Amateur Hour: Sometimes a Temper Tantrum Solves Everything

Henry Payne

I walked halfway down my driveway, then set a modern record for hurling a Ford Motorsports finned aluminum valve cover into Langport Road, where it missed a landscaping truck, bounced twice, then collided with the far gutter. “Had your little fun, did you?” I screamed. “Not so funny now, huh?” At some point, my voice broke and I was croaking a susurrate whizzing hiss mixed with atomized spit.

My girlfriend, Denise Wigor, witnessed this display. “The neighbors,” she said.

I told her what the neighbors could do. I was still conjuring complicated F-bomb gerunds as I addressed the valve cover again: “Have a good life in the Franklin County dump, pal. Hope you enjoy the diarrhea-soaked Pampers.”

I don’t recall Denise saying goodbye.

Boss 302 Mustang front three quarter color
Phillips and his father ordered this Boss 302 Mustang new in 1969 and promptly entered it in slalom events.Courtesy John Phillips

That scrap of shamefulness followed my first serious DIY automotive project. I had bent a couple pushrods in a solid-lifter 1970 Mustang Boss 302—missed shifts, I’m assuming, because I’d just detached the Motorcraft rev limiter, which I felt a certain Dearborn engineer had installed to insult my testicles. Then I lashed the valves, following vague instructions in Hot Rod magazine. I slathered Mr. Gasket goop on both sides of the valve-cover gaskets—strings of it drooling onto my new Hooker headers—and wrenched down the bolts with, oh, I don’t know, roughly the same torque specified for the four-bolt mains. I should have witnessed the aluminum flanges cracking. What I witnessed instead, upon start-up, was two quarts of Castrol jetting onto the headers, igniting a blaze that at least carbonized off the scarlet Mr. Gasket stains. There might have been some other issues.

After that? I treated aluminum with the respect I afforded my mother on her 70th birthday. I later unbolted an aluminum cam cover and wrapped it in a feather-plumped Eddie Bauer vest so it would feel good about itself.

This was a half-century ago. There was no Google back then, only Barney Google, who was a cartoon, just like my mechanical skills. And the Chilton books offered nothing useful on Cleveland-head canted-valve small-blocks owned by entitled teenage sons of Midwest defense lawyers.

302 Boss Mustang racing action black white
Courtesy John Phillips

So, I was entirely self-taught, even as I began rebuilding the engine after every race. Seriously, how hard could it be? To which I received the cosmos’s molten reply when I installed—all at the same time—a General Kinetics camshaft with more lift than a Wonderbra; a costly dual-point Mallory distributor; and twin Stewart-Warner electric fuel pumps. When I lit off that deranged Rubik’s Cube of time/space continuum—using a faulty timing light, of course—scientists in Greenwich lost 13 minutes on their atomic clock. It was vivid, especially when the 850-cfm Holley pulled a full Old Faithful, by which I mean individual blazing Walden Ponds of Sunoco 260 atop my prized Shelby intake manifold, which that week I’d polished to Hall of Mirrors sheen but thereafter resembled a festival of black scabs. Plus, another header fire, although by then such nether-region blazes didn’t concern me. My dad glimpsed me holding the garden hose. “Everything OK out there?” he asked, although he knew enough not to await an answer.

In fairness, I was 17. The only actual training I had received on any topic was 20th-century British literature. Nobody I knew owned a full set of Craftsman sockets. Every twiglet of my mechanical knowledge derived from Jegs—the original store in Columbus, Ohio, with redheaded Jeg Coughlin fussing at the flow bench. I’d corner any Jeggy salesman too slow-witted to flee. “How do torque wrenches work?” “How come hex-head bolts can’t be loosened with a flat-blade screwdriver?” “What if I wired a radiator fan atop the carb?”

I warped one of the Boss’ cylinder heads. Well, more than one. “I might need a head job,” I informed my Jegs consultant, having heard customers asking for valve jobs. He stared, lit a cigarette, began to speak, stopped, then said, “I’ll be right back.” But he wasn’t.

See, what happened: First there was that radical cam, then 12:1 Holman & Moody pistons, shaved deck heights, and valve springs so stiff they’d be appropriate on a Caterpillar D9. Did I mention this was all my own top-secret recipe for speed? I actually knew enough to test this pressurized pipe bomb before towing it 400 miles to Mosport. And guess what? The Boss banged off a 13.3 quarter-mile at National Trail Raceway. There’s me, king of the DIYers, hoisting a 3.2 percent Pabst. So how come my chrome-yellow Boss squeezed out a head gasket during practice? Also on lap five?

302 Boss Mustang racing action color high angle
Courtesy John Phillips

Back at Jegs, where I was floating a four-digit debit courtesy of my dad’s possibly expired Diners Club card, the salesman had news: copper head gaskets. Six pairs. “Ain’t meltin’ them bastards,” he assured, blowing a blue plume of Benson & Hedges through my Keith Richards sideburns. The gaskets resembled something Cartier might sell out of a chrome display case.

Cartier or not, they failed, of course, in a tsunami of steam at the Moss Corner, in what was supposed to be a three-hour race with my best friend Bill Adam co-driving. I drove an extra lap to punish the gaskets, then chiseled them off in the paddock. Which enabled me to insert one arm into gasket cylinder-hole one and the other in cylinder-hole four and stretch the thing into coppery trapezoidal Guggenheim shapes while lacerating and burning both biceps. “You drew a small crowd,” Bill later informed me when my blood pressure had ceased melting its own gaskets. “You said something about Mr. Coughlin.”

