"I remember my parents buying their Victa mower in 1962 and it was a big deal, first thing they had ever bought on HP"
Hi Pope, Norm & Kye
Yes Norm, and that may be new information to some younger members.
In the day, the lawnmower was a serious purchase. There was a lot of pressure
to consume the new post-war consumer products: fridges, washers, mowers.
I know that things like electric shavers (Ronson, Philips, Sunbeam) and handyman
drill kits (KBC, Black & Decker)were all the rage in the fifties and sixties.
For younger members, HP was 'Hire Purchase'. Many lawnmower stores, for example,
would have in-store hire purchase schemes whereby after an initial deposit,
owners would repay in weekly installments. My folks bought most stuff on HP
as well. How else could you keep up with the Jones' - I mean, with their
fancy new Kelvinator or Pope fridge, their fancy Turner or Pope washer,
their new Victa Special... Holden in the driveway ...
Here's something interesting. Victa factory advertisements always appeared
in pounds (not guineas), until ... the Victa
Automatic arrived. After that,
most Victa advertising expressed prices in guineas - until 14 February, 1966.
As a side-note, Victa Accounts changed their pricing a week and a half earlier,
on 1 February, 1966.
For the record:
Victa's recommended price for the
Automatic?
56 guineas.
The Pope 320-01 was dearer than an
Automatic!
The rest is history.---------------------------
Jack