Frank Swygert wrote: > The only other things that are likely to fail over a length of time > is the starter and generator. THat starter is common as dirt -- all old apps, but many. A Fireball Atomic Four (boat motor) uses EXACTLY the same starter. Just some Ford thing. What mainly goes wrong with them is the long screws holding the solenoid together loosen, and you get intermittent starting -- click click -- click click -- then randomly it cranks fine. Loose screws! Otherwise they deteriorate slowly and you get advance notice of impending doom. The generators also deteriorate slowly; lift the hood at night with the engine running, if you can read a newspaper from the blue glow off the commutator, rebuild it! (I'm only partly joking here.) The regulators stick, and sometimes fail outright. There's like 5 people in the U.S. who want to work on THOSE things. Mine sticks (the pull-in relay doesn't) and I have to tap it with a tire iron. Water pumps and fuel pumps scare me more. Fuel pumps die slowly, but you usually don't notice until it wont run, or it makes a puddle of fuel on the ground! Bad time to have to mail order a part! I carry a rebuilt spare (!) in the trunk. (1) you'll likely need one someday (2) you'll have it ready (3) you can always sell it for a profit. Same with water pump. Rock Auto has 'em cheap and new and somehow, the right part. I carry a spare also. These parts die no faster than any other car's pumps, probably less, but they're old and it's most inconvenient when they do. The things that I am very paranoid about in commuter antiques are, in order: tires wheels brakes alignment cooling system carburetor ignition electrics "conveniences" Top of the list is most important, but once good, require least attention. The bottom of the list is less important, but seems to attract more attention! The first three are the most important, the most expensive, but then the least hassle+cost+problem once you get them right. To me, what makes an old car crappy are non-power chassis stuff -- rattly front end that dives and shudders (unsafe, embarassing, no fun and a chore to drive, and ruins other parts), dead springs, suspensions that don't stay in alignment and so eat tires. Crappy brakes are just foolish for commuting, and you can get good tires for cheap. Don't overlook boring old wheels -- dents, rusty leaks, wobble, rotten lug nuts, all that crap makes you crazy. Tires won't hold air wear out, car pulls funny, etc. Wheels are cheap ($50 each new, worst case) and last "forever". A new set of tires costs me $400 and they last 5 years. 34psi regardless of brand. I get good quality no-name Korean tires from my local reputable shop and have ZERO problems. I check air every couple of months, and they never need ANY. I rotate 'em once a year or so. I get 5 tires at a time, old-fashioned style. Under the hood seems most obvious but basically steady highway speeds are really easy on engines! COnstant medium speed, medium load, tons of cooling air, etc. Electronic ignition is mandatory, or adjust points monthly! Ugh. And at 3000 rpm points are pretty much at their maximum output. Cooling system matters the most, other than things that 'break'. I'm convinced that the 'high flow' thermostats are a a failproof upgrade for deadstock cooling systems. One look at them and it's obvious that they will flow more water when open -- I can see NO reason to restrict the flow that the already crappy water pump moves. Factory stamped-steel fans SUCK. They are rarely balanced, and being at the end of the water pump shaft, they wobble and eat the bushing, and shorten pump life, I think a lot. Electric or at least cheap aftermarket flex fan. Flex-O-Lite from NAPA are good. Two row radiator is fine. All flushed and clean, as little antifreeze as you can run safely. Bad wiring will make you nuts, collect fix-it tickets, and maybe get you hit by other cars. Bad wiring is the bane of old cars, but lighting issues are usually "just" socket problems. "Just", yeah right, it can be a PITA to get them working! I replace everythign I can, but the rest I disassemble, wire brush, sand, steel wool, etc. Cut off plastic boots, then seal later with heatshrink tubing and/or layers of silicone. ANd pack the sockets with ordinary chassis grease BEFORE you put the lamp in. It will keep h2o (water and condensation) off the contacts. The grease is an insulator but doesn't matter -- the spring will make metal-to-metal contact. No need to use fancy silicone, and that s**t creeps all over everything and melts when it's hot. Chassis grease stays thick. "Conveniences" like radio, iPod etc -- I swear I spend more time in the car fiddling with this non-essential essential crap than I do working on the car. My current lazy-a** stereo solution is a brick amp under the seat, speakers in the doors, and an RCA-to-miniplug dangling on the hump. Then I plug my Creative Zen ("ipod" workalike) into it. Done. At least a couple times a week I look under the car for "surprises". I listen to EVERY SINGLE NOISE and IDENTIFY IT. THat I think is my #1 trick for heading off problems. Plus anything that doesn't "feel" exactly (I mean exactly) right, I IDENTIFY it. It might be minor, or major, but ID it. I'm not exaggerating when I say I know absolutely every single noise that my Classic wagon makes, and I think, every noise the little Rambler makes. Every. Single. Noise. I usually try to eliminate them (the fold down seat back latch squeaks, never succeeded with that one!) or ID them. I was certain that my home-made strut bushings were groaning, so I squirt some WD40 on it to see if that would make it shut up (ID it). Nope! Turns out, I my lower arm inner bolt (the eccentric) wasn't tight enough. Once a month or so, I put two fingers on the hub of every wheel (including my trailer, if I'm pulling it). Bad bearings get hot! Unbalanced brakes one side gets hotter than the other. (Check side to side, not front to rear.) If the car starts pulling slightly to one side? No need to panic, but I test it next stop, is it me? Wet? Dirt? One time? Occasionally? If it's mild, I'll wait til the weekend, if it persists jack it and spin the weel, look at the disc or drum, etc. Usually it's a false alarm. Takes 10, 20 minutes. But also while you're investigating what turns out to be nothing, you are also, by the way: looking at the tires. Seeing leaks. Looking for shiny spots, wear, heat, etc. THAT is how you HEAD OFF problems in the first place... a major reason to wash a car, for me, is a close-up inspection. _______________________________________________ Amc-list mailing list Amc-list@xxxxxxxxxxxx http://splatter.wps.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/amc-list