7 jokes just for car people

Just because we take cars seriously doesn’t mean we can’t laugh at ourselves. Jokes are a type of secret handshake, after all, based in common understanding and shared experience. If you tell a joke and the other person in the conversation does not get it, that reaction tells you just as much as if they laughed out loud. So let’s take a moment to call out a few of the “greatest hits” in the library of automotive jokes.

 

The 10mm socket

Where is that socket? How did it get there? How will I work without it? The answers to these questions are among the great mysteries of the automotive universe. If your favorite vintage cars are domestic, swap out 10mm for 1/2- or 7/16-inch, either wrench or socket.

Modern cars are riddled with 10mm fasteners, and the tool you use most frequently is likely to disappear first. The prevalance of 10mm bolts and nuts becomes a blessing and a curse: grabbing tools when starting a job or packing a road trip tool kit is quite simple, but one lost tool can cripple your night.

10 mm socket joke
r/Tools / DarkStorm57

The ol’ 710

Engineers work tirelessly to balance form with the function we consumers expect in a car. Unfortunately, that balancing act is usually constrained by the “good, cheap, fast” triangle: You can only pick two.

The third part of the regular-car triangle is serviceability. Even experienced mechanics need a minute to get their bearings when looking around under an unfamiliar hood. A newbie? Before you know it, someone’s posting on r/cars: “I need to fill my oil but can only find the 710 cap.”

You know, 710 = OIL upside down. It’s all perspective.

710-cap-edit
r/facepalm / arbili

“Ran when parked”

We all do a lot of digital (or real-life) window shopping, and we’ve all seen sellers who hide behind the phrase “ran when parked.” The circular nature of the phrase—you can’t park something that is not drivable—is humorous by itself, of course, and it is often found in the text of an ad selling the most decrepit hulk you’ve ever seen.

Sure, that vehicle might have run when you parked it … during the Reagan administration. Leaving a car parked is one of the worst things you can do if you want to maintain any value or function. Rot never sleeps, and neither do the vermin who make nests in intake manifolds.

ran-when-parked-joke
instagram / agirlandagluegun

Winterizing swaps

The cruelness of Mother Nature knows no bounds. Much ink has been spilled over how to properly store a car in harsh seasons—be it the summer months for those in the desert regions or the winter months for those in the rust belt—but best of all are the humorous twists on that advice. Example A:

reverse battery meme
Kyle Smith

“I know what I’ve got”

Usually combined with a ludicrous asking price, the five-word phrase has become synonymous with an overconfident seller. In the same vein as the worst examples of a “ran when parked” seller, such a person is usually hoping the buyer does little or no independent research. Occasionally, a seller who knows what they’ve got is asking a reasonable price, more often, this phrase paints the seller in a negative light: Potential buyers expect that even good faith negotiations or discussion will be met gruffly, at best.

i know what i got funny listing reddit
r/regularcarreviews / Wiliy_Coyote

“It’s only a 15-minute job”

The lies we tell ourselves may stay secret, but this one got out, and we all collectively cringed—then laughed. There might be a real job that takes 15 minutes, but such projects are relatively rare. Often, jobs take longer than expected because the car has lived multiple lives: Broken hardware, corrosion, and questionable discoveries all complicate our estimated project timelines. Maybe our clocks just work differently when we are wrenching, and we think an hour was just 15 minutes? Who knows. It’s just another form of creative accounting.

abandoned car rusty brakes
flickr / Jonathan Khoo

 

***

 

Check out the Hagerty Media homepage so you don’t miss a single story, or better yet, bookmark it. To get our best stories delivered right to your inbox, subscribe to our newsletters.

Click below for more about
Read next Up next: Exclusive: Watch Dario Franchitti reveal Gordon Murray’s T.33 Spider
Your daily pit stop for automotive news.

Sign up to receive our Daily Driver newsletter

Subject to Hagerty's Privacy Policy and Terms of Conditions

Thanks for signing up.

Comments

    The only thing I can add. My Elva has very little rust. Glas body and wooden floor boards, but I do change the oil and add air to tires as needed.

    I have always chuckled at people selling/trading there car with damage. They say that was there when they purchased the car, like it should not detract from the value!!

    I remember a joke from the 1980s…

    Q. What’s the difference between a Texas Oil Man and a pigeon?

    A. A pigeon can still make a deposit on a Mercedes.

    I remember one weekend cruise in my friend Elliot’s 1957 Ford convertible. Driving through a residential area we saw a guy washing his very small Fiat at the curb. Elliot stopped the car in the middle of the street, leaned out the window, and got the attention of the Fiat owner as he was rinsing off the Fiat with the hose. Elliot shouted out, “No matter how much you water that thing, it won’t grow.” I roared in laughter as Elliot laid a little rubber moving on.

    Too bad the Fiat owner didn’t spray the Ford guy with the hose! That is likely what my grandfather would have done – especially when he was younger, and (others say) could have whipped most anyone. Now, of course, the Ford guy might pull a gun.

    10mm sockets have gotten out to the general public. You can buy an assortment of different types of just 10mm sockets at Harbor Freight, and Finnegan’s Garage has a “hide and go seek champion” t-shirt for sale with a cartoon 10mm socket running away.

    I was expecting real jokes; you know, setup and punch line. Like, why do the British drink warm beer? They have Lucas refrigerators.

    Working as a British car mechanic at a dealership in the ’60s, now and then in the Winter, we would see a front wheel drive mini come in for service or repair with either snow tires or chains on the rear wheels only. I would have to ask them “How long have you owned your Mini” ?

    Texas rancher talking to a stoner: Son, back on my ranch in Texas I can get in my truck in the morning, drive all day and never leave my property.
    Stoner: Yeah, man, I had a car like that once.

    And possibly the most common yet absolutely the most ridiculous and painful joke that every car guy has heard at some point.

    “It’s not for sale. Im gonna fix it up some day…”

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *