According to You: Your best roadside-repair stories
I had a feeling the Hagerty Community would come through in a big way for this question: Collectively, we have likely covered millions of miles in older vehicles on highways and interstates, and there’s a good chance we did many of these miles in a neglected vehicle of questionable repute. My feelings were validated, as you folks did not disappoint.
The stories you told were beyond entertaining and many were downright insightful! While I have included some of the highlights below, do yourself a favor and read all of the replies on the original thread, published here.
Replies have been lightly edited for length and clarity. —SM
Mother Nature beats Autozone
@cazinpa: I had a YJ Jeep Wrangler and had recently been working on it. I must have forgotten to tighten the distributor cap, and it came loose and broke the rotor—which would no longer stay in place (rotationally). This was before the days of cell phones, and I was stuck out in the country at night. I was able to rig it well enough to get it to stay in place by jamming a twig between the rotor and its shaft.
@TT: It was about a girl. In the late 1970s I was driving the 1964 Rambler Classic—which my father left me when he died—about 400 miles north of the city to visit my girlfriend. It was late in the day and the road was relatively deserted as it twisted through Canadian forests and countryside.
Suddenly the car overheated. Upon examination, I discovered it had taken a stone through the radiator and was leaking quite badly. Of course, being a teenager I had none of the provisions, money, or tools I would carry today. Many miles from civilization, I had no clue how to fix a car and couldn’t reach out for help. I knew enough that I knew I had to plug the hole somehow at the very least to have a chance. So I decided to break a dead branch from the woods into shorter pieces. I then took a piece about the right size with a pointy end, wrapped a piece of cloth around the point, and jammed it into the space between the front grille and the radiator with the pointy end in the hole. I hammered it into place with a rock. Luckily the grille in those days was relatively strong. I then found some water in a ditch, fashioned a scoop from something, and filled the radiator as best I could.
The solution took a while but it worked. It worked so well that I was able to drive the final 100 miles to my girlfriend without stopping. Then at the end of the weekend, I drove 400 miles back to the city. In fact, my makeshift fix worked so well that I continued driving around the city with the stick still in place for another two or three weeks, occasionally adding some water, until I could get repairs organized.
Tires, they are a-changing
@MRD: I was working for the Rockefeller Foundation in Central Java and borrowed the company’s old Toyota Land Cruiser to take my visiting folks to see a picturesque but remote part of the coast. Had a flat, no AAA to call. The rudimentary jack would not lift the truck enough to remove/replace the wheel. Some local villagers watched the proceedings for a while and then asked why we were trying to lift the truck instead of digging a hole underneath the wheel! Which we then did and went our merry way. Good example of the benefits of looking at a problem through different eyes.
@Harry: Sometime in the past, I don’t remember the exact date, I was driving with my wife in her 2016 Mazda3 hatchback. This car had the very low-profile sport tires and, although the car was only two years old, one of them was flattened after driving over a major pothole. We limped to the nearest gas station and, although it was closed, had an appropriate place to change the tire. So, having changed many a tire in my day (I was in my late 60s at the time) I found the spare tire and jack and started the not-so-easy task of jacking the car. I had the help of my stepdaughter who had her own ideas about where and how to place the jack. As most of you know already, every car maker has their own custom scissor jack—or, at least, it seems that way.
I began jacking the car and once the wheel was off the ground, I began loosening the lug nuts. Yes, you’re right, I should have done that before I jacked the car. That was mistake number two. As I was jacking, the jack slipped because I had also made mistake number one, not setting the parking brake. Obviously, it had been a while since my last tire change and I had forgotten some very important fundamentals!
Well, the car came down on my pinky finger and was now jammed between the tire and the wheel well. Remarkably, I felt no pain, only pressure. I was sure that I was in shock and had badly injured my finger. Fortunately, there was another couple, who also had a flat tire from the same pothole, there at the gas station. That couple and my stepdaughter lifted the car high enough to free my finger. While this was happening, my wife was busy calling 911. The police came and the rescue squad shortly thereafter. Oh, by the way, my finger was undamaged! Apparently, the soft tire sans air pressure and the flexible wheel well saved my digit. Needless to say, my wife called AAA to change the tire. The rescue workers were amazed that I had not been injured!
