"Anything new since I left early
yesterday, Stan?" asked Gus Wilson, putting on coveralls to begin a new day
at the Model Garage.
"Perkins came for his car. Silas
Barnstable stopped to beef about gas going up - though he'd bought it at the
self-service station, not here. And a Mrs. Fogarty came in with a wild
story. But I got her car out pretty fast," replied Gus's helper.
"What was the story?" asked Gus.
"She said her '62 automatic-drive Ford
has been cold-stalling all winter, even after a carb overhaul. She thought
it would be okay once the cold weather was over, but the engine was still
quitting - only on a different timetable, now it's mild."
"It stalls on schedule?" demanded Gus.
"So she said. There are three traffic
intersections between her house and town. In winter, any time she had to
stop at the third light, the engine bucked and stalled. In this weather, it
quits if she has to stop at the second light. On those real warm days we
had, it would conk out at the first light. Some yarn, huh?"
Gus switched on the coffee pot.
"Did you find out why?" he asked.
"Aw, Boss, the whole thing's kookie. I
checked everything. The automatic choke was at the right notch, fast idle
worked fine, hot idle was on the button. The choke wasn't binding. The heat
tube was new - I made sure it was clear and tight in the manifold. The
heat-riser valve worked okay.
But the points were worn and the
timing was two degrees retarded. I put in new points and retimed it. What
else could I do about that wacky story of hers?"
"Driven the car - cold - through those
three lights," said Gus with a grin.
"Huh! You know how weird women drivers
can be. Now you take Daisy Allen - "
"You take her," interjected Gus,
heading for his office. "She's driving in."
Mrs. Allen tootled in, driving a small
Mercedes. She got out, a trim and pretty woman wearing an outrageous hat
that looked like a spaceman's helmet surmounted by a seagull.
"Oh, Mr. Wilson," she chirped. "You've
done such good work on my car that when my brother said he wanted some work
done on his, I brought it right over."
Stan set her straight on names.
"Not that there's anything wrong with
the car," she went on. "It's him - he drove up from Florida to visit me, and
sprained his ankle right on our porch step. The doctor says he has to stay
off it another 24 hours and he has to be back in Florida by Wednesday - it's
terribly important to the government. So he thought if I dropped his car
off, he could pick it up tomorrow morning."
"Yes, ma'am," said Stan. "You say
there's nothing wrong with the car? What's it need - a lube job?"
"Oh no, it's the battery. He drove all
night to get here, and it didn't charge up enough. I had to coast down to
start the engine. So he wants you to put on a new water pump."
"A new what?" gasped Stan.
"Water pump. That's what he said."
"Because the battery won't stand up?"
"That's right," replied Daisy Allen.
"You have to put water in the battery, don't you? Well, I suppose that has
to go somewhere and do something, only it isn't, because the pump isn't
working. And if you don't mind, I'll sit down until Mrs. Fogarty comes to
pick me up."
Stan nodded numbly, feeling the need
to sit down himself.
Before he recovered, Mrs. Fogarty
drove in, giving him that steely glance a sergeant reserves for a recruit
with two left feet. Her ramrod-stiff back and ringing voice bore out the
resemblance.
"Young man," she declared, striding up
to Stan, "you haven't done a thing for my car. It stalled at the second
light."
"I - I guess I didn't find the
trouble, ma'am," stammered Stan.
"No. What are you going to do about
it?"
Gus emerged from under a hood.
"Morning, Mrs. Fogarty. Since you need
a car, suppose you borrow mine and leave yours here and we'll have another
try."
As the women left in Gus's coupe, Stan
morosely kicked one of the Ford's tires.
"Park it outside in the shade,"
ordered Gus. "When it's cool, I'll test-drive it."
When Gus came back from lunch, Stan
was at work on the Mercedes and the Ford's engine was cold. It started up
immediately.
The day was springlike but cool. Gus
headed for a clear road. On reaching it, he stopped. The engine kept going,
still on fast idle. He drove a long block and stopped again. The engine
never faltered. Again Gus started up and stopped.
As he did, the engine gulped for an
instant and stalled. It restarted with no trouble. When he stopped a fourth
time a block farther on, it kept ticking over, on slow idle now. He returned
to the shop.
Before Gus could get out, Stan was at
the car window.
"Gus, the radiator's full up and
there's no sign of leaking at the pump. You think I should put a new one on
that Mercedes?"
"How about the generator?"
"The battery's low, so I checked the
generator and voltage regulator," declared Stan in an injured voice. "The
fan belt was a bit slack. After I tightened it, generator output was just
dandy. Do I put on a new pump or don't I?"
