Thanks, Mark! Good to meet you, too. IF you're ever up Albany way, stop in! jc >John: > >Great story, glad you got home safely. Makes me wanna go RIGHT OUT >and get stainless brake lines though.... Young son should be >commended on such calm obedience. Driver is to be commended on calm >thinking and what sounds like very deft tranny manipulation (only in >a push-button!). > >MANY THANKS for bringing your "barbie-skin-pink" '61. Enjoyed seeing >it immensely. And THANKS also for taking photos. > >Happy Imperialing. >-- > >On Sun, 14 Jul 2002 23:58:14 > John Corey wrote: >>Well, fellow Imperialists, We did it! >> >>The IML had a great turnout of about 15 lovely cars. There was lots >>of foot traffic and interest. We had represented years from the >>early 50s through the 70's (hey, don't press for details, I'm just a >>61 guy). The weather was perfect and the Imperial tent was ideally >>situated to catch the breeze, so it was both shady and cool there. >> >>Young Son (Ethan, 11) and I took Pinkie (the Parts Car NOT) in for a >>full once over & State inspection mid week, filled it with a full >>travel kit (1 gallon each of all fluids, fire extinguisher, towels >>paper and terry, muffler patch, some coathangers, FSM, and a good >>tool set) and set out Thursday afternoon. We had a trunk lid in the >>trunk (yes it goes IN the trunk if turned sideways) to trade with >>Kerry P, some other bits to swap, some 1961 ads and literature, plus >>a cooler of drinks and several boxes of cookies. >> >>It's almost 300 miles from home to Carlisle, twice as far as we'd >>ever taken her before -so we expected a little adventure, and we got >>it! Any of you who have ever travelled central PA know that there >>are small towns, identified mostly by the signs (not actual sightings >>of human habitation), very occasional truckstops, lots of hills, and >>nothing else but trees, unless you count the perpetual highway >>construction projects around Scranton (going on twenty five years >>now, with no visible improvement and few changes!). >> >>Anyway, about 8 PM, almost 4 hours into the ride (at a pleasing if >>not entirely legal rate of progress) and just past said Scranton >>pylons and lane chicanes, the brakes failed. Completely. I thought >>maybe a cylinder had let go or that the master had gone under, as >>they seemed to get a little capacity if pumped. What to do? 5000+ >>pounds of Imperial with no brakes. Nowhere in sight to do work (it's >>REALLY dark in Central PA). Well, what would you do? We just slowed >>down and motored the last 50 miles or so at 45 mph. Hey, traffic was > >real light and the low speed left us lots of front room. Our motel > >was known to be just off the exit ramp, so if we could reach and stop > >there, we could fill up the master in the morning, right? >> >>We did make it to the motel (an overpriced favorite of Class 8 >>truckers, called the Appalachian Motor Inn). Using the lower gears >>and lots of advance planning to slow down as needed, with a final >>punch to reverse and a stomp to the parking brake for the two >>unavoidably required full stops (exit ramp and parking lot). Whew! >>Young son, ever faithful, sat quietly as requested throughout, so Dad >>could REALLLY concentrate on this task. >> >>In the AM, we checked the master cylinder. Yep, down to the sludge, >>and fluid OVER the rubber air boot, too. Hmmm... We topped it off >>and I got in to check the pedal for sponginess from air. The first >>press felt good. Great! Minimal air. But as I held it, it suddenly >>went down with a hiss audible under the car (door was open). Sure >>enough. A puddle of fluid there revealed the line to the rear had >>ruptured. Well, we DIDN'T bring brakelines with us (note to future: >>a little solvent cleaner, 5-minute epoxy, SS foil and tie-off wire, >>we could have patched this one - and DON'T forget the flashlight). >>Back to the room to call for help. Lucky us! Just two miles down >>the motel road (Harrisburg Pike, US route 11) was Eddies Auto Repair > >and they could do emergency surgery. SO... >> >>With the left turn signal on and my left foot tapping the otherwise >>useless brake pedal to simulate emergency flashers, one hand on the >>wheel and the other playing a tune on the tranny pushbuttons, we >>SLOWWWWLLLLLLLYYYY motored down the shoulder to Eddie's for a fix. I >>only had to punch the reverse button once, where the shoulder was >>crossed by the exit ramp for the Penn Turnpike, and a big truck (even >>larger than the Imperial) insisted on his rights. OK, It stalled the >>car, but it kept it straight. >> >>We spent about 2 1/2 hours at Eddie's, with a gas-station quick-mart >>breakfast from across the street, watching mind-sucking daytime TV >>(Eddie doesn't like a gallery when he works, so I didn't try detail >>suggestions or assistance beyond the front counter explanations). By >>noon, we had wheels on the ground again, with new line from splitter >>to rear axle, all