmidnite It had to run concurrently with Just In Case. I remember a buyer at Honda UK telling me he kept a large bag of a certain circlip under his desk just in case the just in time stock did not arrive on time. One problem was getting past the trucks queuing up outside a factory ensuring their load got in at the correct time, just in time as there were penalties for being late. When all your suppliers surround the main plant JIT is fine. When the supplier is at the other end of the world, on the UK road system rather a lot of variables come in to play.
@rogerthat117
@rogerthat117 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for mentioning Deming he never gets the respect he deserves. If the Americans had taken his theories to hart I wouldn’t have 3 Hondas and a Toyota in my driveway
@capmidnite
@capmidnite Жыл бұрын
@@rogerthat117 It also helped that the Japanese had fuel efficient cars in the 70s when the Oil Crisis hit. Japanese cars imported to the USA in the 70s and early 80s were prone to rust out easily, even though the rest of the car was reliable.
@eddiewake2416
@eddiewake2416 Жыл бұрын
I was an apprentice mechanic in the late 60s and trained as a panelbeater in the mid 70s. I well remember the deliberate problems caused by the lazy and militant workers. The number of hours I had to waste stripping out the seats and carpets of cars to remove nuts and bolts which had spitefully dropped into chassis members beggars belief. Fit and finish, along with good even close lines were an alien concept to many of them. I agree, though, with your verdict on the management (or should that be miss-management?) issues. Great video, Jack.
@Number27
@Number27 Жыл бұрын
Thank you Eddie and interesting to hear from someone who went through it all!
@volters9561
@volters9561 Жыл бұрын
In normal company that kind of worker would take one warning and if he wont complay he would be fired. Looks like it's problem with unions too.
@LordOfLight
@LordOfLight Жыл бұрын
And it never occurred to you to ask why they behaved in this spiteful way: no sir, you just blamed it all on the guy who did it.
@eddiewake2416
@eddiewake2416 Жыл бұрын
@@LordOfLight who the hell else should I blame? Some innocent person spent a huge percentage of their disposable income on a new car, with the expectation of reliability and quality, and this tosser destroyed his dreams because he was having a bad day. May the fleas of a thousand camels infest his nether regions, and yours for sympathising with him.
@LordOfLight
@LordOfLight Жыл бұрын
@@eddiewake2416 You're a fool. Worse, you're a self-indulgent fool. You like blaming this guy. I know better than to argue with fools; I'll let life work its magic on you and one day you'll cease to be a fool. The bad news is there is much pain for you between now and then. Goodnight.
@garethjudd5840
@garethjudd5840 Жыл бұрын
My grandfather worked at the Cowley plant in Oxford in the 50s and 60s and the toxic Unions would strike every day for the slightest things, such as on one day the factory stopped because one side had chocolate biscuits and the other didn't.
@baggierols73
@baggierols73 10 ай бұрын
those chocolate Hob Nobs are delish, mind lol
@rayfoster6980
@rayfoster6980 Жыл бұрын
In 1963 my dad bought a new Sunbeam Alpine. As kids my twin brother and I rode with him from California to Florida then back to California TWICE (2 round trips). In 1970 he gave it to us, we drove the heck out of it. Ultimately, that began my career as a mechanic..
@ericcsuf
@ericcsuf Жыл бұрын
Many British car owners became mechanics the day they drove off the showroom floor.
@donaldhill2775
@donaldhill2775 Жыл бұрын
Top attitude mate 👍 don’t complain, no one bleedin cares, just get out and fix it 😂
@antschiari8000
@antschiari8000 Жыл бұрын
If you have ever worked for the old school union system with “Shop Stewards” and the bowler hatted idiots in management, you will know why we failed. It was a disaster waiting to happen. I own and run a metal fabrication shop in the south of England and nobody, who walks in my shop knows if I’m the labourer or the boss… we are all equally liable for what goes out of the door!!!
@rickb3650
@rickb3650 Жыл бұрын
And the surest way to keep a union out is to take care of your workers.
@antschiari8000
@antschiari8000 Жыл бұрын
@@rickb3650 massively agree with that! You have to learn by mistakes made… Britain will never be great again because we got complacent…
@rickb3650
@rickb3650 Жыл бұрын
@@antschiari8000 Both your nation and mine desperately need fundamental inheritance reforms if we are to survive. Different systems that achieve the same result of putting morons in positions of significant power through no qualification beyond birth.
@johnchristmas7522
@johnchristmas7522 Жыл бұрын
WOW a responsible Boss- not down the golf course! Thats a first.
@MrPomdownunder
@MrPomdownunder Жыл бұрын
At Japanese plants the directors wear overalls like all the workers..
@johniksushibar165
@johniksushibar165 Жыл бұрын
My first job was as an apprentice mechanic at a BL / Jag dealer, one day a brand new cortina MK 3 came in, it was like looking at something from outer space. the BL products were thrown together items from the previous decades where the Ford was all shiney and new. it was the same with bikes, i had several BSA,s but when all my friends got Japanese bikes, i had to admit defeat and get something that was relaible and didnt leak all over the floor. hate to say it but my current car was made in korea
@bsimpson6204
@bsimpson6204 Жыл бұрын
From a bikers point of view in the early 70’s, we all knew the score and nearly everyone bought Japanese.
@robertmalinowski4887
@robertmalinowski4887 Жыл бұрын
I rode a BSA motorcycle in Germany. I just swapped the amal carburetor and installed a mikuni carburetor. Because of the vibration, the fenders often had to be welded. Otherwise the bike is good and reliable.
@billbogg3857
@billbogg3857 Жыл бұрын
Now making a triumphant comeback with the Royal Enfield only it's made in India !
@johniksushibar165
@johniksushibar165 Жыл бұрын
@@robertmalinowski4887 i had several BSA,s, the weak point on most British bikes were the electrics, Joe Lucas wasnt known as the prince of darkness for nothing
@johniksushibar165
@johniksushibar165 Жыл бұрын
@@billbogg3857 yea, i was tempted to get one but i dont bounce so well these days :-)
@STOLSPEED
@STOLSPEED Жыл бұрын
As a young Canadian travelling around, I spent the winter of '62 working as an instrument fitter in London. It was a simple job of collecting a box of parts from stores and then polishing rough parts and assembling and testing the result. The first one took me three days, the second one two days, and the third one was done in a day. When I went to stores to get the parts for another, the foreman took me aside and cautioned, "We accept that it takes two days to assemble one. Don't spoil it for all of us...." So I had to learn to work very slowly, polishing and re-polishing parts, and scratching my butt. All the other men on that production line thought this was a really plumb job..... It was a very long and boring time until spring when I could hit the road again. So that's when I learned about British labour practices........ When I did hit the road it was on a British motorcycle, so I learned a whole more about British engineering.... I do note that the British made excellent steam engines in the distant past, but have completely lost it since then.
@seana806
@seana806 10 ай бұрын
In the US/North America around that time it would have been like: “Just take your time and be thorough, quality is job number 1” *returns the next day* “Wow, you are done already? Let me see if I can find any other work for you Mr. Smith.” *returns a minute later* “Looked around for some work for you, there’s not any I can find, you can get off early, see you tomorrow Mr. Smith”. Though that’s not very accurate depiction, it certainly shows the differences between attitudes in the US/North America around that time compared to how it was in the UK around that time.
@ks-eq3yx
@ks-eq3yx 7 ай бұрын
I was trained as a toolmaker by a tec college in the 1970's . 5 years with apprentiship, superb training but when I finally got employed as a skilled man I found that any enthusiasm for the job was frowned on by the closed shop union, and ignored by management. I left before it destroyed my soul completely.
@parttimetourist
@parttimetourist Жыл бұрын
I left belfast to work in England in the early seventys in the major construction industry and several times I had to return to Belfast to get workers because the English men were so lazy all they wanted to do was sit down drinking tea
@poppyneese1811
@poppyneese1811 Жыл бұрын
As a teen here in America I would have about done anything to have owned a MGB or a TR6, these cars were just so beautiful and fun, granted I never got to ride one, but when I was 15 there was a light blue MGB sitting in the back of our local Dodge dealer which I walked by on my way home from washing dishes at local Shoney’s Restaurant at midnight and sit in that MGB shifting gears and imagining I was driving this beautiful British Sports Car on are winding mountain roads, then one day it was gone, I was heart broken 🥲I still remember that non-running light blue MGB and I’m now 60.
@db111
@db111 Жыл бұрын
"SLIDE OF PRIDE" when pride in your product and your company is slowly eroded it's demoralising for the everyone and there can be only one outcome The proverbial sh#t does roll down hill. I worked for Toyota UK in Burnaston and know that the people at the top could pick up the tools and build a car. Life isn't a Carry On film anymore, I guess the 70s were just a sign of their times and a culmination of years of rot, it's a shame, but I still love the Carry On films, I will now stand down from my soapbox. Quality video as usual.
