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George Knowles is one of those lucky
fellows who don't have to let the chore of earning a living interfere with
their having a good long vacation every year. He takes off six weeks each
summer, and he always spends them in the same way - fishing up in the State
of
Maine.
So when George, much sunburned and
looking better than a million dollars, drove his big car into the shop of
the Model Garage late one afternoon, Gus Wilson grinned widely, tamped the
glowing long cut down in the bowl of his old pipe, and set himself to hear
all about the big ones that George had caught and the bigger ones that he
had let get away.
But when George climbed out of his car
and shook hands he looked preoccupied, and very apparently his mind wasn't
swelling on his piscatorial triumphs. "Hello, Gus," he said. "Mighty glad
to see you! Everything all right with you …Good! … Yes, I had a grand
time - tell you all about it sometime soon. But right now I've got this
darned car on my mind. It's the most expensive car I've bought for years -
that's why I let it stand in my garage and took Jack's old open car up to
Maine with me. There's only six thousand
miles on the clock of this bus, Gus, but she isn't running right. Not at
all right!"
"That's queer," Gus said. "I remember
that she was in perfect condition just before you went away… Any chance that
some one was joy riding in her while you were gone, is there? Stranger
things have happened."
"No chance at all!" George maintained.
"Everything in the garage was exactly as I had left it - wheels jacked up to
save the rubber, and so on."
"What seems to be the matter?" Gus
wanted to know.
"I can't put my finger on it," George
said. "Everything seems to be working perfectly, but the car hasn't got any
pep. Every time I drive it I think it's going to bog down with me. It
never does - but that's the feeling it gives me. Take a run down the road
in her, Gus. You'll see what I mean before you've gone a mile."
"Sure thing," Gus agreed. He slipped a
cover over the driver's seat and got in. George Knowles walked around and
got in beside him.
Gus stepped on the starter. The engine
took off promptly and purred smoothly. He backed out of the shop, and
started to drive slowly down the road. "Runs smooth as cream," he told
Knowles.
"Yes," George agreed, "she runs smoothly
enough. But step on her, and you'll see what I mean."
Gus pressed his foot down on the
accelerator pedal. The car picked up speed, but it had a queer feel to it.
"Yes," he said, "you're dead right, George. Something's wrong somewhere.
The engine is running perfectly, but the car hasn't got any surge. She runs
just the way I feel after I've eaten a big lunch on a hot day. I'll take
her back to the shop and give her the once-over."
"Right," George agreed. "Let me out at
my house, will you? You can give me a ring when you get her fixed up, or
when you find out what's the matter with her, if it's anything serious."
Back in the shop, Gus refilled his pipe
and then did some steady thinking. If Knowles's car had been an odd one, or
even a car on which he never had one any work, its lack of surge and pep
would have suggested several possible troubles to him. But the car was next
door to new, and Gus had done enough little jobs on it to be sure that it
had been in perfect condition just before George had laid it up while he
took his six-week vacation.
After thinking things over for a few
minutes Gus decided that the carburetor choke valve might be sticking, but
on examining it he found that it was working perfectly. So was the float.
A careful check of the timing disclosed nothing wrong. Fuel trouble was
out: except when he was off on long trips George Knowles always bought his
gasoline at the Model Garage and Gus takes good care that there is nothing
wrong with the gas that he sells.
He was scratching his head over the
puzzle when Joe Clark called to him from the office that he was going home.
Glancing at the clock, Gus saw that it was a half hour after closing time,
and realized that he was hungry. So he locked up the shop, got into his
car, and drove downtown to get his dinner.
One reason why Gus Wilson is a top-flight
automobile mechanic is that he's never able to stop thinking about a
puzzling job until he has evolved a way of licking it. So all the time he
was eating he was thinking about Knowles' car. "Never heard an engine that
ran more nice and quiet," he said to himself. "Hey! Maybe that's it! That
engine of George's runs too quiet! By gun! I'll have to take a look!"
He hurried through his dessert, drove
back to the garage, let himself in and switched on the shop lights. While
he was taking off his coat he heard a car stop outside and then drive off,
and a moment later George Knowles came in.
"Just happened to be passing with a
friend," he explained, "and saw your lights go on. Well, have you found out
what's the matter with that bus of mine?"
"No, I haven't," Gus told him. "But
while I as eating my dinner I had an idea. If you want to wait a few
minutes, I'll tell you whether or not it was a bright one."
"Sure - go ahead," Knowles said.
Gus started the engine and let it idle.
The he walked around to the back of the car and put his hand over the end of
the tail pipe of the muffler.
"Yep - it was a bright idea!" he said.
"I thought that engine was running too quietly. I can scarcely feel the
exhaust coming out. That locates the trouble, George. It's either in the
exhaust pipe or, more likely, in the muffler. It won't be long now!"
He took off the muffler and exhaust
pipe. He pushed a flexible cable through the pipe with ease, proving that
there was no obstruction in it. Then with the aid of a bright light, he
looked into the outlet port of the muffler, and a minute later he started to
laugh.
"Hey, what's the joke?" Knowles wanted
to know.
"The joke's on you - on us," Gus said,
pointing to what looked like a ball of mud just inside the rear end of the
muffler.
"What the devil is that?" Knowles
demanded.
