Jump to content

Bhigdog

Members
  • Posts

    9,155
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    21

Everything posted by Bhigdog

  1. Best consult an "in state" attorney before disposing of your property via probate. There's many ways to minimize or aggravate the tax bite....Bob
  2. Well, if someone, somehow, rigged up a cable throttle linkage you are on your own. It could be as simple as the carpet getting jammed up or a broken cable strand. If you have a factory stock linkage you are also just going to look for whatever is binding. I also very much recommend getting a shop manual if you are going to do any work on the linkage. It's an over complicated arrangement that also controls your transmission...........Bob
  3. I have a 55 S-88........... No throttle cable it's all hard linkage.............Bob
  4. He might be the same guy that looks at my red 57 Buick and spends 5 minutes telling me how those old cars rode like a dream and his father had one exactly like mine................... only it was a black Ford..........Bob
  5. Interesting discussion, indeed. I tend to agree with you there is no tangible performance benefit to a pertronix. I was meerly speculating. I do remain of the opinion that a pertronix unit is far and away the best choice for reducing needless maintenance.......bob
  6. Admittedly I'm not too familiar with 1935 Whatsits but aren't all the actions above a function of the distributor itself? The points being meerly a dumb ole switch doing what it's told to do by the distributor. Close now and open when I tell you. On/Off with no in between. In other words just a mechanical Pertronix unit. And, as I think about it, isn't the voltage of the spark directly related to the strength and speed of the coil's collapsing magnetic field? An electronic switch should be capable of near constant voltage near instant action where a mechanical switch would be subject to inevitable resistance, voltage drop, mechanical delay and arcing. Would that not slow the collapse resulting in a weaker and possible "off time" spark? Just sayin............Bob
  7. I suppose that if you are taking an old and somewhat unreliable car on a long road trip it makes sense to carry spares of likely failure items. For trips under 100 miles from home or your trailer why bother? That said, and in my experience, a properly installed Pertronix module is not a likely failure item. Nor have I had to lay across a hot engine, etc etc etc because none of my collector cars have had points once I got hold of them. Brand new rebuilds breathed their first breath with Pertronix units. None of them use DOT 3 either. And I use modern detergent oil and EP grease. Old may neat, it may be fun, but it's most often far from "better".............Bob
  8. Clean every thing on the box and nearby area until it's CLEAN and DRY. Run the car and steering and closely visually inspect..........Bob
  9. The "art" brings to mind my wife's remark when she saw the first show trophy my car was awarded: "You're not bringing that in the house are you?"...........Bob
  10. "Carry a spare" is a common comment when the subject of pertronix arises. I have pertronix modules in all my collector cars including a 6 volt unit that,s going on 25 years old. I,ve yet to have a failure. In all that time i,ve also never had to lay across a hot engine, dropped a teeny screw into God knows where, dented a radiator tank with my knee, scuffed a fender top with my belt, needed a dwell meter, point file, or needed to complain about the shi**y chinese points available. BTW every car made in more than the last 30 or so years has electronic ignition....bob
  11. My guiding principle is: Nothing in moderation. Do it until you make yourself sick..............Bob
  12. Since this thread has a definite anthropomorphic bent, even to the point of assigning gender to an inanimate object, I thought I'd resurrect a semi true but highly stylized post concerning my 55 Buick and "her" Sonomatic radio. I wrote it one cold March nite while lying in bed. As I lie in my bed tonight, listening to the cold March wind, I think of my Sonomatic in my 55. Cold. Alone. I think of sliding in beside her. I hesitate as I reach for her knobs. Am I stupid for thinking I can turn her on at such a late hour and on such a cold night? I gently turn her switch. I'm joyed to see the soft welcoming glow on her face and hear the soft hum of her vibrator. I can imagine her power transformer stirring to life as he feels the pulses surging through his windings. Her cold filaments, responding to the stimulations, begin to glow a soft pink. Her plates feeling the inrush of warm energy long to pass it on. Her wires are willing but her resistors say no. Not yet. It's too soon. But his capacitors will not be denied. Growing ever more charged and surging with energy until they can hold back no longer they empty themselves into her waiting speaker. Softly she sings me to sleep..................Bob
  13. When my 55 Century was undergoing MAJOR reconstructive surgery and was cut to pieces i wondered how it felt at night alone in the dark. I started leaving on a small light and a radio tuned to a classical station. We both felt better, i am sure......bob
  14. I helped this big ole boy off the road awhile back. Ten rattle yellow phase. Guessing he's all coiled up now in his den sleeping the winter away.........Vivre, laisser vivre............Bob
  15. Over the last 20 years I always had good luck with Bob's restoration shop, (owner is now retired from major restorations). Five body off restorations were completed in that time. Bob always did them in order and on time. Whenever there was a glitch Bob always made it right without excuses. Shame all shops aren't like that...................BTW, I'm Bob.
  16. I suspect the 235 fork is slightly different. I didn,t have one so i modified, bent, my 216.....
  17. I made the same swap and had the same problem. The fix was to slightly bend the fork towards the clutch. Forget where the difference was but that was the fix. Heat the shank to red and bend. Didn,t take much. I was afraid to do it but going on 25 years now with no problems....bob
  18. Guy near me deals in new and used parts. He used to ask me now and then as a "favor" to turn the commutator of a wiper motor. I would and tell him he could buy me breakfast as a thank you. One morning he said he finds them at flea markets or junk yards and usually just cleans the commutators with sand paper, puts a dab of grease on the bearings, bead blasts the casting and sells them as "rebuilt". Said they're for collector cars and they won't see rain anyway. Until then I usually just had toast and coffee if I knew he was buying. The next time I turned a commutator for him I ordered steak, eggs, hash browns, toast, coffee and a piece of apple pie. Near made myself sick but he never asked me to be part of that scam again.......Bob
×
×
  • Create New...