The Model Garage had just opened for
business when a call from Judge Morley Walker brought Gus Wilson to the
phone.
"Gus," the judge said, "I've a case of
traffic violation coming before me later this morning that I'm pretty sure
will involve you before it's cleared up. I suggest that you get in
touch with Officer Corcoran and discuss the case of the People versus
Pearson."
"How's that?" Gus queried. But
the judge had hung up.
"Now what have I done?" the bewildered
proprietor of the Model Garage demanded of his helper, Stan Hicks.
Stan chuckled, when told the
circumstances. "If I were you, I'd call Jerry Corcoran and plead
guilty," he advised.
"You're in bad, Gus."
Gus, puzzled, put in a call to
Corcoran.
"Pearson?" Corcoran said over
the phone. "Why sure, I know all about that case. We're
beginning to think this guy is nuts. His record shows that he's been
driving for years without a traffic violation. But within the past
month he's been arrested three times for reckless driving. I wouldn't
be at all surprised this morning if Judge Walker suspends his license for a
couple of months."
"That sounds bad, Jerry," Gus said.
"But where do I come in on all this?"
"I wouldn't know." Corcoran
said.
"But if Judge Walker called you on it,
I've a hunch you'll find out before the day's up."
Gus discovered that Corcoran was right
when a long-hooded car pulled up before the Model Garage. Its driver
whipped open the door, popped around to lift the hood and peer suspiciously
at the motor.
The man was considerably over six feet
tall, lean as a plasterer's lath, with a cadaverous face holding an
expression of permanent exasperation.
"What can I do for you?" Gus inquired.
"I'm Gus Wilson."
"Listen to the motor run," the man
begged. "Do you hear anything wrong with it?"
"Can't say that I do," Gus said,
cocking an ear to the idling straight eight motor.
"Sounds pretty to me."
A wild look came into the driver's
eyes.
"That's what the cops say. But I
claim that this rattletrap misses, turns hand springs under the hood and
runs backward half the time."
"Cops?" Gus said. "You wouldn't
be Mr. Pearson, by any chance?"
"The same," Pearson retorted.
"I'm supposed to be a reckless driver."
"Are you?" Gus asked.
"No!" Pearson cried. "For
years I've driven back and forth to my job in Stanfield, 80 miles a day,
without a traffic ticket. Then I buy this jalopy and every time I turn
around someone blows a siren down the back of my neck. I tell you,
it's driving me daffy."
"Tell me about it," Gus said.
"I'm a careful driver," Pearson said,
staring around, as if to challenge somebody to dispute his claim. "But
when a man drives 40 miles to work he has to move right along."
"Of course," Gus said soothingly.
"Okay," Pearson said. "Now I'm
moving along. Everything is fine. The car is running sweet.
Then I step on her a bit.
And then - brother!"
"Misses, huh," Gus said. "But
why should you be arrested for that?"
"Why should I?" Pearson jabbed a
finger angrily into Gus's middle. "Now get this, Wilson. I'm in
heavy traffic, and trying to get to work on time. There's one of those
crawling characters up ahead.
We're all anxious to get by.
Then there's an opening and the guy in front of me zooms around this
slow-moving guy.
There's plenty of room for me to get
around, too, and maybe some of the cars behind me. So I step on it,
and whish!"
"Whish!" Gus echoed. "So you go
around. I get it."
"You don't get it," Pearson declared.
"I only go halfway around. Then
this belly-flapping, bent-on-the-middle car of mine begins to miss bad.
Now, Wilson, what would you do?"
"Flare my stop lights and case back
into line. That's the only thing to do when you start to pass and
can't make it."
"Hah!" Pearson snorted in disgust.
"You don't ease back slowly with a
motor that's practically running backward. You ease back fast, and the
cars behind whomp on their brakes. Tires screech and everybody sticks
his head out and makes faces at you and calls you names, and then a cop
comes along and you find yourself talking to the judge."
"I see," Gus said. "Why haven't
you had the car fixed?"
"Fixed! I've had the dang thing
in every garage in Stanfield. How can you fix a car that won't act up
unless you're driving 50 miles and hour?" Pearson scratched his head.
"Let's get back to my story....
"After easing back into traffic, I
pull off on the shoulder and stop fast. I whip out the door, leap to
the front and throw up the hood. There she is, just chuckling at me.
I keep thinking that if I'm fast enough sometime I'll catch her at it."
"And," Gus said, "you try to be so
fast that a police officer calls it reckless driving."
"Exactly!" Pearson exclaimed.
"And don't think one of those characters will believe it's motor trouble.
They just listen to that sweet-running motor, look up and sort of sneer.
That's what I tried to tell the judge this morning. I said, "Now get
this, Your Honor..."
