Yank tank

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search

Yank tank is a slang term referring to American cars, especially large models produced in the 1950s and 1960s as well as SUVs of recent production.

Contents

[edit] Classic American cars in Cuba

A so-called 'yank tank' or 'máquina' (1956 Ford) in Trinidad, Cuba.

Yank tank or máquina are the words used to describe the many classic cars (for example: 1957 Chevrolet, 1953 Ford, 1958 Dodge, etc.) present in Cuba with an estimated 60,000 of them still driving the roads today.[1] In 1962 a United States embargo against Cuba was introduced, effectively cutting trade between the two countries.[2] This meant that the cars in Cuba could no longer receive new replacement parts when something broke. Currently, the only way to keep these cars on the road today is by using Cuban ingenuity to adapt household products and Soviet technology into these vehicles.[3] If a car is unable to be repaired at the time, the car is usually either “parked” for future repair or “parted out” (to produce extra income for the owner’s family) so that other cars can remain on the road.[4] During the years of Soviet Union influence on Cuba, Ladas, Moskvitchs and Volgas became the main cars imported by the communist regime, mainly for state use. As a result of these internal economic restrictions, to this day there is no such thing as a new or used private European or Asian automotive dealership branch in Cuba for independent purchasing by regular Cubans.

The only American cars that can be purchased for private use in Cuba (with "particular" plates) are those that were previously registered for private use and acquired before the revolution. However, if the owner doesn’t have the proper paper work called a “traspaso”, the vehicle cannot be legally sold.[5] American cars that were present, at the time of the embargo, have been preserved through loving care and ingenuity. And since there were many of these, due to the presence of a past strong Cuban middle-class,[6] classic cars have been the standard, rather than an exception in Cuba. Even President Fulgencio Batista’s son owned a 1956 Corvette.[7] Due to the constant good care, many remain in good working order only because Cuban people are able to adapt to a diminishing source of parts to keep the vehicles running. The owners of these “yank tanks” are sitting on a potential “gold mine” that, if the embargo were to be lifted, the Cuban people could make quick cash by selling their cars to people who collect and restore them.[8]

On the other hand, many of these vehicles, especially those in taxi service, have been converted to accept replacement engines, usually Soviet diesel engines. Fortunately, this is a modification that gives a car a new lease on life. The practical limits of engine longevity, scarcity of replacement parts, and the high cost of fuel in post Cold War (roughly 75 U.S. cents a liter in the summer of 2002)[1] Cuba have made diesel power (roughly 15 to 20 U.S. cents)[1] a popular choice for engine replacement, if a suitable gasoline engine couldn’t be acquired.

However, the old American cars on the road today have “relatively high inefficiencies” due in large part to the lack of modern technology.[9] This has resulted in increased fuel consumption as well as aiding to the economic plight of its owners. With these inefficiencies, noticeable drop in travel has occurred from an “average of nearly 3000 km/year in the mid-1980s to less than 800 km/year in 2000–2001”.[10] As the Cuban people try to save as much money as possible, when traveling is done, the cars are usually loaded past the maximum allowable weight and travel on the decaying roads, resulting in even more abuse to the already under maintained vehicles.[11] The extreme lack or scarcity of parts is directly a result of the Revolution and the embargo. However, there have been talks about easing some of the restriction of the embargo. Former President Clinton has pushed for U.S. citizens be allowed to send up to $300 dollars a month to Cuba and to allow for “direct mail service between Cuba and the United States, suspended in 1963, would now be reestablished.”[12] This would allow for families in the U.S. to send the needed parts (assuming they can be located) to their own families in Cuba, for the necessary repairs.

Currently, it is estimated that there are some 173,000 cars in Cuba, of these it is unknown how many are “yank tanks” and are considered road worthy.[13]

[edit] In popular culture

In The Simpsons Episode "The Trouble with Trillions" Homer, Mr. Burns and Smithers are in Cuba. Mr. Burns, in a way to show he is out of his time, notices "the new Packard we've been hearing so much about", although Packard stopped producing cars in 1958.

In the reality competition series The Amazing Race Australia 2, teams were asked to find a marked "classic car" (which is the yank tank) in the José Martí International Airport in Havana, Cuba and were asked to make their way to the Tropicana Nightclub.

[edit] American Cars in the British Commonwealth

The term "Yank tank" is also used in Australian and Canadian slang to describe these cars, but more generally to describe any American car considered to be large and unwieldy - including both classics (such as Cadillacs) and modern SUVs. The term entered the general vocabulary in Britain during the Second World War and especially the decade afterwards, when some American servicemen stationed in Britain imported cars from the USA. This happened at a time when American cars reached their largest sizes and most extravagant styling, leading to the term 'Yank Tank' in relation to these cars' bulk and unwieldy size on typically narrow and winding British roads. This difference was especially great because British cars of the 'Austerity Years' in the late 1940s and early 1950s were generally small, low-powered, with low equipment levels and constrained styling in comparison. The use of the term however no longer occurs in the UK.

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ a b c Schweid 2004, p. 9.
  2. ^ 2. William M. LeoGrande, “A Politics-Driven Policy,” NACLA Report on the Americas 34, (2000): 35.
  3. ^ 3. John F. Ross, “Viva Vintage,” SMITHSONIAN 32, (2001): 62.
  4. ^ 4. Ross, “Viva Vintage,” 62.
  5. ^ Schweid 2004, p. 13.
  6. ^ Schweid 2004, p. 142.
  7. ^ Schweid 2004, p. 168.
  8. ^ 8. LeoGrande, “A Politics-Driven Policy,” 35.
  9. ^ 12. James P. Warren, Marcus P. Enoch, “Mobility, energy, and emissions in Cuba and Florida.” Transportation Research Part D: Transport and Environment 11 (2006): 35.
  10. ^ 13. Warren and Enoch, “Mobility, energy, and emissions in Cuba and Florida,” 35.
  11. ^ 14. Warren and Enoch, “Mobility, energy, and emissions in Cuba and Florida,” 35.
  12. ^ 15. Philip Brenner. “Washington Loosens the Knot.” NACLA Report on the Americas 32 (1999): 41-48.
  13. ^ 16. Marcus Enoch, et al. “The Effect of Economic Restrictions on Transport Practices in Cuba.” Transport Policy 11 (2004): 70.

[edit] References

  • Brenner, Philip. “Washington Loosens the Knot.” NACLA Report on the Americas 32 (1999): 41-48.
  • Enoch, Marcus, et al. “The Effect of Economic Restrictions on Transport Practices in Cuba.” Transport Policy 11 (2004): 67-76.
  • LeoGrande, William M. “A Politics-Driven Policy.” NACLA Report on the Americas 34 (2000): 35.
  • Ross, John F. “viva vintage.” SMITHSONIAN 32 (2001): 62.
  • Schweid, Richard (2004). Che's Chevrolet, Fidel's Oldsmobile: On the Road in Cuba. Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 978-0-8078-2892-2.
  • Warren, James P., Enoch, Marcus P. “Mobility, energy, and emissions in Cuba and Florida.” Transportation Research Part D: Transport and Environment 11 (2006): 33-44.