@Jeremyho439
@Jeremyho439 Жыл бұрын
Not just tea and biscuit. Before NUMMI, the GM manufacturing plant at Fremont, Calif., was replete with problems, from negative attitudes to high percentages of rejected cars. Sex, drugs, alcohol and gambling were prevalent daily activities, right on the site. The animosity between labor and management was so deep that assembly line workers’ way of fighting management was to sabotage the cars at the line, leaving parts or Coke bottles inside the doors or omitting a few screws, etc.
@toastnjam7384
@toastnjam7384 Жыл бұрын
I recall listening to a podcast several years ago on This America Life about the troubles at that plant and it was horrific. The production lines at Fremont seldom stopped, and when mistakes were made cars continued down the line with the expectation that they would be fixed later. I feel for the people who bought a car made there.
@eweunkettles8207
@eweunkettles8207 Жыл бұрын
sounds like a great job when can i get hired !
@GuinessOriginal
@GuinessOriginal 9 ай бұрын
End of the day that’s crap management. If you can’t manage your workers, it’s definitely your fault. Other people can, so why can’t you? Too much credence is given to management and not enough blame. They’re there to manage workers correctly, if they can’t do it they’re crap, end of story. Anything that goes wrong is a result of bad management - management are there to manage and control the workforce. If they fail, the company fails. Blame the management,
@kactus_3008
@kactus_3008 Жыл бұрын
I recently visited the UK from London to Birmingham. It looks frozen in time like Japan. Great and proud empires do not easily give up comfort in favor of modernity. Same with my hometown, too weak and poor to change anything, if it ain't broke don't fix it kind of attitude….
@Lando-kx6so
@Lando-kx6so Жыл бұрын
That's because both are heavily developed countries with not much more room to build up plus Brtiain is very traditional & there are laws in place to prevent the destruction of old historic buildings & architecture (which in my opinion is a good thing)
@BatCountryAdventures
@BatCountryAdventures 11 ай бұрын
Yes! The comparison with Japan is SO true! Except Japan was so modern during it's heydays that nothing felt old even now. The only thing that gave things away was the browning white fixtures. I left UK 12 years ago and return every 6 years to see my friends. When I went back last year, everything felt delayed and overcapacity. The train services was abysmal and all the highways were gridlocked. I used to think Manchester airport was amazing but it felt terribly designed and rundown now. :(
@pcread
@pcread Жыл бұрын
My dad's stepfather was a Glaswegian in Coventry, working in manufacturing and a hard-line union man. He told me he'd rather a company went out of business than the union lose a strike. Coventry was the Motor City of the UK. So many people worked at 'the Jag' or 'the Alvis'. Until they didn't.
@febweb17
@febweb17 Жыл бұрын
Was he a distant relation of Arthur Scargill by any chance?
@shamuso1596
@shamuso1596 Жыл бұрын
It's what scares me, I was young but remember the 1970's, it wasn't a good time. The industries were destroyed but its happening again, the only thing now its the public sector unions who have the power.
@davidarchibald50
@davidarchibald50 Жыл бұрын
Underlining my life's experience that unions exist solely for the benefit...of Unions
@jackking5567
@jackking5567 Жыл бұрын
I agree with him. My reasons? If a company cannot survive unless it's to the detriment of a person, I believe that a persons life is far more important. Think of it this way - a company survives but it kills people - you can see the problem surely? Imagine going to work and being worse off than if you'd stayed at home or taken another job elsewhere. If a company cannot survive then it should indeed close down because the business plan clearly does not work. Yes - the same should apply today and it would be thousands of them but government subisdise peoples wages. Why on Earth should an outsider (the public through taxes) line the pockets of others for their very bad business plan? A business should be strong and not so weak that it requires government help. Yes jobs are important but why on Earth should things be subsidised by others? How did it get this way? An inept and weak government that's why. Governments are too intertwined with businesses and so pander them. Classic examples currently include the NHS where it's staff are for the most very badly paid. Managers are on superb wages. Why? Why should such a business plan (and it is ran as a business) exist, even in a government ran business? Wages have been allowed to fall and fall to the point where they require government help. Wages so low that if they instead became unemployed their lifestyle would improve. 40% of British workers are on support benefits. There are strong British companies that do not require government help with wages for staff. ALL companies should be like that. Yeah - I'm old enough to remember the boom times. The days when just one in a household worked and yet their (unsupported) wages paid for everything and even for holidays. It was all killed off by inept governments.
@buttyboy100
@buttyboy100 Жыл бұрын
In my experience management styles get the unions they deserve. Enlightened, progressive companies (there have been a few) get moderate unions or sometimes no unions at all. Badly run concerns with draconian or outdated management styles get militant unions. When dogmatic and ideologically driven government is involved you can expect fireworks.
@richardbicknell2140
@richardbicknell2140 Жыл бұрын
My family worked at Longbridge. Tales are unbelievable. Red Robbo, 523 walkouts in 30 months. Measured day work. The union's killed Longbridge because they had the management they deserved
@suzyqualcast6269
@suzyqualcast6269 Жыл бұрын
Owd Oncle Derek.
@dreamdiction
@dreamdiction Жыл бұрын
I really hope you make a written record of your family's experience working at Longbridge. The press could never publish these stories because the print unions would strike so the stories only exist in the memories of those who lived through it, when those people die, the record of what went on in those times will be lost. I hope you interview your family members and get a detailed record of what happened, publish it on the internet so that people can find it by searching.
@someoneelse.2252
@someoneelse.2252 Жыл бұрын
Old timer here: I worked in Linwood Scotland during the sixties / seventies, where the Hillmans were produced. I can only speak to the guys on the floor at that time. Any excuse, and I mean any excuse, was a reason to down tools & wildcat. Of course poor management was serious issue, but the mentality of all the Union members was one of....."who do those bastards in their collars and ties think they are". And by downing tools and walking off, this was an almost weekly thing. Old Firm game being played and few showed up for the shift. 'Them versus us' mentality and it really was a large reason for the demise of Linwood.
@man-of-the-world
@man-of-the-world Жыл бұрын
I worked in a factory in the early 70's and as a previously self employed conscientious worker, I was always taken to task by my fellow workers if I did too much. The phrase that was in common usage back then is that I was "carving the job up". Nothing has changed nowadays.
@andywarne963
@andywarne963 Жыл бұрын
I grew up on the edge of the industrial West Midlands in the 70's and many of my friends worked in factories. I clearly remember one anecdote which summed up everything: A friend in the pub after work was boasting that their floor had managed to get a whole days production of bathroom taps rejected by quality control as they made them so badly. I was confused and asked why this was good. The reply was "It taught management a lesson. Shop steward was really happy". There really was a civil war going on. Union leaders goading inept management and inciting workers who were largely caught in the crossfire.
@thedwightguy
@thedwightguy Жыл бұрын
this "US Against Them" is constantl imported into Canada as I know and have worked with so many Brits in the west. It sucks as most of my early work was in the USA where a "work ethic" is (or used to be) such a large "can do" part of American culture.
@andieslandies
@andieslandies Жыл бұрын
Back when I was a mechanic, I had a boss who told me: "the problem with the British car industry was the British class system, the people who designed cars wouldn't talk to the people who built and worked on them; they had great designs but they never fixed any of the problems".
@stephenrandall3551
@stephenrandall3551 Жыл бұрын
I used to deliver parts to Fords at Halewood. At one time all the workforce walked out and I was stuck there half unloaded. When I asked why they walked out, I was told that a member of management had walked on the shop floor.
@_Ben4810
@_Ben4810 Жыл бұрын
Same at Longbridge...British Leyland managers had to get permission from the shop stewards if they wanted to enter any of the factories, & if they wanted to show a visitor around, this required a long (& somewhat embarrassing...) wait whilst the shop stewards called the union leadership with all the visitors details after they had been questioned & interrogated over who they were & what was their reason for visiting...& even once permission was given by the union, a shop steward would tag-along listening-in to all the conversations between the British Leyland manager & his now highly bemused & even intimidated visitor...
@caeserromero3013
@caeserromero3013 Жыл бұрын
My dad worked in engineering all his life (CNC not for the car industry but did do precision work for F1 for Bennett and Arrows). As an apprentice in the early 70's a place he worked at went on strike one day because the WRONG BISCUITS were put out in the tea room. The manager even apologised and promised the correct biscuits would be delivered for the next day, but no dice. Everyone (except my dad) downed tools. The foreman told my dad to stop work, to which my dad asked: Do you pay my wages? When the guy said 'no', my dad said: Then F off! Dad always hated unions.
@peterfireflylund
@peterfireflylund Жыл бұрын
Good man, your dad.
@stavrosk.2868
@stavrosk.2868 Жыл бұрын
Hating unions? Unions are great, ask the unprotected American workers or the zero contract working poor. In Germany, the unions are part of the management in all enterprises. You should hate idiots, be they in unions or the management.