"What did the judge tell you today?"
"He pointed his finger at me,"
Pearson explained, "and said, "You either prove to me that there's
something wrong with your car and get it fixed, or I'm going to suspend your
driver's license for 90 days, and recommend that you be sent to the county
hospital for observation. You can take your car anywhere you like, but
I suggest that you see Gus Wilson. This court will accept the
decision."
"Hospital observation - God.
Lord!" Gus exclaimed. "We'd better get busy and see what's wrong with
this car."
Gus's first guess was that the car
needed a new set of spark plugs - weak plugs would short cut under rapid
acceleration. But he was pretty sure that, since other mechanics had
worked on the car, he was up against a tougher nut than this to crack.
With the uneasy feeling that Judge Morley Walker was breathing on his neck.
Gus went to work.
He cleaned and tested the plugs,
finding them all right. He checked the ignition points, and the
distributor shaft bearing for a loose bushing. He took care to see
that the spring tension on the distributor breaker point was not too great,
causing bounce and missing at high speeds. He removed the distributor
breaker plate and checked the centrifugal wrights of the automatic advance
for friction - a slow spark on acceleration would cause a loss of power.
He checked the coil and condenser connections.
Turning to the fuel system, he checked
the accelerating jet and pump in the carburetor. Next, suspecting
stalling due to a low gas level in the carburetor bowl, he checked the float
level, cleaned the carburetor, checked the gas line, gas tank cap vent and
gasoline pump. He made sure that the intake-manifold studs were tight,
with no air leaks.
"Let's road-test her now," he said.
"Better take a road where there's no
cops," Pearson warned. "They seem to get hot under the collar every
time they see this rig."
Down the highway toward Stanfield,
with Gus driving, the car ran smoothly. When Gus found himself clear
of traffic he speeded up, then fed throttle as he would if he had been
trying a fast pass.
The car picked up speed - then began
to miss badly and fall away in power. Gus eased over onto the
shoulder, leaped out and popped open the hood. The motor now idled
smoothly. After trying this maneuver several times he began to
understand the look of exasperation riding in Pearson's eyes.
"Now it's got you doing it," Pearson
declared. "First thing you know a cop wil come along and slap you with
a ticket. You should try this during the rush hours, when folks are
trying to get to or from work."
"I see what you mean," Gus told him, a
puzzled expression in his eyes. "If I could only get it to miss when
it's standing still."
"That," said Pearson, "is just what
I've been trying ever since I got the car."
The problem still seemed simple to
Gus. The car acted all right when standing still, or when running
steadily along the highway, but missed badly on rapid acceleration when the
motor would naturally be doing considerable shaking in its rubber-cushioned
hangers. There must be a raw or broken wire, or a loose connection
affected by the motor shake.
Gus began a thorough search for such
wiring trouble. It got him nowhere. He tried the car again
anyway - and got the same overall missing and sudden loss of power. It
was baffling.
Gus hated, as do all good mechanics,
to open a motor wide when not under load, but he felt justified this time.
He reached beneath the hood and removed the throttle wide open. The
motor leaped from idle to full power without a sign of a miss.
"Peculiar," Gus said, straightening
his back. Then a wary look came into his eyes. He twisted the
sleeve of his coveralls around.
"That's funny, my elbow's wet.
Does this car use much water?"
"No," Pearson said, "but I suppose the
service station operator adds some water every time I buy gas."
Reaching under the hood again, Gus
gunned the motor to full, his eye on the radiator. As the motor shook
in its rubber-cushioned mountings under full acceleration, Gus saw a thin
jet of water shoot from the gooseneck of the upper hose connection.
"Ah!" he breathed examining the point
minutely. "We've got it whipped. Let's bustle back to the
garage."
"What was it?" Pearson asked.
"A tricky combination," Gus told him
as they drove. "There's a tiny crack in the pipe where the upper
radiator hose attaches and a very stiff upper radiator hose. This
crack doesn't leak except under rapid acceleration, when water pressure is
suddenly increased and the motor shakes in its hangers. Then the tiny
crack opens up and throws a thin spray. It's picked up and atomized by
the fan blast, and thrown on the plugs - that's when they short out.
By the time you pull over, get out and raise the hood, the heat of the motor
has dried off this thin film of water. We'll solder that crack, put on
a more flexible upper radiator hose, and your trouble is over."
Pearson said doubtfully, "Can you make
the judge believe that, Wilson?"
"He will," Gus assured him.
"Don't forget, he took the trouble to look up your past clean driving
record, and decided that something here needed looking into before he
suspended your license."
"I never thought of it in that way."
Pearson said - and, for the first time, Gus saw him grin.
END