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#31
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They bought them from the City of Santa Ynez as surplus when the city bought new
cars. They must have had twenty or thirty of them at one time. Jim Don Tuite shared these priceless pearls of wisdom: -Another random thought or two, starting with California aviation -history: For many years, the FBO at Santa Ynez had '58 Chevy -Biscaynes as their rental fleet. Maybe they bought them from a -Tijuana taxi company. Jim Weir (A&P/IA, CFI, & other good alphabet soup) VP Eng RST Pres. Cyberchapter EAA Tech. Counselor http://www.rst-engr.com |
#32
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![]() "Del Rawlins" wrote in message ... While Jim is looking for a Triumph, I think your suggestion makes a lot of sense. 8^) Sorry... Old age is setting in. 8^) Try: http://www.triumphtravelers.org/ Gerry |
#33
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![]() There is a book you need: "How to repair your foreign car" by Dick O'Kane -- it was written in the 1960's and was mostly but not exclusively about British vehicles. It had chapter titles such as: Why, when Britannia rules the waves, can't they make a car that runs in the rain? Carburettor is a French word meaning "Leave it alone...." There were also chapters on what your tool kit should have. The typical British car's contents were described and derided "The mallet for knock-off spinners will do you no good when you need a lug wrench...." It suggested you take a sunny day and figure out how to jack up the car & change a tyre then, not not wait for a dark, cold rainstorm. [Hint: my BiL's Morgan is jacked up from INSIDE the car..] There was an entire chapter on likely the worst-designed piece of hardware since the Tacoma Narrows Bridge -- yes, the SU electric fuel pump. And every single word is true. Buy it before you get the car. -- A host is a host from coast to & no one will talk to a host that's close........[v].(301) 56-LINUX Unless the host (that isn't close).........................pob 1433 is busy, hung or dead....................................20915-1433 |
#34
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![]() "David Lesher" wrote in message ... There is a book you need: "How to repair your foreign car" by Dick O'Kane -- it was written in the 1960's and was mostly but not exclusively about British vehicles. I was listening to click and clack one day and a woman called in and her recently licensed son had been offered two used cars as gifts from relatives. One was an old RangeRover and the other was a non-descript type. Their suggestion as that owning the Ranger would teach him a valuable lesson: "Never buy a British car." |
#35
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#36
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Don Tuite wrote:
Typically, V8s of the '50s got 12-13 miles to a gallon. Caddys got as much as 17. Remember the "Mobilegas Economy Run"? 20 mpg was unheard-of for Detroit iron. Until the Falcon and Corvair. (OK. I'm slighting the Nash Metropolitan.) What, no King Midget? |
#37
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In tongaloa wrote:
wrote: What is the one statement that is ALWAYS true about dual SU carbs? They are out of sync. This is not true. They will stay in sync for weeks at a time and may be adjusted in about the same time it takes to 'check' the oil. Bit of hose and a good ear. When they sound the same, they're synced. There is a procedure to follow when adjusting and synching the SU carbs and if you do not follow it, you will have a devil of a time getting them right. Also the use of the Uni-Syn tool is a much more precise technique than listening to the hiss. ---------------------------------------------------- Del Rawlins- Remove _kills_spammers_ to reply via email. Unofficial Bearhawk FAQ website: http://www.rawlinsbrothers.org/bhfaq/ |
#38
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In rec.aviation.owning tongaloa wrote:
wrote: What is the one statement that is ALWAYS true about dual SU carbs? They are out of sync. This is not true. They will stay in sync for weeks at a time and may be adjusted in about the same time it takes to 'check' the oil. Bit of hose and a good ear. When they sound the same, they're synced. -t "...weeks at a time.."; I stand by the original statement. For those that want to see the "official" procedure, you can find it at http://www.britannia.org/mg/garage/d...?ArticleID=004 Of course, after a while you just do a quick and dirty. -- Jim Pennino Remove -spam-sux to reply. |
#40
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In rec.aviation.owning G.R. Patterson III wrote:
wrote: For those that want to see the "official" procedure, you can find it at http://www.britannia.org/mg/garage/d...?ArticleID=004 Man! And I thought I had it bad rebuilding the rear end of my old Ford! They do this every few weeks? Why do you think they call them "sports" cars? Want to hear what you go through changing the rear axle u-joints on a Triumph Spitfire, which I was never able to get to last more than about a year? -- Jim Pennino Remove -spam-sux to reply. |
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Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
'58 Complementary Triumph TR3 Motorcar | Jim Weir | Home Built | 62 | February 11th 04 02:00 AM |