MossRoad
Super Moderator
- Joined
- Aug 31, 2001
- Messages
- 65,759
- Location
- South Bend, Indiana (near)
- Tractor
- Power Trac PT425 2001 Model Year
it's 7ys old,a nd decided it ain't doing another season.
I'm 54 years old and contemplating the same thing!
it's 7ys old,a nd decided it ain't doing another season.
Even if the battery is buried in the wheel well, you have a portal in the engine compartment to jump start the engine. Looks to me like some of you guys have never opened the hood of car newer than 10 years old. Can you guess what that red plastic cover thingy is in the motor compartment ? Are you still putting washer fluid in the radiator overflow bottle and wondering why the wiper spritzers don't work ? And do you know what all that clicking noise is with the motor running, cause it ain't the spark plugs..... ? Yep, I thought so.
Hardy har har, Norton.... :laughing:
A guy I work with had a dead Lumina a few weeks ago. The battery is under the windshield washer reservoir. It has points you can get to for jump starting, but 9 times out of 10, battery problems are corroded or loose cables at the battery terminal. Regardless of if you can jump it or not, you can't get to the battery terminals to remove the cables and clean the connections without removing some other hardware from the vehicle.
Does anyone else remember Chevys with ignitions that had lips on them so you could start the car without the key if you didn't lock the ignition? Maybe I'm imagining it.
Does anyone else remember Chevys with ignitions that had lips on them so you could start the car without the key if you didn't lock the ignition? Maybe I'm imagining it.
Does anyone else remember Chevys with ignitions that had lips on them so you could start the car without the key if you didn't lock the ignition? Maybe I'm imagining it.
I don't believe that they planned it that way, it seems like the tumblers would get worn after a while.
I got myself in a snafu with my '81 F100 one day when I couldn't find the key so took off with out them. When I parked it the cylinder locked, and I took the entire steering column apart to disconnect the steering wheel lock.
(I could never understand how the guy from Hollywood can just reach under the dash and start a newer car... you still need the key to disengage the steering and shifter.)
speaking of 'hotwiring' in the movies.
you will see the guy with 2 bared wires spliced together, then a third in hand. he will brush the 3rd against the other 2, and you hear the starter chirp.. then he will just twist all 3 together! wrong!
I can see the 2 spliced. IE.. as int he old days.. find hot somewhere.. like the fuse box, then splice that over to the wire to the coil... that gets it ready to run.. then take the wire fromt he start solenoid and just hold it to the other 2 till it starts, then release that 3rd one. tieing it in just menas you are keeping the starter engaged!!
Yep well it is Hollywood. Have you seen much factual gunhandling in most movies? Once in a while, but not much.