bled and stopping true. We are duly warned that >>there's rust on those other lines, too. Less than $250 on our >>Plastic (brakes that work: priceless!) and we're off to the >>fairgrounds! >> >>Arriving for lunch we got the last slot of the lineup of >>Eagle-crested Chrysler's Finests. We met old new friends never known >>but by email. We toured the whole show. We found we had lost a >>hubcap center eagle on the way, but replaced it with a reasonably >>clean, matching hubcap for $20. We got a 'road sign' reading >>"IMPERIAL DRIVE" for the barn road at home. We got two good photo >>books for $30 total (Imperial Photo Archive 55-63 and 64-68). We >>ate the usual fair food. About 6 that night, young son, ever patient >>stated a strong desire to go to the drags so we motored on over, >>leaving most of our Imperial pals basking in the cooler evening air. >>That night we traded trunklids with Kerry P. in the motel lot. No >>one could have confused that handoff for a drug deal! >> >>Saturday was more fun. We arrived a few hours earlier than Friday. >>We met a couple more new friends, including a walk-in (and fellow >>Licensed Engineer) who owns a beautiful Coronado Cream 1961 >>Convertible and lives just 10 miles from Carlisle! He'll be in the >>lineup WITH car next year! I proudly bought an IML T-shirt and Young >>Son found a vendor with a custom car model worthy of his allowance >>(and retreated to the back seat of Pinkie to plan his project). I >>found a vendor who will make us a whole set of new stainless brake >>lines in exchange for sending him the originals as patterns (61 >>Imperials being not yet in his repertoire!). Toured the PT Cruiser >>field with Young Son, picking up ideas for GoodWife's Cranberry >>Flamed Chariot. Signed her up for that owners' club. >> >>We had to leave early, about 4 PM, to get young son home for scout >>camp departure on Sunday morn. Bye to those that could be found and >>off we went. At the filling station, top off the tank (we got 15 + >>mpg - not too bad for 75-80 mph in hilly country - though it did >>include that stretch of 45 mph, too). We also added a quart of ATF >>and a bit of 10W-40. Did that ATF go out with the R-punch stops, I >>wonder??? >> >>About an hour down the road it got exciting again (what is it about >>the Scranton area? Is it my personal Bermuda Triangle?). We were >>just cresting one of those looong PA hills and I reached to adjust >>the compartment airflow. Suddenly, the power just silently fades >>away. I didn't lift right away, because the downgrade kept us >>rolling with only a mild loss-of-push sensation. Very weird. Gauges >>read OK, but (push, push on the throttle) no response. Shift to >>neutral. Turn key off, then on again. KAPOW! I thought the >>driveshaft had come free and whacked the floorboards, and I was sure >>I saw the hood jump! Key off and glide to shoulder to check for >>survivors. Quick visual under rockers showed no obvious parts >>hanging off. Electrical power still present (lights work). Brakes >>work. Hmmmm... Let's turn it back on, must've just been a backfire. >>She fires up on the key as always, but.... RUMPA RUMPA RUMPA. Did we >>forget to bring mufflers? It sounds like the MOPARS at the drags the > >night before! Another look under , from the rear, tells the story. >>The left muffler has had its entire rear plate blown wide open, and >>the right muffler has been inflated from a flat oval to a round in >>its middle (the ends held). That was SOME backfire! More like a >>pipe bomb! >> >>Well in retrospect, I see how I did it. When I reached for the air >>controls, I must have bumped the ingition (note for future, replace >>hgih-leverage rigid key ring with limp chain). That accidentally >>switched off the engine at speed, then left the key in the 'ON' >>position (so gauges still read normal at first). The torque >>convertor back-drove the engine while I, in my confusion, fed it gas >>that went through unburned. When the live stuff came through after >>the restart, there was already an explosive mixture in the mufflers >>(or maybe just the left one). That was the bang we heard. >> >>Young son likes the new sound, thinks it's more 'powerful'. Well. >>Maybe. At least at road speeds it isn't too annoying to the old man, >>just a little embarrassing. With the compartment fan on high to keep >>any nasty gasses out, we set off again, stopping only as needed for >>soda recycling and a refuel. Home by 9 PM with only about 6 pounds >>of new leading-edge protein scraps to clean from the grille (Ah, that >>special pleasure of Summer motoring). >> >>We'd do it all again in a minute! A wonderful time had by all and >>(more or less) none the worse for wear. Now, who sells mufflers for >>this old girl....? >> >>from safe at home, for now, >> >>j (&e) 'imperial adventurers' corey >>-- >>John A. Corey >>CFIC, Inc. >>302 Tenth St. >>Troy, NY 12180 USA >>518-272-3565 >>fax 272-3582 >>jcorey@xxxxxxxxxxx >> >>