Broken brakes
@Bob: Driving my ’49 two-door Chevy through Pennsylvania from Wilkes-Barre to Macungie, with the family down the turnpike, northeast extension. Noise coming from the rear left brake. Pulled into the Howard-Johnson rest stop and pulled the brake drum. All done on a bumper jack with tire under the frame. (I know, but it’s all I had.) Turns out one of the brake shoe hold-down clips had fallen off and was bouncing around inside the drum. Of course, it was ground up, but it had done no damage to the shoes. Found a paper clip that made a fine temporary repair. Could you do that today on a newer car?
Randy: I had a well-used mid-’70s Jeep Cherokee that looked pretty nice but was a bit overly rusted on the underside. Headed home on a four-hour drive after a long day of work. Running about 70 mph northbound on I-95 near Fredericksburg, Virginia, at around 1 a.m. with basically nobody else on the road. All of a sudden, boom! The left rear slammed down hard. I eased off the speed without braking and moved across four lanes to the right shoulder. Got out and, as I figured, no rear wheel—and not surprisingly, no lug bolts.
Analyzing the situation, I guessed that the wheel probably went about as far as I did, so I went to look along the left lane. There it was, behind the guardrail and down the bank in the median. I jacked up each corner, and pulled the wheel and brake drum to steal one lug bolt and nut. When I removed the brake drum on the corner with the missing wheel, the drum had a bit of a flat spot and all the brake parts came raining out: The retainers for the shoes had disintegrated. So I replaced three of the broken lug bolts in an appropriate triangle configuration.
Now, to the brakes. I walked to the top of the hill where the inevitable deer fence lived and used my pliers to cut a couple pieces of wire. Back at the brake, I reassembled the shoes and springs, fashioning shoe retainers from the fence wire. I was able to get the slightly bent drum back on along with the wheel. The brake pedal felt adequate so I packed up and slowly headed off. The rear brake made a pulsating effort to stop and go but relented over time and allowed me a maximum speed of about 45. The repair had taken just over an hour and after another hour and a half of driving, I was home in bed. Quite the epic, but an overall success. I suppose I’m not one to call a tow truck if an alternative presents itself!
Tricks for fluid retention
@George: For me, fall trips to the Upper Peninsula in Michigan are a required annual road trip. My friend Danny had a 4-year-old Dodge panel van that was designated as the ride one particular year, but he was not known for keeping a maintenance schedule on his vehicles. About 40 miles in, the transmission starts slipping severely. He said the convertor seal has been leaking … now he tells us!
We went off the first exit to the parts store for two gallons of transmission fluid, a hammer, a funnel, and some rubber hose. We broke a hole through the engine cover at the ash tray, installed the funnel in the hole with the rubber hose connected to the dipstick tube, and drove down the road, pouring in transmission fluid, until the slipping stopped. We made the whole trip and a further six months before Danny had the seal fixed without burning up the transmission. It is unknown how many gallons of fluid he poured through that funnel.
@Dean: My good friend had a 1970 Chevy van with a 350 V-8 engine that stopped running about 5 miles from his house. We did a little diagnostics and confirmed we were not getting fuel to the carb. We did have a 5-gallon gas can and it was full of fuel. We also had a milk jug. So we filled up the milk jug with gas, removed the van’s dog house and air cleaner, and I held the jug over the carb. I then poked a hole in the bottom of the jug so the fuel would run out of it and into the carb. We made it all the way back with no issue, but the van’s drivability was not great. Sometimes you have to do what you have to do!
@Doug: Years ago my brother was driving home from a remote oil rig at -40 degrees. The propane fuel on his truck froze up, so he was stranded in the middle of nowhere. He emptied the windshield washer bottle and filled it with gasoline, then stuck the washer hose into the carb. He managed to make it to safety by squirting gas into the carb.
