Like last week’s Hemmings Six Degrees of Automotive Separation Challenge, we’re placing an American independent on one end of the telephone line and an overseas automaker on the other end and trying to settle the differences between them by showing them just how many connections separate them.
If you’ve been paying attention to past Six Degrees Challenges, you might even have a head start on forming a chain of connections between the two. And if you’re a real student of automotive history, you might be able to do it in two links as we did.
But, of course, that’s not the point. The rules, as before, are simple: A connection consists of one company owning another, merging with another or sharing another’s parts. Explain your connections, and as before, the point isn’t necessarily to do it in the least number of connections, but to do it with style and with obscure connections. If you need examples, check out our previous Hemmings Six Degrees of Automotive Separation Challenges.
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