@dadoVRC
@dadoVRC Жыл бұрын
Stavros K. Exactly. But theres a major problem. democracy. If a bunch of idiots are the workforce of a big industry, you can't pretend that the voted union representatives can be better than them. I was an union representative, working in a small mechanical industry (30employee) , but they voted me because I have the balls to fight for having our rights, not for bullshits. There are (were...) many cases here in which unions are committed to save the job of people who deserved to be fired rather than work to let the company run with better rights for the employee.
@nkelly.9
@nkelly.9 Жыл бұрын
I'll bet your dad enjoyed his weekends. Weekends, brought to you by unions.
@nachomolaolivera7580
@nachomolaolivera7580 Жыл бұрын
@@nkelly.9 Henry Ford created the weekend with christian values in mind. Unions only spread them faster in certain areas. Weekends was something that would be as worldwide regarless of unions.
@johnphelps9788
@johnphelps9788 Жыл бұрын
In the late '60s , on a working holiday from Australia, I worked for a time at a Birmingham car factory churning out Austin 1100s. I was amazed at the high wages car workers earned compared to Aussie car workers at that time. In Australia working on a car production line was fairly low paid and mainly done by recently landed migrants, many with little English, as a means to break into the workforce. In Birmingham however, I found the jobs were very sought after and the pay was more than could be earned by qualified tradesmen such as plumbers, carpenters and motor mechanics, many of whom I worked with , who had given up their skilled jobs to work on the car production line. The line I worked on was sanding down the primer coat on the 1100 body shell prior to another coat of paint being applied further down the line. The workers on my line were sanding by hand and worked their shift half hour on and half hour off. Every half hour one crew would drop tools and sit down while the alternate crew got to work. Two crews of highly paid workers to cover one shift of unskilled work didn't strike me as being a great business model and if this was an example of the British car industry in general I am not surprised it couldn't survive global competition. Another aspect was the cars themselves. The Toyota Corolla in it's original form had an 1100 cc engine and competed directly with the Austin 1100 and I am sure contributed to it's demise. The car industry in Australia has also died after many years of government subsidies but Aussie never really exported cars and the domestic market is too small to sustain a car industry.
@seed_drill7135
@seed_drill7135 Жыл бұрын
Well, we Americans miss those rebadged Hodens.
@MrPomdownunder
@MrPomdownunder Жыл бұрын
When I moved to Aus every other car was either a Falcon or Commode and of course where I worked there was an ongoing debate.... It was really sad to see Ford and Holden go along with Toyota and Mitsi and previously Chrysler and Leyland. Aussie Leyland were very innovative and had a lot of Aussie input .... The Prime ministerial car was a Holden Statesman - very hi spec but alas now a BMW (I think..)
@johnphelps9788
@johnphelps9788 Жыл бұрын
@@MrPomdownunder yep, way back the average family car in Oz was a six cylinder GM Holden or Ford Falcon with to a lesser degree the Chrysler Valiant. The small cars which were popular were the Mini Minor and Volkswagen Beetle.Then came the Japanese invasion, with Nissan, Toyota and mistershitty and they had inclusions like radios, heaters, carpets none of which were standard in the Holden or Falcon. We had too many cars to choose from for the size of our population so local production, after sucking up millions in government assistance, finally died. Us oldies loved our rear wheel drive 6 cylinder go anywhere runabouts with wind up windows, bench seats (for a genuine 6 seater) no aircon, no power steering or disc brakes and a simple motor which could be stripped down and rebuilt in your driveway. ( personal experience here). I was a Holden man, loved them and drove them from the FJ to the last of the commodes.
@SunRise-ul7ko
@SunRise-ul7ko Жыл бұрын
Holden's from the 70's were rust buckets, very unreliable & easy to fix. I bought a VF2 Commodore, which is the last Holden made in Australia. In the last 6 years of ownership, have just done scheduled services. Apart from replacing the battery & a set of tires, not a single failure in the car, not even a light bulb has blown. They finally make a quality car & they closed down the factory. Disgusting.
@MrPomdownunder
@MrPomdownunder Жыл бұрын
@@SunRise-ul7ko All those adverts saying that Holden would survive as a brand - Not actually making any cars in Aus but rebadging Global GM stuff.... All those millions of tax dollars..Thanks GM...
@gilbertfranklin1537
@gilbertfranklin1537 Жыл бұрын
As an 82 yr-old living in the US, I can relate to your story. I grew up when we made a lot of cars, and boy did they sell! But when things went global, we could not compete with the Asians. Same problem with unions - got to a point where a guy on the assembly line who turned three screws over and over made more than a college grad with a Masters degree. Our middle class was spoiled, lazy and just wanted to be entertained. The Japanese were industrious, hard-working and smart. I guess we survived, but it sure ain't the same any more. Now, when I see the Chinese numbers of electric vehicles... here we go again.
@andrewhansen4179
@andrewhansen4179 Жыл бұрын
It's now a common fact that Union labor is approximately 21% more productive than their public non-union counterpart. Union labor is way more loyal to their jobs and as they age their experience makes them more valuable. I worked non-union and union for a total of 44 years and there was no comparison. And in a non-union environment, your job was only as secure as your boss's emotions.
@apexalpha4947
@apexalpha4947 Жыл бұрын
Did they NOT rotate people around (to learn different parts of the Line) so to jump in when someone was out sick ??? I think the Electric Car trend is going to die out.
@sparky6086
@sparky6086 Жыл бұрын
I remember a labor lawyer representing management, saying, that 100%:of the time, problems, that management has with labor unions, result from piss poor management. The big company, that I worked for, took that fact to heart and got rid of their bad management, and they no longer had union problems. I'd have to say, that bad management was the genesis of the British car industry problems, but the coup de gras was the government consolidation of the industry, where it cut out the pride, each individual nameplate's workers may have had.
@Bob-rg3gf
@Bob-rg3gf Жыл бұрын
My father, an MD, left Henry Ford hospital in Detroit because an assembly line worker doing nothing more than working a lever, made as much money. He knew that kind of economy was not sustainable & moved to Kentucky.
@irvhh143
@irvhh143 Жыл бұрын
@@andrewhansen4179 pure BS. The union shops I've worked at were a sad joke. Put in 4 hours and get paid for 8. Then go on strike so you only have to work 3 hours a day.
@g111g
@g111g Жыл бұрын
I've heard anecdotal stories of 19th century British industrialists sending their sons to study classics at oxbridge. In Germany industrialists' sons studied engineering. So maybe a longstanding cultural problem...
@baggierols73
@baggierols73 10 ай бұрын
somehow I can really believe that lol
@thePronto
@thePronto Жыл бұрын
While I was at business school in the 90s, we toured some 'legacy' car plants in inner Coventry (believe it or not) and they were posterchildren of inefficiency. As a counterpoint, we went to the Caterpillar factory and it was fully automated and optimized. For sure, the workers couldn't take public transport to work, because it was in the countryside: the only place there was room to build such a facility: but it was a model of what was so sorely lacking in British industry.
@jerrymcgeorge4117
@jerrymcgeorge4117 Жыл бұрын
When I first toured the Jaguar factory at Brown’s Lane late 86 I was struck by the sheer number of workers on the assembly line, plus the fact the vehicles were on their wheels virtually the entire time. The line itself had been purchased used in 1936 from the Standard Motor Company. No basic investment to modernize production had been made, a fact pointed out repeatedly by Ford once they were in charge. A new line was installed in ‘93 as I recall and the results were amazing. Doors fit, panel gaps were even, driveline vibrations eliminated, etc.
@eweunkettles8207
@eweunkettles8207 Жыл бұрын
then caterpillar pulled out and went to geneva iirc for whatever reason
@thePronto
@thePronto Жыл бұрын
@@eweunkettles8207 I just checked: still there: Peckleton Lane, Leicester.
@eweunkettles8207
@eweunkettles8207 Жыл бұрын
the one that used to be in glasgow !
@ronnieince4568
@ronnieince4568 Жыл бұрын
@@eweunkettles8207 yes but industry has fled Scotland largely -they can't even build ferries today and companies are leaving Scotland to secure their future Of the largest 25 businesses in Scotland only 2 are Scottish -and one is a car deajer Arnold Clark that does most of its business through its English branches . The young and STEM educated leave Scotland at the highest rate in Western Europe -under the SNP of us a dying country and since 2010 had had the lowest rate if new business creation in the U.K..