Alternate endings for alternators
@Binksman: A few years ago on Christmas Eve, I was driving a few hours away in the wife’s Jeep Grand Cherokee. I had already done a lot of work on this Jeep including swapping engines, and I had a pile of spare parts in the shed. An hour and a half away from home I noticed the interior lights were dim. Sure enough, the engine would not turn over. It was the alternator. Absolutely no one was willing to bring me the alternator in my shed. The gas station attendant told me there was a parts store down the street, but they were not sure the store was open. The rest period was long enough for the low battery to start the engine, so I zipped down the street.
One mile later, now with no lights, I parked in front of the store. The staff was clearly closing, but they had an alternator. It turned out I had a warranty on the alternator that was in my shed (that the shop honored anyway), and the guys were nice enough to let me use tools from their work cart so I could swap it out. With five minutes until closing, I got it swapped and started, returned their tools, thanked them for the Christmas gift, and went on my way.
@Dave: In August 1974 my wife and I were on our way to Colorado from Illinois when we got within sight of Pikes Peak. I pulled our 1971 Fiat 850 Spider onto the shoulder to get out for a picture. When I went to start the car after the picture, it wouldn’t start—the starter clicked, but the engine wouldn’t turn. I assumed the starter went bad so, with my wife not having any experience with popping the clutch to start it, I had her push. When I popped the clutch, the tires just squeaked—no engine motion.
I took a better look at it and determined the alternator was seized. On the Fiat 850, the alternator was driven by a belt off the crankshaft pulley—the alternator pulley was double grooved and had a second belt that drove the water pump and radiator fan that sat to the right of the engine. So if I just pulled the belt off the alternator, I’d lose the water pump. Fortunately, I had a good tool kit and was able to get the nut off the alternator shaft and remove the pulley. Lucky for me, the alternator pulley was keyed to the shaft with a woodruff key, which I removed. I had some STP in a bottle so I lubed up the pulley and put it back on the shaft without the key and put the belts back on. The engine started with no trouble, since the battery was fully charged. Off we went the 20-or-so miles to Colorado Springs and were fortunate to find a Fiat dealer who had a rebuilt alternator and a new pulley; the old pulley now had a big oversize shaft hole but it did the job. We were back on the road before dark; the little Fiat got us into the Rockies for a memorable honeymoon.
Marriage made on asphalt?
@Gary: Many years ago, when my late wife Dorothy and I were first dating, we did a drive to Whistler, British Columbia, in my 1975 Chevy Blazer. On the way back, I heard a slight bang and then some rattling. Having had a similar experience with 350 V-8s of that era, I knew a rocker arm had failed. I got out the tools in the truck, took off the valve cover, removed the companion rocker arm and both push rods. Then we limped home on seven cylinders. She was so impressed … probably part of the reason she agreed to marry me!
@Rusty: It starts with a 1965 Dodge Coronet station wagon that I bought in 1978 for $75. What could go wrong? One warm spring day I thought it would be a good idea to pick up my girlfriend in Brooklyn, New York, and take a drive to Cape Cod, Massachusetts for a few days of camping. (My outdoor-survival and all-around-woodsman skills would no doubt impress this young city girl.) Three blown retread tires later, we’re still clanking up to the Cape when a deluge of hot antifreeze starts pouring into the car from under the dash. Pulled over, popped the hood, and went to work rerouting the hoses back into the block, bypassing the heater core that was no doubt the cause of my boiled foot.
We finally made it to Nickerson State Forest, where I couldn’t start a fire, set the tent up wrong, dropped the thermos of cocoa (they were lined with glass back then), and discovered that the woods in Cape Cod were a heck of a lot colder than the streets of New York that time of year. But I guess my girlfriend was awed enough by my ability to get that rolling bucket of trouble to make the round trip, that she consented to marry me some 40 years ago. (My wedding vow included a few words about never going camping again, but still!) All in all, that’s not a bad return on my 75 bucks.
