Willis Donan stared disgustedly at a car
that started off from the Model Garage just as he pulled in.
"Some heap of junk, that eh?" he snorted
to Gus Wilson, half owner of the establishment, as the clattering din of the
departing car faded into the distance.
"Sure looks it and sounds it," Gus
admitted with a grin.
"That's the kind of car they ought to
rule off the road," Donan growled indignantly. "Those old rattletraps are a
menace to everybody. It's a wonder there aren't more crashes, with the
roads full of such crates."
"Because a car's old and noisy, and looks
a bit moth-eaten, is no proof that it's a menace on the road," Gus
protested.
"Take Fred Oakes's car, for example.
He's the fellow who just drove away. I'll bet you a good cigar his car's
just as safe on the road as yours - and maybe a little bit safer!"
"You're crazy!" Donan exclaimed, his eyes
straying pridefully over the sleek well-polished exterior of his year-old
model. "How could that old wreck possibly be in a class with this car for
safety?"
"Wait a minute," said Gus, disappearing
through the open door of the garage. After rummaging around inside for a
while, he returned with a small block of wood in his hand. "How are your
brakes?" he asked walking over to the side of Donan's car. "Didn't you hear
me slide my wheels when I pulled in?" Donan snapped. "If you think my
brakes aren't as good as those on that old kettle, you've got another thing
coming!"
"Let's try them, anyway," Gus suggested
mildly, as he climbed into the seat beside Donan.
The latter backed his car out. When he
got it turned around and headed down the road, Gus placed the small block of
wood on the floor between his feet. "Now stop her as quick as you can," he
directed.
Donan slammed on his brakes; there was a
squeal of rubber scraping, and the block of wood gently toppled over.
"Now try it again," said Gus, as he stood
the block up again, this time edgewise to the direction of travel of the
car.
As soon as he reached twenty-five miles
an hour, Donan jammed both pedals to the floor with a vicious kick. The
tire squealed as before, but the block did not fall over.
"Not so good," grumbled Gus. "Fred
Oakes, now, in that 'old rattletrap,' can tip that block over from either
position. Your brakes are only fair."
"I don't see how that can be," argued
Donan. "I'm sliding my wheels and that's all any brakes can do."
"Trouble is," Gus corrected, "you're only
sliding one wheel. The brakes on the other wheels can't be doing much.
That's worse than having them all working weakly, because one tight brake
will make you skid like all get-out on slippery going."
"How do you know only one wheel is
sliding>" Donan asked.
"Look back," replied Gus. "You can see
the rub mark on one side of the road and not on the other; if both wheels on
the same side locked, and the others weren't holding, the car would slew
around enough that the mark would be wider then one tire could make."
Donan got out and carefully examined the
tire mark on the pavement. "You win, Gus," he grunted, fishing a huge
cigar out of his pocket.
"I never saw brakes tested that
way before. Where'd you get this block?" he asked, picking it up and
looking it over.
"And how do you know it really tells
anything about the brakes?"
"I made it," Gus replied, "but a man
connected with the National Safety Council worked out the idea - and it's a
clever one, too."
"Made of fir, I see," Donan commented.
"How do you load it inside so it will tip over at just the right brake
pressure?"
"It isn't loaded, and the kind of wood
hasn't anything to do with it," Gus explained taking the block in his hand.
"It could just as well be made out of pine, or oak, or mahogany, for that
matter. Even the size doesn't make any difference, so long as the height,
width, and thickness bear a certain relation to each other. The thickness
has to be just forty-four and six tenths percent of the height and the width
should be seventy-five percent of the height. The block has to be squared
up nicely, and you have to have this piece of sandpaper glued to the bottom
end so the block won't just slide along on the floor instead of tipping
over."
"Gosh!" Donan exclaimed. "I don't want
to do all that figuring. Give me the actual dimensions of this block, and
I'll make one just like it." He pulled out a notebook and a pencil.
"This is just a piece cut off an ordinary
fir two-by-four exactly three and twenty-five thirty-seconds inches long. I
sawed a slice off one edge to get the width down to exactly two and
twenty-seven thirty-seconds of an inch. The usual dressed thickness of a
two-by-four is one and eleven sixteenths of an inch, and if you'll check
those dimensions you'll find they fit the specifications so near that the
difference doesn't matter."
"I'll take your word for it," Donan laughed, as he finished
writing down the figures. "I'm going to make me a block like that right
away - and, believe me, I'm going to see that my brakes are kept so I can
roll that block over any time from the edgewise position. How about
adjusting those brakes right now?
"Your saying that old crock was maybe
safer than my car, kind of got under my skin,"
Donan observed, as Gus got his tool kit
and set to work on the brakes. "Anyhow, the motor in that old baby isn't as
safe as this one."