@Jin-Ro
@Jin-Ro Жыл бұрын
I work for a huge American multinational with factories all over the world from China and Russia to the US and Brazil. Our most problematic workforce is Liverpool. Incredibly militant, constant complaints from the production workforce over the pettiest thing. I was in a meeting with Management and Production a couple of years ago and I was stunned how aggressive, rude and combative the Union reps were. It's working against them as they all work to rule, and as a result productivity is low, profits are near zero, performance onuses are zero. The factory will very likely be moved to France, the Americans are just about done with them. The other factories in the UK are fine, no problem and two of them have spent £20 mill between them expanding production. Liverpool is a microcosm of the 70's UK workforce.
@jamesrobert4106
@jamesrobert4106 Жыл бұрын
Liverpool is a disease that England should remove.
@HGAMES69
@HGAMES69 Жыл бұрын
Always the scousers
@correctpolitically4784
@correctpolitically4784 Жыл бұрын
To much entitlement destroys the ability to produce anything.
@jukkaaho7962
@jukkaaho7962 Жыл бұрын
Even japanese cars produced in UK in the 90’s had problems. There were so big quality issues, that as I was working in a Toyota dealer at the time, many customers only accepted cars with vin that indicated the car was made in Japan. If it had UK made vin, they refused to take delivery
@FrunkensteinVonZipperneck
@FrunkensteinVonZipperneck Жыл бұрын
Honda walked away from their factory. Worth less than nothing.
@timothydevries383
@timothydevries383 Жыл бұрын
The US is starting to become like this also.
@robg5958
@robg5958 Жыл бұрын
You have provided a fascinating and accurate account of the car industry and it's sad decline! I myself trained at Short Brothers aircraft factory in Belfast and it suffered from the same kind of problems. The factory itself was decades old and in dire need of modernisation; however, the company was only interested in cutting costs and seemed to always be looking at the workforce as a bunch of work-shy louts. In 1987, I left Shorts to work at Saab Aviation in Sweden and it was like leaping decades ahead for me. The Swedes had an ultra-modern factory with good management and good employee relations. It was immediately apparent to me that I had been working in the dark ages! The British aviation suffered from the same bad management and lack of vision as the car industry!
@howardsimpson489
@howardsimpson489 Жыл бұрын
I owned my car repair business in NZ thru the 60's and 70's and ended up specialising in BMC. Minors, A30's, minis, Landrovers, Jags etc. Before that I worked on British motorbikes. They all had aspects in common, oil leaks galore, even when new, design faults that stayed unfixed or worsened for decades. The cast iron lump "A" series engine, made for the A30 and still used in the 90's. The Japanese made real improvements with every model even with major changes. When the Toyota Landcruiser came out, farmers cancelled their Landrover orders and bought cruisers despite being made by the yellow peril. I reckon the best small UK car was the ubiquitous 1100, everyone's mum had one, they drove and handled well, were long lived and easy to maintain with parts common to other BMC. Lucas was a joke, fortunately parallel imports allowed alternatives. BMC made both the Landrover and the Austin Gypsy, which like Jag and Triumph relentlessly competed until they died out. The Gypsy had a wonderful pressed sealed chassis and tough A90 or Wolseley 110 engines but rotten UK mild steel body work that rusted from day one. The Rover had shit mechanicals, chassis, engine and gearbox but great galvanised and aluminium bodies. If BMC had the wisdom to combine the best bits of both, and they were pretty compatible, it would have taken the Japs much longer to outsell them. When I imported bulk parts from the UK, my first job was to inspect each item and reject the faulty ones, the UK exporters expected this and usually compensated. Fortunately a lot of better bits were made in Australia. The colonies stopped regarding "Made In England" in favour of "Made In Japan".
@iansimpson6618
@iansimpson6618 Жыл бұрын
Had Rovers and would fume over the fact there was never any improvement . It was like, have they never driven or worked on these machines they build. Makes one angry to see a good product die from neglect.
@jwboatdesigns
@jwboatdesigns Жыл бұрын
I worked as a salesman for a motorcycle importer here in NZ. As a little pay perk we'd assemble and pre deliver bikes after hours. We had Triumphs, and Yamahas, and we got the same pay for each, we hated doing the Triumphs, much preferred the Yamahas. As an example, a Triumph Bonneville would take around 12 hours to get fully ready to put on the showroom floor, a Yamaha XS2 would be ready in about 3 hours. On the Triumphs we had to check every nut and bolt, tyre pressures, even spoke tensions on the wheels. All the covers, all the fittings check the lights and wiring, oil levels, even the acid in the battery. The Yamaha, we could take it for granted that other than basic unpacking from its crate, putting the front wheel and handlebars on, there was not much to do and two hits on the starter button and it would be running. Put the D plate on and whip it around the block to check brakes and such and wheel it out to the showroom.
@williampotter2098
@williampotter2098 Жыл бұрын
@@jwboatdesigns Yet the Bonnevilles are much more valuable now. Go figure.
@MrPomdownunder
@MrPomdownunder Жыл бұрын
I can't work out why Land Rover did not have a good look at Land Cruisers...Maybe they did but they didn't seem to improve their cars...
@TeaParty1776
@TeaParty1776 Жыл бұрын
I had an Austin-Healey 3000 that wouldnt start or stop.
@simonpritchard472
@simonpritchard472 Жыл бұрын
I've always thought that, yes, there were issues with work ethic, but ultimately the problems stemmed from where the buck stops -- management, especially senior management. Managers need to earn respect, to be tough but fair. Everyone involved needs to feel that they're part of a team, working together to deliver the product.
@rogerwoodhouse7945
@rogerwoodhouse7945 Жыл бұрын
Enter the Japanese!
@juergenlohse6902
@juergenlohse6902 Жыл бұрын
exactly ! The management is outsourced and Voila : All good old brands are profitable ! Proof, British craftmanshift is still on the market.
@MrJimheeren
@MrJimheeren Жыл бұрын
@crassgop hey if the whole management class are a bunch of Upper Class nitwits it’s no wonder everything goes to shit
@williampotter2098
@williampotter2098 Жыл бұрын
@@juergenlohse6902 But British craftsmanshift can't compete with mass produced products which are more affordable for the average person. I'm happy we still have fine craftsmanship in the world. I just wish I could afford it. And I make very good money.
@nachomolaolivera7580
@nachomolaolivera7580 Жыл бұрын
You forget management was put there mostly by unions. It is the direct fault of most of the workers (Except newcomers like the father of another comment here).
@Khowaiao1
@Khowaiao1 Жыл бұрын
Thank you very much for an excellent review. Unfortunately, most analysts overlook the complex and interrelated cultural factors. Germans and Japanese are culturally more unified in their lives, unlike the every man for himself culture of UK and US.
@andrew_koala2974
@andrew_koala2974 Жыл бұрын
You are exactly ON point. The U.S. has established its traditions from old England - the early figures in the American colonies were tied to and agents of the CROWN And still are. The CROWN still owns two thirds of the USA. The majority of people do not know where The capital of the United States of America is ? And those that guess - get it incorrect - as it is NOT where they think it is. In European royal circles these early leaders in the North American colonies where their agents with code names - George Washington was Washington 711 - and Benjamin Franklin was known as Moses. A reference to parting the pond for infiltration through the Hellfire Club and Nine Sister lounges. George Washington took orders from the Grand Lodge of Masonry from Daniel Coxe for plans for the federation of the British colonies. Benjamin Franklin became Post Master - an early form of what is today the NSA to spy on letters of concern. Independence Hall was constructed by Masons to formulate a revolution to take state powers and convert the centralized control of the GOVERNMENT. Rothschild's understood the importance of the Postal Service controlling it in Europe and control the "Pony Express" under Franklin. I call it the first NSA of its kind. Adam Smith was educated in the school of economics in Cambridge - England. He championed "open free Markets" giving total control of all the country's ports to offshore interest to the East India company. The Pope controlled Britain under the treaty of 1213 and all its possessions including acquired territories in India - America - Africa and China. How do you think we have such impressive Universities! Clue ... "Opium" trade.
@jamesfirth2392
@jamesfirth2392 Жыл бұрын
@@andrew_koala2974 are you an Allegro owner?
@bh5037
@bh5037 Жыл бұрын
and this - we fight only for us - is a narative of the brutal captalime in both countries as only by this they can press down wages ... and it worked until last 2020 but seems people realize and quit more often ..
@jeffreywarrensmith581
@jeffreywarrensmith581 Жыл бұрын
Not just cars. When I went to school in Australia -1950-60s- we were taught about wonderful English bone china, sheffield steel industry, Axminster and Westminster carpets, and their giant shipbuilding industry. So the problem seems to have been more than just the car industry.
@BatCountryAdventures
@BatCountryAdventures 11 ай бұрын
Oh yeah! My friend told me Sheffield used to make world-renown steel and I scoffed at the idea until I googled.
@douglasbull7829
@douglasbull7829 Жыл бұрын
Really enjoyed the clarity with which this story was arranged and presented. My years in and out of the UK has given me a shorthand in describing British social and economics problems as; "we have a heritage" and "It must be either/or" never considering that it might be 'neither/nor'.
