Monday, June 23, 2008

It’s Smart (and SAFE) to Read the Directions

Or in this case, the shop manual. Tom (my owner’s dad) didn’t really want me to publish this account of his stupidity, but he relented when I explained how it might stop others from making the same potentially dangerous mistake.

About 2 weeks ago, Ariel told her dad that I had lost my dash and dome lights. Tom immediately assumed it was a problem with the 47-year-old headlight switch and he performed the same fix he’d done on his own ’63 Corvair – he spliced a wire into a wire of the dash light circuit and ran the other end to a switched 12V tab on the fuse block. Bingo, instant dash lights. However, every time the key is turned ON, so are the dash lights. Dash lights all the time are better than none of the time.

What they didn’t realize is that by powering the dash lights the way he did, he screwed up my tail light circuit. When the key was on, so were the tail lights, but as soon as the headlight switch was pulled, the tail lights went out. Not good unless you’re trying to run from the cops which Ariel would never do. So Ariel was driving around at night without tail lights. Fortunately, a Good Samaritan pulled up next to her Saturday night and informed her of the issue.

This time Tom pulled out the shop manual, reviewed the wiring diagrams, and discovered that there’s a separate 12V line coming into the headlight switch that powers the tail, dome, and dash lights. He tested the switch and found that lo-and-behold it worked perfectly. He confirmed the orange wires were in fact not powered, so he moved the splice from the dash light wire to the orange wire and moved the other end’s connector from a switched contact on the fuse block to an un-switched one. All the lighting works perfectly now.

While he had me in the garage, he pulled my air cleaner assembly and found the expected puddle (about a tablespoon) of oil in the bottom of the right-hand air filter housing. He knew the blow-by hadn’t magically gone away, and we’ll live with a quart of oil every three weeks. Next he pulled my six spark plugs and found the right-hand side’s three were oil-fouled. After a thorough cleaning on the wire wheel and checking gaps, the plugs were re-installed and everything else put back in place. I started right up and idled nicely before being backed out into the driveway and put back into service.

Wednesday, June 11, 2008

Look Mom, No Oil

It's been a week and a half and noone's had to put any oil in my crankcase. All smiles here.

Ariel's dad did have to fix an issue - no dashlights. Thinking it was the headlight switch, he pulled out mine only to discover it didn't match the spare one he'd pulled from a '64. He ended up wiring the dashlight circuit directly to a switched terminal in my fuse block. Now when the key is on so are my dashlights.

Monday, June 02, 2008

Many Hands Make Light Work

Ariel, her dad (Tom), and her Opa (Tom’s dad) decided to tackle main seal replacement this weekend. After an early dinner, they put me in the garage and up on jackstands. By 10 PM, my drivetrain was out and the transaxle was removed. The next morning, Tom was in the garage early and had the front seal replaced and the bellhousing re-mounted by breakfast. After eating, he and his dad had the back seal replaced, the transaxle re-installed, everything else bolted back on the engine, and the drivetrain back in place by lunch. Then by 2 PM, everything was hooked up and I was back on the ground. This was the quickest engine remove, repair, and reinstall that Tom has done. The result of all this should be a significant reduction in my oil consumption.