Back when I belonged to the WPC Club, I wrote a mini-article about how I simply-fixed a pinhole leak that developed in Horrie's oil-pressure line, that 'runs' to the dash-gauge, thru the firewall. Before I mention the 'fix', I urge ALL of you, with cars having an oil gauge, to go out to your cars, & check these rubber-lines, for contact/rubbing abrasions, like where the lines contact the throttle-linkage-bracket, on the firewall. One memorable day, 15+ years ago, I returned home, from a local cruze-around, to discover an apparent engine-fire occurring, 'from' all the smoke that was , then, billowing from under the hood!! Quickly raising the hood revealed an actual oil leak, that was dripping/spraying onto the driver's side exhaust manifold. What I dscovered was that the oil-gauge line, from, oh, March, 1957 until that day, had been lying against the subject "t-l-b" , until, from very minor driving-vibrations, a crescent-gouge had been worn into that line, until the pinhole failure eventually developed, with the aforementioned "excitement". Fortunately, I was 'home' when the line-failure (finally) occurred!! Like Dawson, I encountered great difficulty in locating a NOS or NORS (after-market) oil pressure line, & my local "hydraulic" shop didn't have the esoteric fitting, that conects to the gauge. What to do?? Well, kind of like, for the stolen Civil War train, "The General", when its Union Army liberators ran out of track , they just moved the track, from the rear, to replace a destroyed-section, lying in front of the train. Well, that's not a perfect analogy, but I do try to use "what's at hand", to effect repairs, when ever possible. What I did, to fix the oil line leak, & to PREVENT any future leak, from its wearing against the "t-l-b" was to have that hydraulic shop, merely, install (brass) CONNECTION- FITTINGS, to the area of the failure. The "c-f's" now lie against the "t-l-b", preventing any further abrasions/wear onto the oil line. Subsequently, no problemos from/with the oil line---btw, the area of the 'failure' is virtually "invisible", due to its small-size, and its location, with its hand-in-glove fitment, lying against the "t-l-b"-----the line, itself "looks" fine, but be sure to run your hand all-around its length, to check for wear-points!! Neil Vedder ************************************************************* To unsubscribe or set your subscription options, please go to http://lists.psu.edu/cgi-bin/wa?SUBED1=l-forwardlook&A=1 |