@noelgibson5956
@noelgibson5956 Жыл бұрын
I live in Australia. In 1975, my parents purchased a brand new Triumph 2500 TC.......it was just rubbish. As a seven year old, I remember it literally breaking down as they left the showroom they purchased it from. We were still so close to the dealer that some employees from the dealership were able to come out and push it back into the premises to investigate the problem. They somehow patched up the issue and we hit the road back to the country town we arrived from.......but were stuck in Sydney an additional four days over what was planned. For the next five years that dad owned it, it was frequently off the road due to another glitch that required attention. That Britain still has a car industry now is astounding! Around that time, Australia still made plenty of cars, but due to poor quality, changing market preferences, expensive unionised workforces and the government removing import tarriffs, they are now all gone, the last car being produced in 2017. If the UK isn't careful, literally ALL it's manufacturing will be lost to China, Thailand or India.
@ivorgotten2368
@ivorgotten2368 Жыл бұрын
Hi Noel, that last sentence is a bit late. British companies do not own anything, and haven't for years. All of our utilities, ie Gas, Electricity, Water etc, are foriegn owned. We don't even own British Airways, or for that matter, the airports they fly from. The steel industry is owned by India. Power generation is owned by the French and the Chinese. As this video states we don't own any car manufacturers. We are building 3 new Royal Navy auxilliary ships, but the main company in the consortium is Spanish. The once great British Merchant Navy is now all but defunct, so we must rely on Foriegn shipping to deliver our goods. Everything we buy, which used to say Made In England or Britain, now says Made in China, Thailand or India. And the list goes on.
@noelgibson5956
@noelgibson5956 Жыл бұрын
@@ivorgotten2368 Yes I can relate. In 1975, our government was a signatory to the Lima agreement. From that point, on, the decline began. They did this without our approval. It meant manufacturing was effectively handed to developing countries on a platter, at great expense to ourselves. Now, helping others is admirable, but handing over entire industries? Two questions here:- is it really our job to ensure Chinese peasants are employed? And secondly, our leaders are elected to serve us, not the entire world. We currently have a leftist government pushing for us to be yet even greener, when we hardly contribute anything to g/w as it is. China is the No.l emitter. It's akin to asking someone to lose weight when they're anorexic whilst the fat kid escapes scrutiny. That we invest in China at all is treacherous. Organ harvesting, slave labour and genocide is apparently acceptable again. Every time Australia had a company that was successful, be it cars or making cookies, foreigners came in and just took control. It's just infuriating. Our.......ahem.......'government', just does nothing. I could say so much more, but you get my sentiments. Thanks for the insight.
@johnhouston9764
@johnhouston9764 Жыл бұрын
@@ivorgotten2368 so very 😥
@80sidd
@80sidd Жыл бұрын
British still have the breweries and pubs
@bryanwheeler1608
@bryanwheeler1608 Жыл бұрын
Most of the problems with vehicle manufacturing in Australia can be sheeted home to GM. They progressively meddled more & more in GMH decisions over the years, adding stupid "innovations" that destroyed the reliability of, in particular, Commodores. At one time, most electrical systems etc, were locally sourced, but as GMH went more & more to imported accessories, the cost went up & the value down. All this had happened before, with Leyland Australia, so the warning was there, but GM in the USA didn't care. By the time GMH closed manufacturing down, they were already a large im porter, but those cars weren't selling, either. It didn't get any better in the years since, so now, GM has pretty much disappeared from the Australian market.
@gartht6536
@gartht6536 Жыл бұрын
I worked in a factory in the 70's and 80's and there were people in the workforce who saw it as their 'job' to find any possible dispute and stop production. Many, not all of them saw themselves as communist and 'working against the system'. Workers and management knew this, but they were unable or afraid to remove or disempower these people. By the same token there were elements of management who took any opportunity to 'put the workers in their place' It was all politics and we see where it ended up, and knew it was going there. Small independently owned companies could probably have survived, but there was no accountability in the huge monoliths.
@jerrymcgeorge4117
@jerrymcgeorge4117 Жыл бұрын
I worked for the USA Jaguar Cars organization ‘86 - 2000. You can never blame who Jeremy Clarkson often referred to as “the British worker Johnny.” The issues started at the top, when the top was removed and replaced by Ford execs there was a brief period of hope. Then the top of Ford was replaced and it all went straight down the crapper. Props to the lads and lassies at Browns Lane who in one year received Ford’s highest quality plant award, and were subsequently shut down. That there was anything left for Tata to buy is a miracle. Yet I fear the future may be even worse.
@svanimation8969
@svanimation8969 Жыл бұрын
In India tata's business FULL on boom ! 🥳
@svanimation8969
@svanimation8969 Жыл бұрын
Specially cars I'm talkin about! Tata's nexon EV rock ! In India ! People's literally waiting for cars 🤣 2-3 years ! Here !
@petersteele4948
@petersteele4948 Жыл бұрын
A friend of mine bought a beautiful new Series 3 XJ Jaguar when they arrived on the scene here in Australia. Of course, he suffered a string of issues including oil leaks and nuts had been placed inside the hubcaps at the factory, obvious for a bit of fun. Took him ages to find the rattle. He sold it after about two years and bought an S Class Benz. He lamented the loss of the beautiful Jag and used to say “ If only they’d let the Japs build it.” True story.
@Cdr_Mansfield_Cumming
@Cdr_Mansfield_Cumming Жыл бұрын
Hmm, I grew up in Coventry. My Dad, Granddad, Uncles and Aunts all worked for Morris, Jaguar, Talbot/Peugeot, Triumph, Hillman, Land Rover, Massey Ferguson and Alvis. I saw my Dad move from one to the other. I remember most of my family members were hardly at work in the 1970s; it appeared they were always on strike. The inefficiencies in the industry could have been resolved into the 1980s, just like they did in the USA. My Granddad worked for British Leyland at the Standard works. He worked nights for a decade. At the same time, he also had a full-time job during the day. He managed it because they slept during the night shift. They couldn't get rid of the bad practices because the Unions would call a strike if anyone were disciplined or sacked. If only they knew then what we know now. Would they had some national pride and pull the British Car industry into better shape?
@allanfifield8256
@allanfifield8256 Жыл бұрын
I worked at a large printing plant in the 1990's. The pres supervisor (one of the most important positions in a large plant) was about 45 and very English working class in accent and mannerisms. I asked him if he ever went back to England and the answer was one time, never again. I asked, "Why?". He said that when he visited that one time that all his friends and colleagues who had anything on the ball had emigrated. Only the losers had stayed in England and he had no sympathy or interest in those left.
@MrPolicekarim
@MrPolicekarim Жыл бұрын
You OZ, please?
@romansseja4062
@romansseja4062 Жыл бұрын
Spot on and the very points I have been countering those posting in the press blaming Thatcher. In my youth I was aware of this malaise by my father (a displaced person after the war) asked the owner of the textile factory employing him why he didn't replace the belt drives on his machines with modern electric motors (as in Europe). ''We're OK, we are making profits''. Over those years, 60's - 80's, I'd heard operators offer suggestions to be told ''You are here to work not to think'', and then operators clocking in at the last minute, brew tea, then switch on thie machines. Whilst in Germany and Japan operators arrive in good time to switch on the machine (to warm up), then make coffee and start work ''on the buzzer''. All the large manufacturing sites I'd worked in are now housing estates.
@rreif5934
@rreif5934 Жыл бұрын
I believe that part of the problem was the "Be British, Buy British" attitude for a long time (same here in the U.S. with "Buy American") where problems with the industry were glossed over because they didn't get the market feedback that was needed to avoid getting passed by other countries. A prime example in the period was Lucas Electric, the Prince of Darkness, that was used because they were the only British supplier. Why improve quality and innovation when they were still buying your cars anyway?
@TeaParty1776
@TeaParty1776 Жыл бұрын
I was told that the faulty electrics in my A-H 3000 was because the wires were covered, not by rubber, but by WW2 bandages. Why do I think of Benny Hill?
@trentweston8306
@trentweston8306 Жыл бұрын
I'm glad you mentioned Clarkson's car years that is another great insight into the problems going on.
@PaladinCasdin
@PaladinCasdin Жыл бұрын
It's an absolute tragedy that so many of those great names are no longer with us, especially since in so many cases it was simple human pig-headedness that caused all the issues! Classic example is of course the Triumph Stag, was originally envisaged to use the 3.5l Rover V8 but very early on in the design process Rover said no (allegedly because of the old rivalry between the two companies), so Triumph had to design their own engine from scratch in a fraction of the time they needed - and we know how that went. Could have been one of the all-time great cars, could have been a V8 MX-5 years before Mazda had the idea, but the crap engine let it down. What really annoys me about the whole process is that Austin basically kick-started the Japanese car industry after WW2, with their agreements with Datsun/Nissan (the US did the same with Toyota, and they're not much better off). Austin engineers went to Japan, saw the way they did things there, came home and CHANGED NOTHING. The same thing happened with the motorbike industry, when Triumph, Norton, BSA etc started getting kicked by Yamaha, Honda, Suzuki... maddening that no one thought to do anything about it. (Incidentally, Triumph Motorcycles is entirely British owned. To my knowledge, they're all that's left. 😭) Even worse is that Rover MG could have been amazing, the Rover 75 was an absolutely fantastic car that could eat its German rivals for breakfast - and it failed because Rover had a reputation for unreliability. Which the 75 absolutely was not, but how do you convince people of that? The damage had been done.
