Originally Posted By: CourierDriver
Would the men of 1950 be more mechanically savvy in fixing the family cars of 1950's then the men of 2013 . Examples: engine rebuilding, tuneups, transmissions, radiator replacements, fenders, bumpers, etc.
The family cars of the 'fifties required a lot more fixing than those of today and they were pretty simple by current standards.
The average car of the past thirty years will could reach an easy 150K with no more than quick oil change outlet maintenance and probably one brake job and a couple of sets of tires.
No bulky ignition points to service and replace anymore, no carbs requiring adjustment and rebuilding, and with modern platinum plugs, plug replacement is usually more a matter of removing them while they'll still come out than real need.
Modern oils combined with modern engine management systems have also played a role in increasing engine life, so there's typically no need to do a field overhaul of an engine.
Cars are far more complicated now than then, but they also need much less attention on a regular basis to run reliably.
If the impecunious or the curious needed to learn the skills of yesteryear, they would.
Modern cars have made those skills largely irrelevant.
My take is that men of today have far less need than did the men of then to acquire mechanical skills to keep their ride to work running than was the case sixty years ago.