Hitting it off
@Tim: In the early ’80s we graduated from our ’72 Pinto wagon to a ’74 Volvo 145 wagon in bright orange: Mechanical fuel injection got 20 mpg city/30 mpg highway in air-conditioned bliss, and the car carried anything! But one afternoon, driving home on a regular visit to Tucumcari from Albuquerque, the car quit running. After coasting for a couple of miles, I got out to troubleshoot. There was plenty of gas, a good battery, plenty of spark, but I couldn’t hear the fuel pump when the wife tried to start the car. Something in my head said, “When an electric motor doesn’t run, whack it.” (I had raced slot cars back in the day.) I grabbed a handy roadside rock, told my wife to crank the engine, tapped the pump, and presto: It started!
I jumped back in, broke the speed limit, and held on until it quit again, and we coasted on the shoulder for as long as the orange Volvo “pumpkin” would roll, all to the delight of my 5- and 7-year-old kids! This procedure/repair was repeated six or seven more times with the last run getting us from the freeway to our driveway. It turns out to be a common pump problem, as one terminal of the commutator will come apart when the fuel pressure builds and the pump stops. And if the commutator stops on that bad spot it won’t restart when asked!
Unexpected parts and labor
@Rick: In 1976 a friend and I drove my 1968 VW Bus from Los Angeles to Montreal for the ’76 Olympics. After the games were over, we drove back across Canada. While driving through Saskatchewan in the middle of nowhere, the bus suddenly dies. We pull over, take off the bike racks (which was actually a big pain), and open the engine hatch. Turns out there was an idle shut-off valve on the side of the carburetor. It had wiggled its way loose, landing on the engine and shorting out the ignition system. It would have been an easy fix, except that when the valve came loose, it started jiggling in place, eventually making the round opening into which it screwed an oblong shape. The unit would no longer fit! Eventually, we figured out that, if we just plugged the hole, the engine would run. So we put a rubber bicycle-tire patch over the hole and wrapped electrical tape around the carburetor to keep it in place. Not only did it work, but we drove the rest of the way across Canada and down the entire west coast back to LA. Thank goodness for tire patches!
@Thomas: It was the early 1970s. My sister-in-law had a brand new Triumph GT6. She had just left our house when we got a call. The car had just quit. It would crank, but not start. The fuel line from pump to carbs somehow had a hole in it and was pouring fuel on the block. I stood there and scratched my head. I took one of the windshield wiper hoses attached it to the pump and then the carb inlet. I twisted two of her hairpins on each end with a pair of pliers. She drove home from there, about twenty miles. She said she called her mechanic the next day and explained the problem. He said he would send a tow truck. She said not to bother; she’d drive it over. She said that, when she got there, he just stood and stared at the repair for about five minutes, shaking his head!
@Pete: My first car was a ’66 VW Bug. Lots of interesting repairs, but one I’ll never forget: On my way home one evening, the gas pedal suddenly dropped all the way to the floor, and the engine dropped to idle. I coasted to the side of the road, about 8 miles from town. When I pulled on the pedal, the cable seemed very loose. Opening the hood, I saw that the ball on the end of the cable (which attached to the throttle arm on the carb) had broken off and was missing. I pulled the shoelace from one of my sneakers, tied it to the cable, and then to the throttle arm. Drove it that way for a few weeks until I had the cash for a new cable.
@David: I’ve got a hundred roadside repair stories, and this one happened during spring break of my senior year in high school. My friend and I decided we would take his ’68 Fairlane because it was newer and bigger than my ’67 Mustang. At the time, it was about an eight-hour trip from Nashville, Tennesee to Panama City, Florida (this was before you could take interstates all the way there). It was over 90 degrees and we were on a two-lane road in the middle of Nowhere, Alabama when the belt shredded and we started overheating.
Luckily, we found his old Boy Scout belt in the trunk—you know, the army-green one made out of some kind of woven cloth … We removed the buckle and managed to tie it around the three pulleys tight enough that it stayed. We limped on until we came to a gas station that sold belts a few miles later. Bought the belt, installed it, and had a crazy good time on the beaches of Panama City like only two 18-year-olds on their first unsupervised road trip could.