@neilritson7445
@neilritson7445 Жыл бұрын
you like the vw and Porsche air cooled engines in the back then?
@chrissmith7655
@chrissmith7655 Жыл бұрын
Hi, poor management end of. Working in VM in Ellesmere port I reported a fault in a product being made to a member of management, 'It will get picked up down the line,' was the reply. 'Why not correct the problem at source?' I asked. 'Can't stop production.' so we carried on making rubbish at management behest.
@mazdaman1286
@mazdaman1286 Жыл бұрын
A mate of mine worked for Leyland , I had to work 10 days to earn the same as him in a week. He always complained how poorly paid he was. The funny thing he took so many sick days a month , and still left me for dead in the earnings stakes. I felt sorry for the workers who were trying to pay a mortgage get kids brought up because of the strikes, my mate didn't care he went back after the strike got overtime etc and just threw the cars together . He went on to other jobs after Rover folded with the same attitude, he did not stay long in any of them then wound up on the dole where he remains. He felt he was entitled to everything ...he was the rule not the exception...
@LordOfLight
@LordOfLight Жыл бұрын
No he wasn't. Not that there aren't plenty like him, but not the rule........except in places where management were so awful they engendered that kind of attitude.
@johnchristmas7522
@johnchristmas7522 Жыл бұрын
Thats the responsibility of Management. Should have closed down the plant and built it in the West Country.First item? Top Class management, ( same level as BMW!) not boys in suits who just past the "management" exam!
@T16MGJ
@T16MGJ Жыл бұрын
Now that "The English patient" disease has spread throughout the British Public Sector. Much evidence daily now and worsening. EVERYBODY OUT is not just a sound from the distant past UK. For the most part, the UK does not have a manufacturing base anymore worth a mention, So Red Robbo clones near extinct there now. Plenty of clones in the Public Sector though. TV News channels allow them to spread their good words to all for the benefit of the Nation. It is fake news that only British Cars suffered extensive corrosion. Most maybe all did back then. My father died forty years ago. His Toyota Starlet's metal dissolved as you stood there watching it. Even the Japanese did not have access to top quality metal and protection processes back then.Some of the items on my Honda proof positive of that. Italian car companies withdrew from the UK consumer market due to shocking terminal corrosion issues with their cars. All that seems to be conveniently forgotten by those determined to bad mouth assure this nation's ongoing decline. Some say that is both assured and deserved. Ask your friendly MoT tester how many relative modern day Fords, Mercedes etc he has failed due to serious corrosion in recent years. Only in the UK .. :SIGH: The land of the increasingly self-inflicted. EVERYBODY OUT. The words of the Nation's Lynch Mob.
@michaelmurray7379
@michaelmurray7379 Жыл бұрын
In 1979 i started an apprenticeship with Lucas Girling, i was 16. In just a few days i was amazed how the workers on the factory floor were taking the piss. Going to the toilets with news papers under there arms, Going to wash there hands half an hour before lunch, going to the toilets for half an hour after lunch. I knew at the age of 16 that this would not end well. I only done 3 years of my apprenticeship, because the factory closed, with a loss of 3000 jobs. Lazy bastards.
@spanishpeaches2930
@spanishpeaches2930 Жыл бұрын
Their...
@arianbyw3819
@arianbyw3819 Жыл бұрын
We had a branch of Lucas hurling down the road from me. The workers stole everything that wasn't nailed down.
@paulnolan1352
@paulnolan1352 Жыл бұрын
Agreed and Lucas electrics were crap.
@T16MGJ
@T16MGJ Жыл бұрын
Michael, I speak from experience that those negative and harmful to the Nation qualities are still alive and kicking in the UK. Not in what little now remains of the now extinct UK manufacturing of course, but in the Public Sector. Another tells me that many hundreds of Laptops issued to civil servants within one Government agency went missing. Far too much "The Taxpayer must provide" mindset now rife in many areas of the Public Sector. Meantime, EVERYBODY OUT. Where's my tea and biscuits.
@georgec7899
@georgec7899 Жыл бұрын
Yes i visited the Factory in Koblenz in Germany the difference was Night and Day compared to the UK plant-they worked hard in Koblenz and deserved to succeed
@graemeyetts3465
@graemeyetts3465 Жыл бұрын
I was there as a kid at the time,and remember well my British car owning Dad bemoaning the industry's decline.Even more so when his motorcycling enthusiast Son cut his teeth on Honda and Kawasaki. To summarise; British government,and previously British industrial management, tried to do everything on the cheap. Undoubtedly complacency played a major part here. As a youngster I could not understand how a shiny new Datsun or Toyota could be exported from thousands of miles away with a landed price below that of a local product. My old man was an engineer by trade. His explanation focused mainly on cheaper labour. In defence of Austin,Morris and Rover,the country was broke post war and this surely affected investment strategy. It is of course correct that the former Axis powers were barred from military production and of course needed to find alternatives and quickly. Labour relations were entirely different in Germany and Japan than here in Britain. I had the benefit of spending time regularly as a teen and even then I saw that Germany did things for the longer term,and funded properly. The outcome is the saddest and most unfortunate outcome now,in that Honda and Nissan are now largely the "British Car Industry" and supported and staffed by British tax payers. Unintentionally, or otherwise, Britain can take little pride in "Doing things on the cheap" I'm absolutely no left winger,nor socialist,but everybody lost here,not least the ordinary working Man.
@PacoOtis
@PacoOtis Жыл бұрын
Bravo, from here in the States! Excellently presented! Best of luck!
@PaulOostindie
@PaulOostindie Жыл бұрын
In 1983 I was sent from Canada to the old Bowater Mersey paper mill in Ellesmere Port to help with the engineering of the three paper machine rebuilds that were 2 years behind schedule. The old mill had 14 unions I was told and went under from labour issues. A Canadian company bought it and were rebuilding it as a non-union mill. I remember going into the control room one day about 10:15am. And the operators were all in the adjoining kitchen/lunchroom. I noticed a number of alarms beeping and flashing on the screens. And asked the operators how did they know if these were critical alarms or not. They responded that it didn't matter because it was tea time and they continued to discuss a cricket game for the next five minutes before going back to work I worked there for 2 years and yes during tea time it didn't matter if the pulper was overflowing and the ground floor was 2 foot deep in pulp. How can you run a mill efficiently with those kind of ingrained attitudes. But I also acknowledge there are bigger issues; at the time the labourers and skilled tradesmen were paid about 1/2 to 1/3 that of Canadian workers who were mostly unionized when the cost of living was definetly not lower than in Canada.
@bobrose7900
@bobrose7900 Жыл бұрын
Labour relations in the late 60s, 70s and early 80 were appalling. My dad would often cite that the wrong person made a cup of tea and everyone walked out. Quality was therefore abysmal and the common thought from the workers were that they would never buy a car that they produced. I could rattle on about this but I'm fed up relating these tales. Remember Red Robbo slagging off the products that he built - instant dismissal but this was the general thinking behind the products. Strikes meant less money for R&D and you had some horrendous designs coming out.. and the press had a field day. Forming the Leyland group was a complete mistake and companies should have been allowed to fail without years of support by the Government of the day with the same eventual ending. Coming home from school us kids were more often that not met by our father out on strike. It was endless, and depressing. A turning point was when Honda got involved, only to lose their support when part was farmed off to BMW without any consideration for Honda. If it could go wrong it did and the eventual management by-out was a fiasco. Shame, because there were some good cars about at the very end... Great video, if a little frustrating and upsetting for me.
@motsigman
@motsigman Жыл бұрын
The product was sh1t, the workers never OK'd the product..
@neilritson7445
@neilritson7445 Жыл бұрын
Hi Bob - see my comment. Pressure on sales affected everyone and that created the stress and aggro. I was IR Officer in Cov for the EEF!!!!!
@euc131
@euc131 Жыл бұрын
Excellent summary - I don't think it matters too much who owns the brands - so long as the cars are being built here. Rolls and Bentley are making far more cars (and money) than ever before and the cars are really well built.