302 Boss Mustang rear three quarter black white
Courtesy John Phillips

I should have quit. Instead, I learned to change head gaskets in 90 minutes, right there in Canada’s dirtiest paddock. Which is how a guy named Brian Burgess found himself grasping the Boss’ high-capacity coil while I bumped the starter to locate top dead center. From all available evidence—I mean, from where Brian landed in the dirt—I killed him. “Oh, grow up, he’s fine,” said Bill. “Just drag him out of that puddle.”

Brian mutely stared at the sun for 10 minutes, then valiantly shuffled off my mortal coil, a comeback line I conjured only a year later because the Mustang had liquefied my brain.

For 54 years, Bill and I have remained close. Yet here’s how he initiates most of our conversations: “Hey, uh, listen, you OK?”

So, by all means, do it yourself. Even better, consider doing it without yourself.

302 Boss Mustang front cornering action black white
After his dad lost interest, Phillips continued to modify the Boss 302, using it to obtain his competition license. In 1973, he sold it to a chunky teen in Milwaukee, a kid who couldn’t crawl over the full roll cage to find the driver’s seat.Courtesy John Phillips
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Comments

    OMG twice, not once, I sprayed a mouthful of coffee all over my computer screen. This article is just too funny and REAL. It brings back so many memories of myself at 16-17yo and a Mini Cooper S 1275.
    Thank you for my Monday morning Hagerty read.

    I love these stories and can watch the movie comedy in my mind! But there is also an educational aspect. I learned two new words, and they didn’t even start with F!!!

    Uh, are you sure that’s not a 1970? 69’s had two headlights. I used to drive a yellow ’70 Boss 302 and sure miss that car.

    The story says it was a 1970 Boss 302. It would have gone on sale starting September 19, 1969. Production of the 1970 Mustang began in mid-August 1969 at the Dearborn Assembly Plant. Some of the first 1970 Mustangs produced were Bright Yellow Boss 302s that were scheduled for dealer introduction shows and promotional activities before the on-sale date.

    What a terrific story. It sounds like my own but with a 1963 Corvair Turbo Spyder. That car taught me how to strip bolts and treat third degree burns.

    I have a best friend of just short of 60 years — I’m 65 and he’s 67. Some of my tom foolery has come close to killing him but we spent the morning welding a new suspension into my 63 Econoline pick up.

    Reminds me of when I was starting as a Service Tech I was serviceing a Ford Mustang I was orderd not to use an impact wrench on the rims so I was using a 1/2 inch drive wrench to tighten the lugnuts and I was being constantly being called out to pump gas on the full serve islands I almost broke a plate glass window when my wrench slid close to the window and I almost lost my temper over that one.

    Hilarious read! We must be about the same age because I identify with all your references, and we probably came up with the same F-bomb gerunds lol! I thoroughly enjoyed this read, thank you for taking me back to the late 70s with my Trans Am.

    I can remember when I was about 10 years old. (1955) I would sit at the dinning room table & put together Monogram 1/25 scale car kits. This was a 1955 Ford convertible. I didn’t like the windshield so changed it to look more like a boat windshield. Back then we used airplane glue to put them together which did not as fast as super glue does today. Well after about 3 attempt’s getting the windshield to stay in place & it didn’t threw the whole model across the room. You what happens then, yup destruction. That’s when my Mom said, “Tommy it’s time to go to bed.” Patience is truly a virtue.

    Great read and like many here (myself included), can attest to the old adage; there’s no such thing as a free education! Still have the scars to prove it…

    Broke (destroyed) a lot of essential components in frustration, only to have to repair or replace wasting more time.
    The best story though is when I worked in a garage and the mechanic had removed repaired and reinstalled a rad core in his own vehicle 3 times and it still leaked. I watched him take the core and a sledge hammer outside mumbling something about ” this is the last time”.

    I had a friend back in the middle ages circa 1980. He has always had quite a temper. He fixed more body panels that took his emotional outbursts than we could count until he actually got a bit smarter one day. Only a bit. He had driven an old Datsun 1200 into the ground and when through with it he positioned it at the far end of the driveway kind of in the hedge. From that point on, whenever a wrench slipped or a starter would not fall into place, he would quietly pick up a hammer or equally heavy tool and very cool like take the short walk to the end of the driveway and then unleash his rage on that poor old Datsun we had called it (Earl). Did the neighbors think he was nuts? Sure, but they already did anyway. I’m not sure who was crazier, my friend or the guy that bought the Datsun off of him a few months later who put it back on the road. That plan did get his ’69 Dodge truck on the road sans dents though. He still has a bad temper today. He is a fair mechanic but I don’t let him work on my car unless I supervise.

    Phillips is the best. I think he is channeling Hunter S.Thompson. Happy to now read his work at Hagerty in addition to C/D.

    Another wonderful true story that makes me glad no one here knows my history .

    I kept at it and enjoyed a long and happy career as a Journeyman Mechanic but we all had to start somewhere .

    -Nate

    This story had me ROTFLMFAO! It’s like someone had witnessed my entire life’s experiences, from watching my Father as a kid, racing with others, racing myself, working at a Chrysler shop, working at a machine shop, working at a racing shop/team and combining it into five or so hilarious paragraphs. Great read! OMG I’m still crying tears of laughter. The things we have to experience/witness to truly learn a life lesson or two. Thank you for putting it into words.

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