ChatterBank2 mins ago
"Put together on a friday"
10 Answers
Heard this expression for the first time today, I'm guessing it means that its a thing that is done quickly and shoddily because the workers want to clock off for the weekend?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I can remember the expression "Monday Car" and "Friday Car" in the 1970s when British Leyland were at their height.
For younger people (who are used to todays well made high quality cars) it may be hard to realise that many many cars made back in the 1970s were rubbish.
Many were an ugly design, low quality, unreliable, they rusted after a few years, and they lacked many features we take for granted today (many had no radios, heaters etc).
If you were "lucky enough to get a good car you felt it was a "Monday car", when the workers had got back to work and were enthusiastic.
But if you got a bad car it was a "Friday car", when the workers were looking forward to the weekend and perhaps had been to the pub at luchtime.
I remember one car featured in the paper at the time that had a badge on one side of the car saying "1300 engine" and the badge on the other side of the car said "1600 engine".
Thats the sort of thing we had to put up with at the time.
For younger people (who are used to todays well made high quality cars) it may be hard to realise that many many cars made back in the 1970s were rubbish.
Many were an ugly design, low quality, unreliable, they rusted after a few years, and they lacked many features we take for granted today (many had no radios, heaters etc).
If you were "lucky enough to get a good car you felt it was a "Monday car", when the workers had got back to work and were enthusiastic.
But if you got a bad car it was a "Friday car", when the workers were looking forward to the weekend and perhaps had been to the pub at luchtime.
I remember one car featured in the paper at the time that had a badge on one side of the car saying "1300 engine" and the badge on the other side of the car said "1600 engine".
Thats the sort of thing we had to put up with at the time.
Examples of Friday British cars were legion. Typically, Triumph Stags (British Leyland's "rival" to the Mercedes SLK sports car) must have been made, and designed, on Friday! These examples were all new 'Friday cars': They all overheated, one I had had had the wrong size wheel brace for the wheel nuts, so you couldn't change a wheel, one had the brake warning light wired to the oil pressure gauge and vice versa so when the car ran out of oil(because the gasket leaked ) the wrong warning light lit, one cut out because the crash sensor 'thought' the car had crashed, but started again when the bonnet was slammed, and most had defective ignition...Oh, and this 'drop head' car, had a metal roof, like the Merc's, but it didn't fold away like the Merc's. Two people had to remove and store it in the garage if the driver wanted 'open air' driving !
You young people don't know what real British motoring is!
You young people don't know what real British motoring is!