@jneyron
@jneyron Жыл бұрын
Quality, quality quality. I am a Canadian born in1950 and we had lost of British car in Canada at that time but their quality was poor, poor, poor. There is your answer
@Jonathan_Doe_
@Jonathan_Doe_ Жыл бұрын
The problem with building factories in deprived areas to try and improve their economies is, sometimes areas are deprived because the people are.
@FrunkensteinVonZipperneck
@FrunkensteinVonZipperneck Жыл бұрын
The greatest deprivation was education. At age 11, boys were sorted out, denying them access to decent learning. Result? The UK has the worst rate of literacy of any OECD nation. Yes, "literacy." Reading competence.
@michaelboyce7079
@michaelboyce7079 Жыл бұрын
The "cup of tea and a biscuit" analogy reminded me of a story I read years ago about the BSA factory. Some visitors were being shown through the works and one of them asked about an oven he had spotted. Their guide told them it was used to temper new crank shafts and opened the door to show them the insides, only to find two pies in there, warming up for lunch!
@Allanfearn
@Allanfearn Жыл бұрын
And who was running BSA then? Docker?
@T16MGJ
@T16MGJ Жыл бұрын
Whatever next, frying eggs and bacon on the coal shovel of a steam locomotive. 🤗
@georgec7899
@georgec7899 Жыл бұрын
Having spent 40 years in the British motor industry in vehicle components during a visit to a well known British Motor Electrical Manufacturer in Birmingham i stopped to ask a assembler on Dynamos .I was immediately ushered away not to speak to this man as the Area Manager was behind me and i was not supposed to do this because of a possible walk out of the men on this facility.It is of little wonder that we we lost major automobile car manufacturers to other Nations
@thedwightguy
@thedwightguy Жыл бұрын
Prince Charles opened up a BSA plant in LA very near our house in the mid-sixties: they were going to take the motorcycle market and Japan hadn't got going strong just yet. I think the plant was in Irwindale (industrial zoning) bu tnot sure, and don't know what happened to the plant.
@eweunkettles8207
@eweunkettles8207 Жыл бұрын
we used the electrode holding ovens to cook pies and other greasy delights , even cooked a whole pheasant in tinfoil that a scaffolder had dropped a well aimed clip on from up on a rig jacket in an 80s fabrication yard happy pre thatcher union days !
@neglectedloves
@neglectedloves Жыл бұрын
Very interesting video 🙏🏻 The recovering car industry as well as many other industries in the UK will deeply suffer from the worst decision ever, the Brexit. Ordering goods in the UK has become a living nightmare with never ending extra costs, shipping delays and customs hassles. Honestly I try to avoid ordering in the UK as often as possible... 😩
@kmrerk
@kmrerk Жыл бұрын
In 1961, I bought my 1st new car. I really liked the way it looked. It was so fun to drive. It was an MG1100, black, with nice, brick red, soft nuagahyde upholstery. It stopped working with only 6700 miles. It was still under warranty. The dealer couldn't fix it. It sat in the shop for over four months. That engine oiled transmission had burned out. I managed to get the dealer to give me a partial refund. It could have been such a great car.
@feefyefoefum
@feefyefoefum Жыл бұрын
My dad bought a new Rover 3500 SE in 1982, it was a beautiful and well made car and aside from some small issues it was reliable and he owned it for ten years. BL could make good cars when it tried, they weren't all terrible like the Morris Ital. I think pride in the product is a factor.
@Number27
@Number27 Жыл бұрын
That Rover was a good car but they weren’t well made.. you must have been lucky! Thanks for watching!
@feefyefoefum
@feefyefoefum Жыл бұрын
@@Number27 It was an export model to Australia, so maybe they got special attention?
@fantabuloussnuffaluffagus
@fantabuloussnuffaluffagus Жыл бұрын
He owned it for 10 whole years? A typical Toyota goes 10 years before needing its first repair. I have a Mazda that's 25 years old and still going strong. If that's the best of the brutish car industry, no wonder it failed.
@TheBuccy
@TheBuccy Жыл бұрын
I had an Rover SD1 2600, a fantastic car ,smooth as hell good, fuel consumption . British engineering is world beating. Politicians and the management class they come from are fucking useless as we are finding out to our co0st today.
@TheBuccy
@TheBuccy Жыл бұрын
@@fantabuloussnuffaluffagus rubbish I worked on all marques, they all break down from time to time. Trouble with the Brits is their inherent snobbery. If they buy a foreign car and its a lemon they tend to keep stum and suck it up.
@patrickhostler5939
@patrickhostler5939 Жыл бұрын
I will also add that the way we buy or rather obtain cars now, will have a massive affect on the industry globally. The majority are now leased/rented from new, then swapped after 2-3 or 4 years. As a result I genuinely don’t think people care about their cars like they used to, they are seen as almost disposable, or something to ‘update’ like a mobile phone. With the insane complexity of modern vehicles now people buying them down the line are going to be in for some shocking bills when they inevitably go wrong… and of course no one can repair them at home on a Sunday morning… I think this will have serious repercussions for car manufacturers in the rest of the world!
@shadeburst
@shadeburst Жыл бұрын
A guy I used to know loved to tour Africa in a Landy. The first thing he did was to strip out all the electronics and fuel injection and replace them with stuff he could repair by the light of a kerosene lamp in the middle of nowhere. Modern cars produce amazing power with unbelievable fuel economy compared to the cars I grew up with, but they need a lot of maintenance. If something stops working the mechanics don't waste a second trying to repair it. They chuck it out and install a new part (at a cost that would have bought a whole car in my ancient days).
@LordOfLight
@LordOfLight Жыл бұрын
Last time I looked the Toyota plant in Burnaston was the 2nd most efficient car plant in Europe. The 1st most efficient was the Nissan plant in Sunderland. As it happens the latter was also the most efficient car plant in the world. This was a few years ago but well after the 70s. Don't blame the fellers on the shop floor for the failings of their management. "I've spent 30 years going round factories. When you know something's wrong, nine times out of ten it's the management, people aren't being led right. And bad leaders invariably blame the people." ~ Sir John Harvey-Jones R.I.P.
@outwiththem
@outwiththem Жыл бұрын
Right. They hire managers from colleges. Not from the assembly lines. Stupid. Japs hire managers from assembly lines instead.
@intercommerce
@intercommerce Жыл бұрын
I think you're right on all counts, you've neatly explained it. I miss all those British car manufacturers!
@MePeterNicholls
@MePeterNicholls Жыл бұрын
“We’re British don’t you know! The world can’t teach US!!!!!!! Nor can you lower classes. Know your place!”
@raypitts4880
@raypitts4880 Жыл бұрын
sounds like monty python again im above him and he below me i know my place
@rredlum9466
@rredlum9466 Жыл бұрын
An interesting analysis. The militance of the workforce , a sure contributor to the demise, was crushed by Thatcher during the eighties. The major blame though imho lies with the management of the factories. As long as the founder of a brand was still in full control eg. Sir Lions of Jaguar, he was able to produce cars the likes of the Jaguar E-type after an amazingly short development time. All this for a very competitive market price, meaning that the production proces was very efficient. Management was by common sense and down to earth with a detailed knowledge of all aspects of car design, production, marketing etc. Knowledge acquired by learning on the job and not in a fancy business school. Only when the financial professionals started having the top positions in management instead of the engineers, things started to go down. When the politicians started to meddle with affairs the demise was accelerated. After my recent visit to a Volkswagen plant, I was astonished about the level of engineering involved designing the cars but also the production facilities with ease of assembly in mind. Very little specialised labour force is required for work on the production line. For instance, random students looking for part time jobs are trained very briefly to execute a few simple things and a permanent local quality control ensures that no mistakes are passed on down the line. In the German car industry the engineers are calling the shots. It iseems no coincidence that Bentley and Rolls Royce are German owned nowadays I believe. The British skills of the workers are among the best in the world and the Japanese and Germans are profiting of it, it is the management to blame.
@dryfrog
@dryfrog Жыл бұрын
Your picture of the red E-type woke me up! I had a '67 4.2 E-Type coupe in Nassau Cream. Still the prettiest car I ever owned. It was 4 years old when I got it, sure of many years service. Got "Jagged-out" fast and traded it for a 914 in a year.
@mariaefelices6543
@mariaefelices6543 Жыл бұрын
Very accurate,I worked for BL. For 30yrs up to 1988 as a technician in lex cardiff ,always short of spares through strikes at cowley and others ,made life hard apologising to customers why their cars off the road for weeks if not months ,I cant fix a motor without the part etc etc bad days ,thats why the public lost faith and BOUGHT foreign cars ,some cheaper as well ,great documentary interesting ,ty mark shaddock cardiff
@alwynhuigens8431
@alwynhuigens8431 Жыл бұрын
In the early 1960th I worked for a Ford dealer in the Netherlands as a 16 year old. My task was to prepare new cars for delivery most either English Cortinas and Germans Taurus' in more or less equal numbers. Th e cars needed a check of all bolts, clamps and completeness of parts . No Cortina was ever without defects or surplus part such as screws or bolts lloose, missing or left over. Floor mats missing, trunks not fully outfitted etc. A clear indication of workers care and pride being insufficient. Never were such incidents encountered in the German Fords. The two cars were identical in size, power and price but incomparable in quality and up to date technology. I always liked the English Fords but after that I would never buy one.