Gus laughed some more. "That's a
wasps' nest," he said. "While you were gallivantin' around up there in
Maine some nice industrious insects set
up housekeeping in your muffler. And they built their happy home so big
that the exhaust couldn't blow it through the tail pipe. Naturally, the
obstruction in the muffler caused back pressure, and enough loss of power to
give your engine that dead feeling when you stepped on the accelerator
pedal. You're not stung, George - but you might have got stung real bad if
the old carbon monoxide hadn't done in those wasps!"
He cleaned out the muffler with a stick,
and replaced it and the exhaust pipe. Then he got into the car and raced
the engine. "Perfect!" was his verdict. "Pep to spare!"
Lights burning after hours in the shop of
the Model Garage always are an irresistible magnet for Gus Wilson's
customers, many of whom are his near neighbors and all of whom are his warm
friends.
Before George Knowles had time to drive
out, genial Dr. Marvin, on his way home from the last call on his evening
round, came in and settle himself comfortably in the only chair. Then young
Jack Simpson appeared, said "Thought I'd find you here!" to his
father-in-law, and perched himself on Gus's workbench. State Trooper Jerry
Corcoran rode up on his motor cycle in what sounded like a blast of
machine-gun fire, and joined the gathering. And then lean Tim Sheridan,
Gus's most ardent disciple, parked his "Screwball Special" out front and
came in wit his blond hair on end and his dog Dodger at his heels, to smoke
home-made cigarettes and to imbibe automobile wisdom at the feet of his
master.
In a few minutes the shop was full of
tobacco smoke and conversation. George Knowles told all about his fishing
trip. Then Gus told about the wasps' nest in the muffler of George's car.
"Mufflers," Jerry Corcoran said. "That
reminds me of how I stuck my neck out last Sunday, and darned near broke the
first rule they taught me when I went on the cops."
"What rule is that?" Dr. Marvin asked.
"Never to start anything that you can't finish, Doctor," Jerry said
grinning. "And that's just what I almost did!
"I guess you all know that little
church about five miles out on the dirt road. A lot of people who live back
in the country attend it, and some of them aren't such very good drivers.
They park their cars in a field beside the church, and when they start home
after the morning service they're likely as not to get in trouble and tangle
up the traffic. That dirt road is narrow, with a high crown, and shallow
drainage ditches on each side of it, and low clay banks on the outer edges
of the ditches. So I make a point of being out there at
noon on Sundays, to keep things
moving.
"Last Sunday I was a few minutes late - I
had to chase a fellow who was doing seventy-three on the highway, and write
him out a ticket. When I came in sight of the church I saw that there were
a half dozen or so cars tied up on either side of it. And when I got past
the cars on my side I saw what was tying them up - an old sedan which was
stalled right across the road, with its rear wheels in the ditch.
"I rode up to it, and got off my motor
cycle, all set to bawl out the driver for trying to turn around in a place
like that. But, when I got an eyeful of the driver, I saw that she was a
darned pretty girl, and that she was all hot and bothered about the trouble
she was causing. So instead of bowling her out I asked her what was the
matter and if I could help her. She said that when she had turned into the
road in front of the church she had started home, and then remembered that
she had to go to her aunt's house, in the other direction; that she had
tried to turn around and had stalled her engine, and that she couldn't get
it started again.
"'Hop out, Miss,' I told her, 'and let me
have a try at it.'
"She got out and I got in. when I
stepped on the starter the engine took off, but it ran in a weak, sputtering
sort of way, and every time I put the car in gear and speeded up the engine
to try to pull the rear wheels out of the ditch, it went dead on me. After
I had tried four or five times the car was full of black smoke that had me
coughing and made my eyes water, and some of the young fellows who were
standing around were beginning to grin and wisecrack.
"I hated like the dickens to admit that I
couldn't get that car started, but I was just about to give it up and ask
some of the crowd to help me push it out of the road when that black smoke
gave me an idea. When I got out and took a look at the rear end I was sure
that I was right. The exhaust pipe was low-hung and it stuck out several
inches beyond the back of the car, and it was right up against the outer
bank of the ditch.
"I got some fellows to push the car until
the rear wheels ere part way out of the ditch, and blocked them with a
couple of rocks. Then I took a look at the exhaust pipe, and knew that I
had guessed right. When the rear wheels had rolled down into the ditch the
end of the pipe had bitten into the bank and cut itself a nice,
close-fitting plug of sticky clay. I suppose the gaskets were loose enough
to allow enough of the exhaust to escape for the engine to idle weakly, but
as soon as you gave her the gas the back pressure built up and killed it.
As soon as I had cleaned out the exhaust pipe, it ran all right."
"Nice going, Jerry," put in Gus,
approvingly. "You should have been a mechanic…"
"That reminds me - " interrupted Jack
Simpson. But Gus Wilson was pointing an accusing forefinger at the shop
clock.
"That clock reminds me," he said, "that
it's a quarter past twelve! I don't want to seem inhospitable, gentlemen,
but these lights are going out in exactly two minutes. And fifteen minutes
after they go out I'm going to be home and in bed!"
"That's another of your bright ideas,"
George Knowles said, getting up and stretching.
"I'm chock-full of them!" Gus admitted.
END
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