@Al: My 15-year-old son was staying with my sister 500 miles away at the end of the school year. I then found out he started summer school in two days. I figured my 1985 Isuzu Trooper would be a comfortable ride for what was going to be a one-day marathon drive. The Trooper ran well but had a slow oil leak. The first leg was uneventful, and once I arrived at my sister’s place I rested for an hour before loading up my son and heading home.
Once we were on the road, I stopped to top off the oil. On the Trooper, Isuzu had a rubber stopper for the oil fill on top of the valve cover. Back on the road again, we were about fifty miles down the road when the oil light came on and smoke began rolling out from under the hood. Pulling into a wide spot on the side of the road, I lifted the hood to find out the rubber oil filler plug was missing. I forgot to put it on after topping off! Down the road was a truck stop, so I thought maybe I would get lucky and find something that would replace the missing plug. The only thing I found was a Harley Davidson beer Koozie. I rolled it up, stuffed it in the hole, and completed the trip—all in one day.
Getting shafted
@Gary: Back in the late ’80s I had a 1970 Ford F-250 4X4. Driving home one day, one of the rear driveshaft U-joints decided to let go. Since I was only about 10 or 15 miles from home, I got out and took a look. I took the rear shaft completely off and tossed it in the truck bed. Then I locked the front hubs, put the transfer case in 4-high, and drove home. (I bet that’s been done a million times.)
Marvelous motor swap
@Brian: Quite a few years back a friend and I left Chicago for Minnesota in my ’66 VW Beetle. I knew the engine was a bit tired, but I had just adjusted the valves, re-jetted the carb to run cooler, and I wasn’t going to push it. About three hours out, somewhere near Madison, Wisconsin, the engine let loose. We towed it to the nearest repair shop, which was actually a VW dealer. They took it into the shop and confirmed the motor was toast, then quoted around $1000 to rebuild it. Not the kind of money this 21-year-old wanted to put into a $1500 car. We were leaving the dealer, feeling totally dejected, when one of the mechanics followed us into the parking lot and offered to sell me a good running motor for $100! All we had to do was pull it out of his old ’60 VW Bus and swap it into my Beetle.
We bummed around for an hour ’til he got off work, then he drove us to his house where we could drive the old Bus to proof the motor. It seemed to run OK, so I agreed to the price and my motor as an exchange. He provided the tools and we went to work. No sooner than we started pulling the bus motor, the skies opened up into a torrential downpour! Working through the rain, we had his motor swapped in about an hour and left mine on an old pallet. A couple of tweaks, and she fired right up. We made it to Minneapolis and home a few days later, without a hitch. That motor was still running great when I sold the car over a year later. I will never forget this guy’s generosity, and the kind of fellowship that old air-cooled guys continue to share all these years later.
Junkyard dogs aren’t your BFF
@Gary: Many years ago on a run to St. Jovite, home of the Le Circuit Mt. Tremblant, the tandem axle trailer carrying my race-ready MGB seized a wheel bearing. I went onto the shoulder to effect a repair, when I noticed a wrecking/scrap yard only a few meters from the stranded trailer. I nominated myself to stay with the rig and send my crew off to find a tire, so I had a bit of time to kill. I’ve have always liked to roam around wrecking yards (when that was still possible) so I headed towards the entrance. I got maybe a few yards in when I heard the sound of a chain unraveling!
Realizing that a junkyard dog was likely attached to that chain, I started to run, boosted by adrenaline. Unfortunately, not quite fast enough. The dog sunk his teeth into my backside just as it reached the end of its chain, got yanked backwards, and let go of me. I spent a lot of time standing over the next few days, except when in the race car!
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I have had the spare tire popped on just before the skies opened up and poured rain on me. So a dry tire change was a nice thing indeed that day.
