Talk:Stutz Bearcat
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
[edit] Contradictory year numbers - found with the help of dices?
The introduction says, An evolution of the company's 1911 roadster, the Bearcat name lasted from 1914 through 1934.
The "Classic Bearcat" section first also mentions 1911 as year of the Indy car the Bearcat was based upon, then states: The original Bearcat lasted from 1914 through 1917 - and two sentences later says, For example, in 1912, Stutz Bearcats won 25 of the 30 auto races they were entered in.
(1) Contradiction within this section, unless 1914=1912.
Which would mean a car managed to follow its forerunner two years before it started to exist! Vow, has the 1911 car been such an effective example that the Bearcat, existing only as of 1914, managed to travel back two years for winning races in 1912? What a miracle.
(2) Contradiction between sections: either 1917=1934, or an explanation is missing.
According to the introduction, the Bearcat name lasted till 1934, that's 17 years longer than the "Classic Bearcat" section says of the car (till 1917), or almost seven times as long (1914 to 1917 = 3 years, 1914 to 1934 = 20 years). Or slightly less than 4.5 times as long, if 1912 is correct instead of 1914 (1912 to 1917 = 5 years, 1912 to 1934 = 32 years).
Why haven't these contradictions already been recognized?
Or are the numbers correct, but the explanations so incomplete that what looks like total errors is "just" the lack of essential descriptions that has been overlooked because the author(s), due to his/her/their own knowledge of these explications, didn't miss them? Dear contributors, next time perhaps ask others with no specific knowledge for a critical comprehensibility feedback.
So, in case the numbers do apply and 1917 has actually been the end of production, then what else does "the name lasted" till 1934 mean? That cars of this brand didn't just keep nostalgic memories alive but actively drew attention by taking part in races until 1934 (quite a long post-production period) and stopped to do so precisely in '34? Or did they perhaps take part even longer, only achieving the last success in 1934? Or did the brand appear in several movies - until 1934? Or was 1934 the year of all Bearcats' total replacement as celebs' prestige top symbols on wheels by Rolls-Royces and/or Packards and/or Duesenbergs? If one of these assumptions matches the real tide of events, the article should tell that clearly.
Thanks in advance for fixing. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 80.109.76.27 (talk) 06:07, 10 April 2008 (UTC)