"Certainly it is," Gus grunted, as he
jacked up the rear of the car. "So long as the motor isn't so loose in the
frame that it's likely to drop out in the road it doesn't matter how rotten
it runs or how much noise it makes - from a safety standpoint. All it can
do is stop, and while that may be a blamed nuisance, it won't put your life
in peril unless you happen to be crossing a desert or something like that.
"No," Gus continued, "the fact that the
motor is on the blink, the paint is peeling off, the mud guards are full of
dents, and the upholstery is sprouting whiskers, have nothing to do with
safety. Safety hinges on the mechanical condition of the running gear -
especially the steering part of it - and of the brakes."
"It's a pity there aren't some simple
ways to test the running gear like this block you use for testing brakes,"
Donan remarked.
"Some of the tests you can make yourself
are even simpler," Gus answered, as he lowered the rear of the car and
pushed the jack under the center of the front axle.
"Looseness is the steering gear may be a sign of coming
trouble," he added, as he left the jack and came around to the side of the
car. "Anybody can test for steering-gear looseness just by jiggling the
steering wheel back and forth like this while you watch the front wheel to
note the point where the slack is taken up and the wheel just starts to
turn. If there is much over an inch to an inch and a half of play with the
wheels in the straight-ahead position, then watch out, especially if the
play develops quite suddenly. It may mean that something is coming loose in
the steering mechanism, maybe a ball joint coming apart, or a loosening of
the adjusting nuts on the rod that links the wheels and holds them in
line. Of course, if the looseness is really due only to natural wear of
the parts, and if it isn't too bad, it won't cause an accident, unless
you're in the habit of driving fast. In that case, you won't have as close
control over the steering as you should, and the looseness may favor the
development of shimmying."
"Let me see how much play there is now,"
Donan said, as he reached for the steering wheel/ "Then I'll be able to
judge if any more play develops."
"Here's another simple test," Gus said,
as he started to raise the jack very slowly. "Watch the wheels, now. If
the kingpin bearings are tight, and the wheel bearings perfectly adjusted,
the wheels will move up just as though they were solidly attached to the
axle. If either one sags, then you should grab the tire at the top after
you get it clear of the ground, and shake it in and out to find out whether
the looseness is in the king-pin bearing or in the wheel bearing. A little
looseness in either bearing doesn't necessarily mean danger, but it is well
to check it once in a while to see that it isn't getting worse."
"I can do that with my own jack just as
well can't I?" Donan asked.
"Sure," Gus replied. "Take one side at a
time.
"There's another test you can make when you have the front wheel
jacked up. That is to spin it to see that the front axle bearings are in
good shape. If the wheel spins freely, with only a faint, smooth kind of a
roar from the bearing, then everything is probably in fine shape, but if you
hear any sounds of grinding or grating, especially if the wheel seems to
catch here and there as it spins, then it's quite likely that one of the
roller bearings has cracked. Often a roller bearing can go all to pieces
without jamming the wheel, but once in a while a broken bearing locks the
wheel. If that occurs suddenly while you're going fast, lots of unpleasant
things can happen."
"How do you adjust a front-wheel bearing
when it gets loose?" Donan asked.
"That's simple enough," Gus explained.
"Just pull the cotter pin and turn the castellated nut on the end of the
axle till the bearing just begin to bind, then back it off enough so that
the next slot in the nut will line up with the cotter-pin hole in the axle -
and don't forget to replace the cotter pin!
"While we're on the subject of axles,"
Gus went on, "the seating of the rear hubs on the tapered ends of the rear
axles should be checked once in a while. There shouldn't be any looseness
at all. If there is, the continual banging the key gets, every time you
take your foot off the throttle and put it on again, will eventually shear
off the key and you'll have to be towed home. Or, what is still worse, it
may snap the axle - and losing a wheel doesn't make for safety!"
"Anything else that can affect your safety?" Donan Asked, as Gus
finished with the brake adjusting.
"No car is safe with a windshield wiper
that is on the verge of not operating at all," Gus grumbled, as he put away
his tools.
"But how can you check the condition of a
windshield wiper? Either it works or it doesn't, I'd say."
"What's the matter with testing it now
and then, to see how much pull it has?" Gus suggested. "If your wiper has
power enough to drag the rubber blade back and forth across a dry
windshield, you can bank on its working in the rain. But he sure to clean
the windshield before you test the wiper on the dry glass, or the grit will
make troublesome scratches."
"That's a good tip," Donan agreed. "I'm
going to test my wiper every time I get the windshield cleaned."
"And don't forget your lights," Gus
added, as a parting suggestion.
"Now you're kidding, Gus!" Donan laughed.
"Anyone who drives with rotten lights
certainly is putting an awful strain on his own good luck!"