Years ago I had a Mercury tracer wagon. Halfway home from a 250 mile trip on a Sunday the water pump started to seize up. Car started to run hot and rough. Seized pump threw off timing belt and chewed up cogs. Nothing open on Sunday i limped to the nearest town and motel. Monday morning called the local Napa and they were super nice and delivered a new pump and timing belt with a drain pan for anti freeze. Driver said if I needed anything else just call. Swapped out parts and took a shower before 11:00 am checkout time
A mechanic friend had just past an accident when a battery terminal came loose in his tired Subaru. He walked back and bought the battery out of the wreck for $10.
Driving PCH down the coast of Northern California on a 1970 or 80 something Suzuki GS1000 I felt my lower calf getting hot and looked down to see my pant leg was covered in oil. I stopped and found the oil filler cap had fallen out. I put some oil in the crankcase (as I had a quart with me do to it’s burning of oil) and rode slowly to the next small town to the local market. I went in to get some kind of a plug or cork only to find none were available but the lady behind the counter suggested I carve a potato and use it as a plug. Sure enough it worked and got me to a little bigger town where I was able to get a rubber thermos cork which got me all the way to LA
I GOT THIS
In the mid 1970’s, I was on a 5-day road trip driving my ’68 Roadrunner from Garden Grove, CA to Cleveland, OH while moving back home. After stopping for gas and a lunch in Joplin, MO I went to fire it back up and all I heard was a large clunk under my feet.
I pushed the car away from the pumps and crawled underneath to discover the starter lying on top of the headers! There was only one short bolt captured w/ the starter and the long bolt was nowhere to be found.
The convenience store/gas station didn’t offer any type of vehicle service, but put me in contact w/ one a half hour away. They had a long starter bolt on hand and was willing to bring it out to me via tow truck.
When the tow truck showed up w/ the correct bolt (he brought both just in case!) I said, “I got this” since I was hauling everything I owned, including my tools. Crawling back under the the car and in less than 5 minutes I was firing up the big block and ready to go.
That bolt cost me around $35 – the cost of a tow back then. I didn’t mind too much because I was on my way again in less than an hour.
Almost forgot … on the way TO California the year before, the water pump started leaking in Albuquerque.
A Chrysler dealership was right down the road where I bought a new pump and some coolant. I changed the pump right in the dealership parking lot. If I remember, it took longer for things to cool down than it did to change the pump.
Another St. Jovite story. 1975 driving Mom’s 1968 Chevelle wagon to my first driving school @ Jim Russell. Just into Canada, late Sunday afternoon the water pump let go – really! About 500 miles from home and alone, I fortunately realized my toolbox was in the back! I wandered around the area, completely deserted, nothing there. And there it was! My all-time-best “barn-find”, a ’65 Chevelle with a small block, abandoned behind an abandoned barn! I quickly “borrowed” the water pump, then drove a half mile to a place with a huge overhead light and Viola! On the road again. The trip home was exciting as the only thing I couldn’t connect was the power steering pump! No matter, I was a newly minted formula race car driver and the shoulder exercise was great!
In the late 70’s I had a 69 f250 with the 300 -6. Driving down a country road and the engine died. I had gas , the rotor was turning and had spark. Finally determined the condenser was bad but didn’t have a spare. Luckily there was a radio capacitor mounted on the positive terminal of the coil .All I did was loosen coil and rotated it 180 degrees so I could put capacitor on the negative side of coil. Carried a spare after that.
I had a ’62 Austin Healey 3000 BT-7 tri-carb with about 3″ of muffler ground clearance. On a first date I drove to one of those “off the map” spots full of great expectations. My date was having none of it and in making a too-fast, dejected retreat I hit the muffler solidly on a rock breaking the rear hanger. We were 12 miles from nowhere at midnight with an exhaust on the ground. I found a coathanger in the truck (about all it would hold) wrapped it around the exhaust pipes and had my date lean over the trunk holding it. Worked a treat. No second date.
The best story I ever heard was told to me by a fellow who had just bought a brand new Pantera, back in the ’70s. On the way home, as he was rounding one of the Midwest’s interstate cloverleafs, he had a stuck brake…and a brake fire. Out in the middle of nowhere, no fire extinguisher handy, he put it out using nature’s aimable water. Priceless!
