|
"Is this Mr. Wilson?" an eager voice
inquired over the phone. "I'm Barry Overholtz. The crankcase of my car is
full of water, and I've got to deliver my newspapers."
Gus was of a mind to hang up and go back to sleep. Then a
mental picture came to the Model Garageman of Barney's thin young features,
and he didn't have the heart to do it. Barney was 17 and as
freckle-spattered as a brook trout. He had the trustful brown eyes of a
cocker spaniel.
"Hold your horses, kid," Gus told him. "I'll be right over."
At Barney's house, Gus checked the oil stick of the kid's
1941 Ford. Then he did the only thing possible at the moment - for Gus. He
loaded Barney's papers in his tow truck and started delivering them over
Barney's rural route. Folks who were up this early were startled at the
strange dawn vision of the burly owner of the Model Garage. Gus was flipping
papers onto the porches, with Barney rinning at the wheel.
"Now about this car of yours," Gus said. "You've had it about
a month, haven't you? Have you ever let it run out of water and get hot?
It's not been cold enough to freeze and crack the block."
"It's never been hot," Barney assured Gus.
"In that case," Gus declared, "since you bought it over in
the city, you should contact your dealer there. He should fix it."
"Gosh!" Barney exclaimed. "Do you think he would?"
At that moment, Gus was inclined to think that he wouldn't.
Most used-car dealers in the city were honest, but it was an old trick of
unscrupulous dealers to put a temporary repair on a cracked block, and foist
the car off on some unsuspecting character like this kid. The car would run
all right for a few days but then the crack would open up and fill the
crankcase with water.
"I'll have to have it fixed right away." Barney said, his
eyes anxious, "or Mr. Thompson will take away my paper route."
As soon as the newspapers were delivered Gus took Barney home
and towed the water-logged Ford into the Model Garage. He got a quick
breakfast at the café, where Officer Corcoran kidded him.
"My paper was late this morning, Gus," Corcoran declared. "It
had greasy fingerprints all over it. The next time this occurs, I'll have to
report you to Mr. Thompson."
"If it occurs again," Gus chuckled, "I'll be going to bed at
dusk, so I can get up at five. Barney jangles a mean telephone."
Back at the garage, Gus put in a long-distance call to
Stevens and Bartlett, the used-car dealers where Barney had bought the car.
Their attitude in the matter was about what Gus had expected.
"The car was all right when the kid took it out," Stevens
told Gus. "I couldn't be expected to repair a water leak on an old car like
this, after it's been driven 30 days on a paper route. Kids do things to
cars, you know."
"I know," Gus said wearily, "and so do some dealers."
Gus hung up, wondering about what kind of an outfit Stevens
and Bartlett were. He began working on the car. He drained water and oil,
pulled the heads, began scraping carbon, inspecting gaskets for
imperfections, block faces and valve ports for cracks. Stan Hicks, Gus's
helper, strolled from the grease rack, grinned widely at Gus.
"You always were a sucker for kids, Gus," he said.
"It isn't that," Gus protested. "I'm just curious to see if
this used-car outfit is trying to gyp Barney Overholtz."
The carbon on the heads and block faces was dry, indicating
rings in good shape. There were no signs of water having been in the
cylinders. There were no cracks, even at those danger points between valve
ports and cylinders. Gus was puzzled. There had to be a crack some place. It
must be inside the valve compartment.
A crack in the cylinder water jacket, inside the valve
compartment, Gus told himself, seldom occurs unless a car has been badly
frozen. He ran his inside micrometer around in the cylinders. Its reading
showed that the car had been rebored to 60 thousandths oversize, yet there
was no distortion of cylinder walls, such as would have been the case if the
car had been badly frozen. Really, except for the mysterious crack, the old
heap was in exceptional shape.
Gus pulled the generator and then the manifold, which on a
Ford V-8 also acts as the valve-compartment cover. At once he saw water
mixed with oil. This meant nothing, since water would have been pumped up
here from the crankcase with the lubricating oil. It would be almost
impossible, Gus knew, to locate a crack in here visually, without pulling
valves, springs and guides, and cleaning the compartment with steam. Gus
cleaned it the best he could, using a solvent spray and blowing out with
compressed air. He could find no cracks, and being certain that there were
none in the compression chambers, he replaced the engine head and filled the
radiator with water.