@ShutterBiscuit
@ShutterBiscuit Жыл бұрын
You pretty much hit the nail on the head. Strong unions, an unmotivated workforce, and inept management were the major factors in the demise of the British car (and motorcycle) industry. One thing not spoken about was the lack of "not looking over our shoulder" when it came to the competition brought on by simple arrogance. One legendary example is when the President of BSA/Triumph took delivery of a Honda CB750, the drive chain broke, and he didn't see the Japanese motorcycle industry as a threat after that.
@fairybuddy-angel2035
@fairybuddy-angel2035 Жыл бұрын
Yet strong unions work well in Germany and France. Our culture of clash and conflict (thriving for 12 years under the current Tory coup) is very different to theirs of cooperation.
@stephendavis6066
@stephendavis6066 Жыл бұрын
Unmotivated work force , inept management... if the managers got their act together, the workers just want a proper share....politics needs to follow solid business leadership not the other way...
@Comakino
@Comakino Жыл бұрын
Leyland was hopeless, and the Japanese and Germans killed off the rest by making better cars, and cheaper cars. Look at the TR6/7 vs the 240Z. Leyland should have made the mid-engined MG prototype they had on the cards and focussed on lower volume, for higher profit. There's a reason Land Rover and Aston are still around.
@ShutterBiscuit
@ShutterBiscuit Жыл бұрын
@Retired Bore I don't give crap as to what his title actually was. He was the man in charge, that was my point.
@martinrichardhorrocks9869
@martinrichardhorrocks9869 Жыл бұрын
@@Comakino Aston Martin has been a curse for its owners since 1923. Not long before its vampire attraction does for Lawrence Stroll either by the look of things! A mass manufacturer without premium brand recognition cannot reinvent itself as a low volume high profit offer. BL arguably had the brands like Jaguar/Rover/MG/Triumph to do what BMW&VW/Audi & gradually increase volume of quality products. ** Unfortunately, BL couldn´t do quality ,particularly not quality in all aspects of the business (TQM) as per the Germans and Japanese. I think there is also a British perception problem of mistaking luxury/exclusivity (based on élitism) and quality (based on value). * * Jaguar is about to find this out with its new strategy to become a luxury brand even though it hasn´t managed to be a serious player in the lower level premium market sector. Clever image protion has to be matched or exceeded by appropriate product, service and some sort of "specialness". Jaguar Land Rover simply don´t have the resources to put themselves there, and wishes fall short of plans.
@billdew5558
@billdew5558 3 ай бұрын
I was an apprentice during the 60’s and what struck me as a teenager was the bitterness felt by the general workforce was the feeling that they, the workforce had “won the war” but they got no reward or thanks for their effort. The turnaround in the 80’s was not because of Thatcher but because this militant workforce had now retired.
@johnday1172
@johnday1172 Жыл бұрын
Great commentary. You have some very valid information & thank you.
@rickden8362
@rickden8362 Жыл бұрын
The decline of British industry started before the post WW2 era. It began with it's worst political decision of the last 100 years...entering WW1. There was really no reason for Britain to enter the war but the economic results were devastating. Britain entered the war as the world greatest creditor, it exited the war as the worlds greatest debtor. Living in illusion of an empire they couldn't see was about to dissolve around them.
@kurt2022
@kurt2022 Жыл бұрын
I had a friend that bought a used Jaguar around 2002 and I'm thinking it was a '94 or '95 car, it had a pressure switch that failed on the anti-lock brake system and the only replacement part available was oem. What I thought was a $30 part, cost nearly $600 from Jaguar. He freaked out on the price but coughed up the money to buy it and get the car back on the road. A couple of months later he had something else very expensive fail and he gave up on the car and sold it for next to nothing. The huge parts mark up in the US turned many away from British cars.
@stevemawer848
@stevemawer848 Жыл бұрын
That'll be your import taxes protecting home industries, then. 🙂
@funkymonk984
@funkymonk984 Жыл бұрын
I know nothing about cars and car manufacturing. But I love your speaking style. You seem perpetually on the edge of delivering a punch line to a joke. And yet you are not telling a joke at all. You just seem very pleased to share your knowledge and thoughts. You also leave the ending conclusions open to the audience in a nice way. I think if you spoke on any topic, it would be similarly charged with the joy of sharing ideas.
@ninelaivz4334
@ninelaivz4334 Жыл бұрын
Also I think they made some funny-duddy car designs that once we were out of the 50s and 60s couldn't compete with Italian designs, German and Japanese efficiencies. The only UK cars that stood out were the high end cars. Having said that, had management allowed the designers to do their thing British car designs would have been way ahead of the competition. The Austin Allegro was meant to be a hot hatch. Its design was a good 15 years ahead of its time but management said no and instead, they produced that grandpa design .
@mikethespike7579
@mikethespike7579 Жыл бұрын
Management always had a thing about costs. Everything had to cost nothing but look like a million pounds. That's why British cars always ended up looking a bit strange.
@nigelb6262
@nigelb6262 Жыл бұрын
Great video as usual. I would say complacency and lack of capital investment post WW2 are the main reasons.
@caeserromero3013
@caeserromero3013 Жыл бұрын
Donald Stokes campaigning to join the (then) EEC was a bone headed move. He envisaged 'sweeping Europe' with Leyland cars. All it ended up doing was making foreign imports more attractive to the UK market. Rather than gaining a European market, they lost the home market. Allegro vs Golf was no contest.
@sonnylatchstring
@sonnylatchstring Жыл бұрын
Poor quality was a big issue. British themselves were used to servicing their own cars, foreigners not. The times a British built car didn't leak oil was a sign there was not enough oil in the engine.
@shadeburst
@shadeburst Жыл бұрын
In 1969 I bought a Honda 350. It revved to ten and a half and felt like a sewing machine. For a week I swapped bikes with a friend who had a Triumph Thunderbolt. It vibrated so badly that I could not close my hands on the handlebars.
@DrakeN-ow1im
@DrakeN-ow1im Жыл бұрын
1960s Jaguars used more oil than they leaked - comparable to two-stroke engines!
@sorinmiliescu
@sorinmiliescu Жыл бұрын
I used to know the owner of a Rover dealership, and I laughed my head off when he told that they used to drain the engine and transmission oil from the brand spanking new cars before to bring them in the showroom, so that they will not leak on the showroom floor 😂🤣😅
@Number27
@Number27 Жыл бұрын
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
@jimmys6566
@jimmys6566 Жыл бұрын
simply untrue
@raypitts4880
@raypitts4880 Жыл бұрын
like my triumph tiger cub 1961 i used to park all over the place to cover the oil leaks it stopped leaking now 2022
@jguenther3049
@jguenther3049 Жыл бұрын
Betcha my boots, they failed to refill at least one of them before it was put out on the road.
@jguenther3049
@jguenther3049 Жыл бұрын
@@jimmys6566 Were ye there, Moriarity?
@edoardodisetti4798
@edoardodisetti4798 Жыл бұрын
Hi Jack, very interesting adn well done. As a car lover and Italian, I see so many (sad) analogies with what happened to the Italian car industry. All that know-how and brand value gone, for good, I am afraid......
@ehehbwucee
@ehehbwucee Жыл бұрын
From 1970 I have had something like 25 cars from new, company and personal. In the early days when a British car was bought, first thing you did was put a notebook in the car, write down all the things that needed fixing. At the initial service there could be as many as 20-30 faults and a few pages in the notebook filled. By the 90s and dominance from other car manufacturers (not UK) the notebook often never had an entry for first check. Now it is unusual to find an initial fault. Cars from Japan (or wherever made) and Europe. Unions have a place but thank goodness those troublemakers of old have gone and some reasonable dialogue exists (mostly).
@johnwright9372
@johnwright9372 Жыл бұрын
Good video and well balanced. The story about the trim shop is telling, but to me it reflects more on unprofessional senior management largely composed of old school tie types to whom the notion of including the work force in management decisions, sharing responsibility and the benefits with staff was anathema. They did not innovate or invest in modern production plant. I remember working at a large manufacturing company in the mid 70s which had a machine made in 1916 stamping out steel parts.
@georgec7899
@georgec7899 Жыл бұрын
That Typifies our current POLITICIANS it appears
@jamesbryan3983
@jamesbryan3983 Жыл бұрын
I don’t know anyone who has so succinctly put together the facts for this demise before this. Well researched , easily digestible, factual. Well done.
@letitrest4662
@letitrest4662 Жыл бұрын
Pish...
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