Fresh home from Vietnam I was travelling in 1969 from Ill to Ca in a 1962 Pontiac Catalina. Somewhere on I-80 it quit charging. Opened the hood and found the alternator bracket broken. Found a piece of 2×4 on the side of the road and jammed it down between the alternator and valve cover. Beat it in with a rock and back on the road. Sold the car 3 year later with it still holding the alternator and charging like a champ.
This is set in Australia in the early 1970’s. I was a penniless uni student in Armidale NSW.
One weekend a friend and I took my 1962 $200 Holden EK down to the coast to visit his parents. The car was an absolute heap.
On the way home from the coast to the highlands we had to go up miles and miles of winding isolated dirt road known as The Big Hill.
Right in the middle , the car quit. No fuel at the carby but plenty in the tank. Fuel was dripping from the mechanical fuel pump, so the diaphragm was shot. No houses or passing traffic.
Luckily my friend’s mother had given us a roast chicken to eat on the way home. It was in substantial plastic bag.
I pulled the pump to bits, laid some of the bag over the diaphragm and sandwiched it between the two halves of the pump.
The fix worked well enough to get us to the next town about 50 miles on, where I bought a fuel pump kit and fitted it on the side of the road.
Just as well the chook was not in a paper bag!
In 1985, I bought my sister’s broken-down ’69 SAAB 96 for a dollar and, among other things, replaced worn upper radiator locating straps with new, slightly longer ones. This enabled the top of the radiator to tilt slightly back toward the fan, but there looked like enough clearance. My friend and I drove it from Delaware to Arizona with no mechanical issues until we made a panic stop in St. Louis on a Sunday afternoon. The engine was able to move forward up enough to chew up the radiator! I had a few spare parts for another car in the trunk, including a radiator from a SAAB Sonett, much wider than the damaged one. We wired it to the front of the grille, bought coolant and some long flex hoses from an auto parts store, and continued on our way.
I was driving back from the lakes region in NH about well over 10 years ago and came upon a toll booth. Drove in to pay the toll, put my foot on the gas pedal and nothing. I got out of the car and started to push it off to the side in a parking lot. The toll attendant told me I could not do that. She had to call a tow truck. The car was a 1963 Porsche 356B, small and light and I ignored the attendant and continued to push it out of hearing range, I’m sure I pissed her off. Took a look under the car and found the accelerator rod had rusted through where this bushing was. Called my son-in-law. Told him my problem and to go to my house get some 12 gauge wire, something to strip off the insulation, a pair of pliers and a wire cutter. Didn’t take to long and he found me. The fix is obvious from what I told him to get. Drove home, ordered a new accelerator rod and of course got the wrong one, however, it fit perfectly if i did away with the rusty bushing altogether. Worked for me and still working today
I was in the Marine Corps , Stationed in Beaufort, S.C. I was driving a 56 Austin Healey 100-4. One morning we had a big parade and inspection and I was wearing a crisp set of khakis. On the way to the base, I felt something warm on my right leg and looked down and saw that the mechanical tach drive cable was leaking oil out from under the dash. My entire right leg was soaked in used motor oil…I got out of that inspection but I am sure I paid for it in other ways…. Ed
While pulling my BMW Bavaria from Santa Fe, NM to a new job in Medford, OR my Ford 150 4×4 pickup quit running around midnight just west of Kingman, AZ. I. took a nap by the side of the road thinking a highway patrol might stop by and lend assistance. After an hour or two of listing to 18 wheelers fly by I decided to see if I could figure out what was going on. I turned over the engine by jamming a wrench across the starter and discovered the rotor on the distributor wasn’t turning. I removed the distributor and found that a roll pin that connected two parts of the drive shaft had sheered off. I searched around the bed of the truck and found a nail about the right diameter and put it through the hole, clipped off the excess with some wire cutters and peened the end over with a rock. I put the distributer back in and timed it by ear and continued on my way. I don’t think I ever took out the nail for the rest of the time I owned the truck.