Lighting his pipe, Gus pondered.
"From what you just told me, I think
we'd better. After we check out what I'm thinking, of course. Loosen the fan
belt."
Stan went back to the Mercedes, while
Gus parked the Ford in a work area. Then he went to the Mercedes, grasped
the pump pulley and checked it for play.
"Looks as if Mrs. Allen was right," he
declared. "We'll have to put on a new water pump if we want to keep that
battery charged."
"Relax, Stan. I'm not nuts. The pump
bearings are worn. On a Mercedes, the pump will keep working for a time
anyway, but the fellow who owns this car slacked belt tension so that it
wouldn't wear the bearings still faster.
"The trouble is, he didn't figure on
the extra electrical load of a long all-night drive. Under these conditions,
belt slippage was enough to cut down his charging rate - that loose belt
couldn't pull the generator at full speed. Since he'll probably be driving
at night again when he goes back, he figured he'd better get a new pump put
on the car first."
Stan grinned weakly. "Makes sense,
Gus, when you tell it."
Gus returned to Mrs. Fogarty's Ford.
By now he felt pretty sure that the trouble was in the automatic choke,
though, as Stan had said, it worked freely and was set at the right notch.
Nevertheless, Gus pulled off the thermostat for a look inside. It was
perfectly clean; the carburetor venturi was gleaming, too. Evidently both
had been serviced not long before.
As Gus began to put the choke
thermostat back on, something else registered. The bimetallic thermostat
spring looked odd. It was not perfectly spiral, and one turn touched the
next instead of clearing it.
From his parts stock, Gus selected a
new choke thermostat of the same model. He took it out of its box. Its coil
was a smooth spiral. Taking both the old and the new thermostats outdoors,
he left them to reach the same temperature.
When they had done so, Gus laid both
on top of the shop hot-water heater and watched patiently. As warmth
expanded them, the old coil unwound much more quickly than the new one.
The shop door banged, and Stan bounded
in, back from downtown with a new Mercedes pump. He looked curiously at the
two unwinding thermostats.
"That's Mrs. Fogarty's trouble?"
"Sure. The old coil opens too fast,"
explained Gus. "That leans the mixture too soon for a cold engine. It also
lets the fast-idle screw drop off its cam too early. So the engine stalls
that much easier. All the car needs is a new choke thermostat."
"Want me to put it on, Boss?"
"Go ahead. I'll do the really rough
part for you, if I have to."
"What tough part, Boss?"
"Explaining to Mrs. Fogarty why we
didn't spot the grief the first time," answered Gus, smiling.
But when the two ladies brought back
Gus's car, Mrs. Fogarty was content to hear that what had caused the
stalling had been set right.
"We have that new water pump for your
brother's car, Mrs. Allen," said Gus. "But it isn't installed yet. Want to
wait?"
"No, I have to get home. We're
attending a dinner for Stevie - my brother. I'll drop him off here to pick
up the car in the morning," she replied.
"Stevie?" mused Stan as the women
drove out in the Ford. "That figures. I wondered what the brother of that
dame would be like. Probably a kook, too."
"Stan," said Gus gravely, "that's no
way to talk about a good customer."
Early next morning, a car paused
briefly outside to drop off a passenger. A man limped into the shop, leaning
on a cane. But he was tall, well built, and wore an Air Force uniform with a
colonel's insignia. Gus had never seen him before, yet there was something
familiar about him.
"My sister, Mrs. Allen, left my
Mercedes here to have a new pump put on."
"Right. It's ready for you," said Gus.
"We also charged the battery overnight."
He got the bill while Stan brought the
car forward.
"She didn't give me your name,"
remarked Gus, preparing to write the bill.
"Stephen P. McRae," said the officer.
Getting out of the Mercedes, Stan
froze with one foot on the ground. "Hey, you're the Colonel McRae who was
decorated for Vietnam. Your picture was in the paper."
McRae nodded and paid the bill.
"We're both proud to have you as a
customer, Colonel," said Gus.
"Yeah," breathed Stan. "But one thing
bugs me - no, forget it."
Seated in the car, McRae grinned.
"You want to know how a fellow can go
through a war and then come home and sprain his ankle stepping off a porch,
eh?"
"Guess I had a nerve to . . ."
"I just goofed," said McRae. "I was
telling my sister about my battery trouble and wanting to get a new pump. So
she began to explain, in her own special way, why a worn pump could run down
a battery. There's something about my sister and her matchless explanations
- " confided McRae with a wry grin. "That's when it happened."
END