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THE AGES OF SERVICE

A. survey of the woi'ld's motor-cars and commercial motor vehicles reveals the amazing fact that nearly one-third of the automobiles in the world at December last were eight years old or older. Statistics of the leading motorised countries show that, of the 42,942.694 cars and-trucks in operation at the,,end 8f 1938, no less than 13.287.845 had seen, at least eight years' service. Of that total of aged automobiles, 10,239,197 were nine years old or older, and 6,112,727 ten or more years of age. - ; Indicative of how economic and political difficulties affect the production of new units and sales of new and used automobile?: is the striking fact that, at ■ the end of; 1937, there were in the world only 3,339,000 motor vehicles ten years old or older, yet twelve months later, the aggregate of these ancients had nearly doubled. More people hung on to their old' machines and fewer old-timers went to the wreckers' yards. Th£ figures ' reveal what« a colossal potential for the sale of new vehicles lies ahead of the industry, for obviously many millions of the ancients must be nearing the "junking" stage.

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/EP19390624.2.188.5

Bibliographic details

Evening Post, Volume CXXVII, Issue 147, 24 June 1939, Page 28

Word Count
190

THE AGES OF SERVICE Evening Post, Volume CXXVII, Issue 147, 24 June 1939, Page 28

THE AGES OF SERVICE Evening Post, Volume CXXVII, Issue 147, 24 June 1939, Page 28