MAKING PROGRESS… of sorts (Part 172o)
The previous evening
with Elle’s parents and her ‘aunt’ and ‘uncle’ were never brought up
when I arrived home. Elle pretty much knew from having taken the message
from Cliffy about the new motor that I’d be off to the garage after
supper. Being away over the weekend had put my ‘chores’ behind schedule
so I hustled away from the table to try and get some of the lawn cut. A
couple of warm days had brought forth a growth spurt and I didn’t want
to let it get too far ahead of me. Being out in the yard reminded me
that I needed to trim back the opening in the hedge between the two
houses. Since Elle had told me of her positive interaction with the two
women who’d be spending the Summer there I knew it would be well used.
In doing the trimming I had to go through the hedge and when I did I
took another look around. It was certainly different than when Elle and
I’d first moved there. There were new plantings surrounding the new
patio as well as fresh sod for most of the back yard. I remember
thinking that Celia, the lady who owned the house when we moved in,
wouldn’t recognize the place. I also notice something else… something
very interesting, especially to me. Among some random clothes hanging on the wash line were two pair of
panties… one noticeably larger than the other. The two women I’d seen
the afternoon before weren’t big enough for the one pair but it only
took me a few seconds to realize there was another woman living there
that I had yet to meet. It was getting late and I did want to be at the
shop by 7:30pm so didn’t dwell on the subject all that long but got me thinking about later in the Summer.
Showing
up at the garage with $700 made me an instant hero with the rest of the crew.
However, Cliffy had one piece of good/bad news. Over the week of trying
to put the pieces together within our ‘budget’ he’d made a lot of phone
calls all over the Northeast area and had stumbled onto some
interesting news. Chevrolet had developed a new, high performance,
camshaft for the 427ci big block engine. It would cost about $175 more
than the standard one and he’d told the guy who’d told him about it that
we wanted one. If we were to get it we needed cash and needed to go
upstate to get it. He wouldn’t ship it unless he had cash, no checks or
money orders, and he wanted the cash no later than Wednesday. Being a
practical sort, I asked just how much difference this special cam would
make. I wasn’t good on technical stuff but I was good on making common
sense decisions. I listened to all the numbers of torque ratings etc.
but it was when Cliffy brought out the fact the Chevrolet had developed
it specifically for racing that I bought into the idea. It helped when
he told us the guy had said Chevrolet had made a limited number of them
and originally had to approve just who got them. Cliffy’s father walked
up just about at that time. He’d avoided being involved in the race car
right from the time we’d bought it from him, only offering an occasional
comment. So, when he piped up with the suggestion that Cliffy go get
the cam the next morning the decision was made for us.
Once that
was decided we broke up into pairs to start assembling the bottom end of
the motor. Even though the parts were new we still had to wash them with a
special solvent. That was my job along with Buster, not my favorite crew
member. (Thinking back on it now, it’s a wonder I’m still here as I had
no protection for my hands or face and I was in the liquid halfway up
to me elbows.) The engine block in itself weighed over 600 pounds and
was too big to fit in the tub so we had to spread cardboard on the floor
and brush the solvent over the whole thing. The stuff smelled and,
having used it the previous year when Alan and I rebuilt the Ford motor
before the championships in October, knew I wouldn’t be able to get rid
of it with soap and water. I just hoped no one at the bank would comment
on it the next day. Cliffy and Alan started fitting the wrist pins to
the pistons and putting the rings on them. Dick went about making up the
new motor mounts we’d need for the Chevy engine. I remember the shop
being almost eerily quiet as we went about our assigned tasks.
========================
In
part 172g I jumped a little ahead and wrote about how our part-time
crew member, Robob, had a contact with Chevrolet and that he could get
us a set of the newly developed aluminum heads. The Chevrolet plant was
located just outside Buffalo, NY and that we’d have to have someone pick
them up for us and mentioned that my friend "Big B" whose sales job took him up there would pick it up.
In writing about that I forgot about the camshaft and
it also being located up in Buffalo. We still didn’t know about the
aluminum heads when Cliffy took off to retrieve the camshaft. Sorry
about the screw-up.
=========================
Cliffy wanted
to get away before daylight to get through the city before it got
congested so took off around 10pm. The engine block was attached to a
moveable stand and we moved it over by the air compressor to blow it
dry. Alan had said he wanted to get the crankshaft in place and
‘buttoned down’ before leaving. The thinking behind that was it would be
ready to have the pistons inserted and that Cliffy, during the day,
might be able to ‘pop’ a few and saving time for other things. The rest
of us left before midnight and were happy with the progress. I remember
Alan, the eternal optimist, thinking that we could be racing on
Saturday. I, silently, disagreed. It was one thing to put a motor that
you had just taken apart back together but this one was new in every sense. I knew there would be some ‘bumps in the road’ to come.
By
mid week Elle seemed to be doing OK and had most of her energy back.
She’d made contact with Martha from next door and had spent most of the
day with her daughter and Kaye getting to know each other. Elle had
mentioned that the woman was a tennis player and wanted Elle to show her
the courts. With school still in session they didn’t make an attempt to
play but Elle agreed to “go hit a few” after supper. Not sure of how
her pregnancy would come into play Elle told me she really hadn’t wanted
to but, wearing a partial ’package’ and a pair of her loosest shorts
they were headed up to the school as I was leaving for the garage. As I
wrote about Martha when I met her on Sunday, she was worth a second
look. Older than Elle and I by a few years, I was tempted to find a
reason to delay leaving so I could see just what she was wearing. But
when Elle told me she was going over to her house to pick both her and
her daughter up I gave up on that idea… but it was ‘food for thought’
for the future.
Cliffy was back with the cam and wasn’t sure
what to do with it. There were no papers with it but he did have some
telephone numbers to follow up with. I was a little concerned and
couldn’t help but wondering if we hadn’t made a mistake. I asked who the
guy was that Cliffy had met with and he didn’t know his background but
said he had a good reputation within the racing community. All I could
do was hope… since it was pretty much my money that had bought it. By
the time we left that night we had all the pistons in the engine block
and were ready to bolt the oil pan on. It was beginning to look like a
motor.
To be continued…
2 comments:
We used to clean equipment and parts with gasoline, leaded, and of course never had any idea that there was a health hazard involved. Just let it go onto the ground. No wonder I'm goofy. We used to put a little gas on poison ivy, no one ever gave a thought that we might be doing to our world. Looking back on the stuff I worked around and inhaled into my system I am amazed at living so long.
OB... like the old German saying goes.. "We grow too soon old and too late smart"
I used gas to wash out paint brushes and then used that to kill weeds in cracks in the driveway... among other things
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