Smiths gauges were very popular in the Aussie muscle car scene in the 70/80's so their appearance in Mad Max isn't surprising, but this is a good spot for sure.
I have mates who still covet these gauges in their 70's Toranas.
(This was spotted by Howard Lowe of 'Smiths Bishops Cleeve' on facebook. I just took the screen-grabs and looked into it.)
In Mad Max 2 The Road Warrior (at 1.05mins)
Before nitro
After nitro
The speedometer was in the six-wheeled Humungous Truck on a Ford F-100 Chassis.
The truck has only one seat lined with cow hide. The vehicle is equipped with a loudspeaker system. Behind the seat is a roll bar with megaphones mounted up top. Behind the bar is a spoiler. Riders can often be seen hanging off of the back or sides.
The truck is easily recognizable by its six wheels, with all four of the rear wheels appearing to be powered. The truck also has two large chrome 'big rig' style exhaust pipes and menacing bull bars in the front, which prisoners are mounted to. In the back there are two 55 gallon tanks and a fuel pump. Two tridents and a mace are installed on the sides of the cab.
Humungus' truck also has a nitrous oxide system equipped, which allows it to reach high speeds for a six-wheeled vehicle. This system is used to catch up with the V8 Interceptor , as well as to ram the tanker head-on during the film's final chase.
A replacement part
This ad tells a story
"The whole purpose of mechanical watches is to be impertinent." ~ Lionel a Marca, CEO of Breguet
Smiths gauges were very popular in the Aussie muscle car scene in the 70/80's so their appearance in Mad Max isn't surprising, but this is a good spot for sure.
I have mates who still covet these gauges in their 70's Toranas.
Keen eyes, might give it a watch this weekend
They do oil pressure too!
Fill your boots.
https://www.minisport.com/mini-mecha...-for-mini.html
There is lots of Smiths stuff still available for old minis.
A post of mine from a couple of years ago with another Smiths sighting in a movie.
https://forum.tz-uk.com/showthread.p...ghlight=Smiths
Most of my early cars, starting as a teenager, were minis and so far as I recall they all had Smiths gauges - speedo, temp and oil pressure. My very first was an old early 60s model with the original 'soup stirrer' gear lever and of course the thief-friendly sliding windows which perhaps surprisingly continued in models for many years. I think I was impressed by the whiplash aerial which someone had put on it, but it quickly became apparent that the old girl was completely clapped out. Sorry, I digress.
The majority of people here seem to prefer the older vintage style 'boobies' Smiths logo for TF models, but whilst I like both I tend to favour the block capitals style perhaps because I'd seen it so often on gauges and clocks when I was young.
Another Smiths in the wild: the speedometer on the milk float in the Father Ted parody of Speed, in which Dougal has to keep his speed above 5mph otherwise the bomb will explode...
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would be more shocking to see them use anything that said Lucas in the post apocalypse :) or was that the 70's!
The PRS-40 could never have been a Mad Max watch for two reasons.
Reason 1:
"Another related but different scenario involves what I like to call (as of five minutes ago when I made it up) the Mad Max Watch Hypothesis. This posits that a mechanical watch is inherently superior to a quartz watch because in the event of a collapse of technological society (which is beginning to seem more like a blessing in disguise than an apocalypse lately, depending on how grouchy you feel about the day's headlines) a mechanical watch can be serviced. A quartz watch on the other hand, will, in the fullness of time, run its battery down and die – not with a bang, but with a whimper." (JACK FORSTER)
The Watch To Wear If You're Going Off The Grid For Good
https://www.hodinkee.com/articles/th...-grid-for-good
Reason 2:
In terms of the equipment used in the Mad Max movies the key words are:
"Found-Objects, Re-purposed."
RE-PURPOSED = Something recognizable used in an unfamiliar way. The idea about repurposing is that the original application should be obvious and the re-purpose surprising.
The PRS-40 is not something re-purposed. If anything, it is a prototype.
"The whole purpose of mechanical watches is to be impertinent." ~ Lionel a Marca, CEO of Breguet
Probably a bit heretical in these parts, but I'm pretty certain I wouldn't be all that bothered about a watch in a post apocalyptic wasteland situation.
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