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- Path: sparky!uunet!gatech!mailer.cc.fsu.edu!sun13!sun8.scri.fsu.edu!nall
- From: nall@sun8.scri.fsu.edu (John Nall)
- Newsgroups: rec.autos.tech
- Subject: A story......
- Message-ID: <10044@sun13.scri.fsu.edu>
- Date: 31 Jul 92 14:08:30 GMT
- Sender: news@sun13.scri.fsu.edu
- Followup-To: rec.autos.tech
- Organization: SCRI, Florida State University
- Lines: 44
-
- I suppose that I can be justly accused of wasting bandwidth by sending
- this, but I have to tell it to someone and probably this group would
- appreciate it more than most.
-
- Crusing down the highway in the old MB 300D late yesterday afternoon,
- I felt the old familiar tug of a soft tire. Pulling over to the side,
- sure enough I had developed a bubble on the left rear and it was going
- down fast. No problem - I knew there was a spare in trunk, although I
- had never used it. (I've only had the car a couple of months - an old
- 1977 that I picked up cheap. I had checked to see if there was an inflated
- spare when I bought it).
-
- Anyway, jacked it up, pulled the flat off, put the spare tirE on, tightened
- the lug bolts and let it back down. I noticed that the wheel on the flat
- was a fancy mag, as were the other three, whereas the spare was not a mag.
- But didn't think anything about it, other than that it made the car look
- a little tacky, with three mag wheels and one regular wheel.
-
- Put the flat in the trunk, shut the lid, wiped my hands good (glad I always
- carry some rags) and started her up. Put it in gear, it went about 6 inches,
- and stopped. "Hmmmm..." thought I. "Guess there is a rock or something
- under a wheel." Backed up about a foot and it stopped again. Got out, looked
- under all the tires. No rocks, no branches, no deep holes, nothing except
- just flat pavement-shoulder. "Hmmmmm...again...", thought I. Got back in
- the car. Same thing. Had to be something strange about the new tire. Jacked
- car up, took tire off, looked at it carefully. Looked ok. While I had it off,
- turned everything by hand and it turned ok. Put the tire back on, and while
- it was still jacked up, turned it by hand. It would go about halfway around
- in either direction, and then stop.
-
- Well, to make a long story short....and I didn't deduce this right away...the
- lug bolts for the mag wheel were too long for the regular wheel, and going
- in too far. Striking part of the brake mechanism.
-
- Interesting???? It was a long walk to find a telephone. The temperature
- here is 97. Humidity is 90%. Bugs are out in force.
-
- John
-
- --
- "...There's no time. The nuclear reactor will blow any minute. I'll have to modify
- the kernel on the fly." Mitty slid into the analyst's chair and calmly began
- displaying memory locations, changing some of them. The others watched in
- awe. The nuclear reactor ominously went "pocketa, pocketa, pocketa..."
-