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- Newsgroups: rec.autos.tech
- Path: sparky!uunet!haven.umd.edu!darwin.sura.net!udel!rochester!cornell!chapman
- From: chapman@cs.cornell.edu (Richard Chapman)
- Subject: Re: Good books to learn auto mechanics?
- Message-ID: <1992Sep15.180141.26455@cs.cornell.edu>
- Organization: Cornell Univ. CS Dept, Ithaca NY 14853
- References: <1992Sep12.162714.10418@midway.uchicago.edu> <z+xn00=@dixie.com> <1992Sep14.063101.4193@osf.org> <1992Sep14.172657.19662@mcnc.org>
- Date: Tue, 15 Sep 1992 18:01:41 GMT
- Lines: 67
-
- brooks@mcnc.org (Ted Brooks) writes:
-
- >To learn to fix cars is much like learning many other skills. Read. Analyze.
- >Assimilate knowledge. PRACTICE - time and again. Know when you're getting
- >in over your head, and ask for help, or wait till tomorrow, when the problem
- >may look a whole lot clearer. Seek out a mentor if possible. And take your
- >time. Haste makes waste may be a cliche, but it's true.
-
- I agree with every word of this, and can vouch for Ted's ability -- over
- the net he has helped me several times with problems I've had getting a
- '37 Nash in shape.
-
- The easiest way to be a mechanic is, undoubtedly, to grow up being a
- mechanic, starting with lawnmowers, go-karts, and model planes, then
- scooters, motorbikes, old cars, then modern cars. The hardest way is probably
- to start in by attempting the repair your late-model automobile needs at
- the moment so you can drive to work.
-
- So what if you weren't born with a wrench in your hand? You can do
- what I did. I started about 3 years ago with a '77 Motobecane moped I
- bought at a yard sale (in several big cardboard boxes of parts). Went
- to the library, bought the necessary tools, talked to everyone I knew,
- started putting it together. Learned a lot of basics in the several
- months it took to get it in good running shape. The thing was light,
- only 100 lbs, 2-stroke engine, minimal electrical system, everything
- in easy reach of everything else, and parts were cheap (when I
- could find them at all -- ended up making some things, and that was
- also educational). Ended up spending about $150, sold it for $60.
-
- Then I bought an '82 Chevy Cavalier for $100 -- wrong move; too hard
- to work on at the time, given what I knew. Got rid of it.
-
- Then I salvaged an '81 Suzuki GS650E motorcycle from the garage of the
- house I was renting, that the previous owner had crashed and abandoned
- (also learned a lot about the DMV trying to get a title for it). That
- took another year or so to get going, but I learned a lot more, about
- DOHC engines, CV carburetors, hydraulic disc brakes, manual
- transmissions, and the like. Actually made a profit on that one: spent
- $600, sold it for $775.
-
- Then I bought the '37 Nash, which by now I felt confident I could
- handle, even with the engine seized at the time I bought it (it is now
- driveable). I learned a _lot_ about autos in general reading the
- books in the library about fixing old cars, which were so much
- simpler. As far as books on auto repair in general, read the old ones!
- Then learn how cars incrementally arrived at their current state as
- you need to. The Nash has no rat's nest of vacuum tubing, no emissions
- controls to worry about, no electronic ignition or computer of any
- sort, no air conditioning, no automatic transmission. Everything on an
- old car is much more accessible for working on, also. You needn't go
- back that far in history: any car before about 1970 is pretty simple
- compared to a '92 Honda Accord.
-
- I'm not sure I ever want to fix my late-model daily-use car, for the
- reasons given by the previous poster who is studying to be a mechanic.
- It's just too damn hard for the most part, for an individual to get
- access to the necessary equipment to even do the diagnosis, much less
- the repair. But, I think I know enough of the general principles to
- be able to (1) choose a competent professional when I have to (2) know
- when someone is talking shit (either a mechanic or a salesman) (3) do
- the simple stuff myself
-
- In the process I've acquired a garage-full of tools, suffered a fair
- number of skinned knuckles and high-voltage shocks, inhaled a good bit
- of fumes, broken a fair amount of stuff (hopefully less than I have
- fixed), and acquired some knowledge. Good luck,
- Richard Chapman
-