Wednesday 15 June 2011

The beginning!

Once upon a time, I went to the drag racing with some friends. They have a 1974 Dodge Challenger, in purple, and run it in the Pro/ET class. The drag racing is fun, and I've always liked the look for the early 70s cars. As I learned about the cars I was fairly certain that one day I would probably end up with one.

And then one came up for sale.

Predictably I bought it. Maybe it wasn't my best financial decision - we already knew it needed some work, but it was in budget, and it being a classic car I decided I probably wasn't going to lose out a huge amount, financially.

Unfortunately, the vibration in the driveshaft that my friendly engineer noticed on the test drive that I hadnt' spotted was, in fact, a little worse than expected. The car was 3 hours away from home, and at about 2 horus and 45 minutes into the journey home I was thinking: "Is it just my imagination, or is that vibration getting worse? I've been in the car a long time, and if it's gradually getting worse that's probably not good. I'm not far from home so I'll let people know in the morning. It could be my imagination - it is getting fairly late, but I'm sure it's getting worse". And that's when the driveshaft became disconnected from the diff. The engine hit 5000 rpm and stalled. Everything was silent, except for the sound of metal dragging on the road. At this point, I didn't know what what wrong, and so I selected neutral, and tested the brakes a little - they still worked. I decided to get off the road at the roundabout just ahead, and there I waited for the recovery people...

"Hello? I'd like to have my car recovered to home, please."
"What's the problem with it?"
"The driveshaft has failed, and the car can not move under its own power."
"How certain are you of that?"
"Well, I've just picked the driveshaft up off the road and put it in the boot, so it's fairly safe to assume that it's not going anywhere under its own power unless you show up with a drivesahft for a 1972 Dodge Challenger"
"We'll send a recovery truck out".

What an awesome first day...

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