Gus peered about in the valve compartment, seeing no water
flow. Maybe the crack was way at the bottom of the block. This hardly seemed
likely, but could not be overlooked. Gus pulled the pan, lay under the
motor, looking up. He was there for perhaps five minutes, before he saw a
single drop of water drip from the throw of the crankshaft, which was in the
down position. Just at this moment the phone rang.
"This is Stevens," a voice said over the wire. "You
understand, Wilson, that the 30-day guarantee on young Overholtz's cart has
expired. Still, we'd like to know what's wrong with the car."
"At the moment," Gus said, "water is leaking out of the
crankshaft."
"Out of the crankshaft!" Stevens repeated. "Never heard of
such a thing."
"Neither have I," Gus told him as he hung up.
Getting under the car again, Gus found, by turning the
crankshaft, that the water was very slowly issuing from the timing-gear
case. If there was a crack up there, behind the timing gears, Gus told
himself, they might as well junk this motor. He crawled out, back to the
bench and lit his pipe.
There was something queer here, Gus thought. A crack caused
by a freeze-up, in a car that had been rebored to 60 thousandths oversize,
would surely come here, where the metal was thinnest. At least there would
be cylinder-wall distortion. Or maybe, he thought, had been no freeze-up on
this car. Where would that possibility leave him?
Gus looked grim, and then a slow smile formed at his mouth.
How many times over the years has he leaned against this bench thinking that
he was at the end of his rope? Yet, always, somehow, things had worked out.
They would this time, too, he decided.
He had water and he had oil, he told himself, in passages. At
what places that he hadn't thought of could these two possibly meet? Gus
visualized the construction of the engine block. Nothing but a crack, he
decided, could put water in the tuning-gear case, but the chances of its
being there were so slim that the water must be running down there from the
valve compartment. Gus moved forward, intent on pulling valve, springs and
guides, for a closer inspection, when Barney Overholtz came into the garage.
"Hi, Mr. Wilson," he said, and then his eyes fell on his car.
"Gosh!" he exclaimed. "You're working on it yourself."
"Yeah," Gus drawled. "Stevens and Bartlett tell me that your
guarantee has expired. They won't do anything."
Barney's trustful eyes rested on Gus's face. "Golly, Mr.
Wilson, I won't be able to pay you for a while, because right now I'm broke.
I had to pay Mr. Kleiber, over at Stanfield yesterday, for a new water pump.
The left-hand one wobbled."
"Don't worry about it," Gus said. Then, thoughtfully: "You
say you put on a new water pump yesterday?"
Gus found his mind chewing on a startling idea. The water
pump had been put on just before water appeared in the crankcase. Was there
any connection? Gus recalled that there was a small oil hole drilled from
the valve compartment through the block, to meet a similar hole in each
water pump. Oil flowed down these holes to lubricate the water pumps. But
this was grabbing at straws, Gus told himself. No one had ever heard of
water traveling along a pump shaft, up these oil holes into the valve
compartment again, but could see nothing. He began to pull the new,
left-hand water pump.
"What are you doing now?" Barney wanted to know.
"Grabbing at straws," Gus told him grimly.
With the pump off, Gus probed down the oil hole. It ran on a
slant from a point within a half-inch of the pump rotor to the pump shaft.
But this one had been inaccurately drilled. The side of the hole had broken
out into the pump water jacket. Pressure from a filled
radiator had forced water up the oil hole and into the front end of the
valve compartment, where it ran down into the timing-gear case.
"Out of a million water pumps," Gus said disgustedly, looking
at it, "maybe one was badly drilled like this. And you had to get it,
Barney. Goes to show that when a workman does a sloppy job, it can hurt
someone a thousand miles away."
"I guess," Barney said thoughtfully, "a fellow should always
do things real careful, Mr. Wilson, like you do."
"Me?" Gus chuckled. "Why, I'm not careful. I just bumble around, grabbing at
straws. This one was awfully thin."
The phone rang again.
"We've been thinking," Stevens said over the wire, "about
that car we sold the newspaper boy. You can fix it up, Wilson, and bill us .
.
."
"Goes to show, Barney," Gus grinned, "that folks are more
honest than we sometimes give them credit for. Stevens won't have to pay, on
account of the faulty pump, but that man has a conscience, after all."
END
|