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The station wagons. The Dart doesn't have vapor lock. It is just a Dart.You have to use a make/model lol
Very helpful info! I just had an issue with vapor lock in the Dart the other day.
The station wagons. The Dart doesn't have vapor lock. It is just a Dart.You have to use a make/model lol
Very helpful info! I just had an issue with vapor lock in the Dart the other day.
The station wagons. The Dart doesn't have vapor lock. It is just a Dart.
It makes no sense at all -- the laws of physics tell us that wood is a poor conductor of heat and is therefore a lousy choice for a heat sink -- but I don't care if it's voodoo if it actually works. Amazing.
I have heard of that before and I can't explain it either. Just like I can't explain why a battery left on a cement floor will go dead. Lots of people have told me this is nonsense, I say leave a good battery on a cement floor for 3 weeks and see what happens.
I once snapped the drive shaft in my old International. Exactly the same thing you describe...taking off from a light and CLUNK...engine running, wheels not turning. Took me a month to find a new drive shaft. Was your driveshaft still connected at both ends as it turned?
It appears to be. The frame of the car is constructed such that the shaft wouldn't necessarily fall to the ground if either end let loose (unlike that stinking Ford) but it doesn't seem to be sagging or drooping unnaturally. When I put it in gear I can see the shaft move a very slight bit, like a spline on the forward end has let loose and is grabbing just slightly, but the grinding noise i hear seems to be coming from further to the rear of the car.
I talked to my mechanic this morning and he thinks it's possible something let loose inside the transmission. The clutch has just been replaced, and I don't feel any grinding thru my foot when I use the pedal, so I don't think it could be that. I didn't feel any resistance or hear any grinding when pushing the car last night -- other than the resistance of trying to roll two tons of steel uphill -- so that would seem to rule out anything directly to do with the axle.
I think we found a way to get that repair paid for.If you want to charge for the answer once you get it, I'll pay a fair amount. This is the most interesting automotive mystery-malfunction I have heard in a long time.