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On Sun, 12 Aug 2007 17:58:35 +0000, Larry wrote:
Bob wrote in news:1186936610.427720.323340 : Hi Larry: I just finished talking to a nieghbor up the street. He's retired and restores really old cars.... His lates is a 1916 Overland. So Im standing there yacking when I notice a bunch of flexable metal conduit (3/4" OD) routed to a metal junction box. I asked what that. the guy says that most of the old stuff used flex metal conduit for their wiring. Oh, the wire was also straned tinned. Simple.... industructable ... Built like a ship......... 1916. Im not sure modern is always the best way. Good luck with your Chev. I dumped the Chevy. It was my father's. He died last January. The Chevy's wiring was a bunch of hookup wire of various colors, then loosely wrapped in cheap electrical tape to make it a "harness", as opposed to just leaving hookup wire laying all over. I had to fix the right front door wiring as Dad had it fixed by Mr Goodwrench and Mr Goodwrench smashed the plastic-covered wires into a sharp object under the right front door switches, shorting it to ground....stranding all the power windows open or closed until the short vibrated clear enough and the 25A breaker ("protecting" the #18 wires?) cooled off and reset. The Overland wiring reminds me of my favorite car, my 1973 Mercedes-Benz 220D taxi sedan. Its wiring is contained in a plastic harness case. Every plug and socket on the car is bakelite with brass cross-split pins into brass matching sockets that never corrode. In the wire end of these brass pieces, there are two holes at right angles in a solder cup. The tinned wire is inserted into the cup through the side hole and hand soldered to fill the cup. Wires pulling loose, in 34 years of service, simply doesn't happen. The soldering is stronger than the wire, itself. The plugs don't pull loose as a snap-on bakelite cap, which holds the individually-removeable/replaceable pins in the bakelite holder also directs all wires out the side of the plugs/sockets so there is never linear pull. The pins fit so tight you have to pry the plugs apart with a screwdriver blade to unplug them. There are matching sockets in all the stuff, like taillights for instance, these plugs fit into. The jacketed harness fits into a groove impressed in the steel so it doesn't protrude, such as in the trunk (boot) floor (deck?). Mr Goodwrench can make cars like this, but chooses not to. So can't Sea Ray, but that's another sad story. Larry, you remind me of the Swedesh guy used to run a Fellows gear shaper in the shop. He was always bitching about, "Yah, how com 'dis machine it never break, but my ford car it always break". Finally one of the guys told him "if you have paid as much for your ford as the company paid for this gear shaper your ford probably wouldn't break either." Quality costs money and I remember a friend who bought a new 190D. People used to stand around talking about how much more it cost then a Chevy. Bruce in Bangkok (brucepaigeATgmailDOTcom) |
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