hewey
Well-known member
Enjoy the wedding and festivities mate 


Thank you Dennis! Happy Thanksgiving to you as well.congratulations on the wedding and feeling better. Happy Thanksgiving also.
Dan, it's a little cloud hanging over me but it hasn't pissed on my parade too much. Life is hard and short if you're miserable so I prefer to laugh and hope others will laugh with me. Or at me, it's all good.Bob, I think of you often and hope this issue recedes into the darkness from which it came. And I always admire your humor. You are something else!!
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Hewey, we did enjoy the wedding. Liane did her best to make it a crisis but I reminded her we're the grandparents. Stay at arms length, make suggestions but don't volunteer and donate money where needed. Our poor son and daughter in law have three days to prepare for a mob to show up for Thanksgiving. I think I'm tasked with picking up a pumpkin pie from Costco.Enjoy the wedding and festivities mate![]()
This wiring sounds all too familiar -- but I'm usually the one who nicks the wires and then has to shorten them myself! I'm glad you got the flickering power figured out in the shed. We had the same problem in our whole house when it was new. Power company came out several times before they finally found a bad connection in their transformer box that was arcing. Good thing you didn't have a fire inside your garage -- nice catch.Went back at it Sunday and got everything straightened out. I usually have 8 inches of wire in the box to play with but the shortened wires made it a tight area to work in with that pair of 4-inchers. I pity the person who opens that box up in the future.
Thank you Rick!I'm glad your Grandson's wedding went well -- definitely nice to be able to just show up.
This wiring sounds all too familiar -- but I'm usually the one who nicks the wires and then has to shorten them myself! I'm glad you got the flickering power figured out in the shed. We had the same problem in our whole house when it was new. Power company came out several times before they finally found a bad connection in their transformer box that was arcing. Good thing you didn't have a fire inside your garage -- nice catch.

Leonard, we didn't get to spend a lot of time with the newlyweds but I expect they will be returning to Florida for future holiday gatherings. The bride is in the Air Force stationed at Beale AFB so they will are living in Rocklin, CA.Glad you had a great time at your grandson's wedding.
I got to spend a little time with my newly married nephew and his wife. It's really a special time.
Small world. I spent 5 yrs at Beale. I’m trying to find my picture of my 442s in front of the SR and U2. Great location to be stationed at.
Shorty, it is indeed a small world. Hard to believe the SR-71 started flying in 1966, almost 60 years ago. Mach 3 at 80,000 feet is still an amazing feat today.Small world. I spent 5 yrs at Beale. I’m trying to find my picture of my 442s in front of the SR and U2. Great location to be stationed at.


@Squankum, it was the War Department until 1949. When they renamed it the Department of Defense it grew quite a bit.Small world, Big DoD?![]()
Trust me, I am very familiar with the idiosyncrasies of my C4 Corvette. Fortunately mine is a 1987 so the metal window mechanisms still work fine at 37 (the '84-6 C4s had Chinese toy grade plastic window mechanisms). I've had the front of the engine apart a couple of times. First time was for the water pump a couple of years before Y2K. By the time I got the old one out I looked for the fanciest and most expensive aluminum one available and spent several days polishing it. More recently I have had to replace crumbling plastic pieces, including a coolant temperature sensor and its connector.Some C4 content for you, Bob! The alleged Car Wizard moans about:
a) all of the things in the way of removing the water pump (yawn)
2) the location of the horn fuse (good Lord! This gripe is justified. What were they smokin'?)
iii) plastic window regulator, boo, later part upgrade, yay





Hi Bob. Thought I would stop in and say hi. What I would give to be able to attend my Grandson or Granddaughters wedding. You are blessed I like your Knipex pliers as well.![]()
Parts start arriving, including the sensor, connector and its wires and a new U-shape throttle body heater hose. You can see how bulged the one in the photo above is

Might well be. Reason is that in Yurp Q7 TDIs were available with 500HP 6.0 litre V12. My business associate in Iceland has one - just detoxed to 600HP. Pretty impressive performance (ours is a 3.0 litre and does just fine but probably not up to SR71 intercept performance).Looked like an Audi A7 as a chase car at the English airfield, what white sedan was being used for the US footage, I could not figure out.
Might well be. Reason is that in Yurp Q7 TDIs were available with 500HP 6.0 litre V12. My business associate in Iceland has one - just detoxed to 600HP. Pretty impressive performance (ours is a 3.0 litre and does just fine but probably not up to SR71 intercept performance).


Hi Emil. I am truly blessed to be here to see my grandchildren marry and start their families. The Knipex pliers get way more use than the others in that plier drawer.Hi Bob. Thought I would stop in and say hi. What I would give to be able to attend my Grandson or Granddaughters wedding. You are blessed I like your Knipex pliers as well.![]()
@Squankum, when they were priced below $30 I snatched them up. Much as I like the comfort grips, they weren't on sale when I 'needed' them.Be like Bob! Get the Knipex Twin Grip pliers! All the kewl kids are getting them!
Amazon, normal handles, showing $34 for me right now:
Same, from Harry J. Epsteins:
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Knipex Twin Grip 8" Slip Joint Pliers (8201200)
Knipex 82-01-200 Twin Grip slip joint pliers with a push button for easy adjustment.www.harryepstein.com
Look at those teeth! They win most every fight.
Amazon, comfort grips for those who dig that sort of thing... showing at $30 for me right now?!
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B097C7W2YK/?tag=atomicindus08-20
It's up there with the A.I.R. pump as a WTF emission feature.Oh, sure. That throttle body needs some 200F+ coolant flowing through it. You never know when it will ice up.
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Another win for the robots! They use Dodge Chargers and Camaros according to some other YouTube videos and websites. I couldn't swear to it but the one in that video looks like a BMW in the front.
Rian, you're right. Turns out the chase cars have pilots in them to help guide the plane in for a landing because the pilot's view is so poor in the U2 cockpit.Those pirates sure are impressive the way they fly.
@cannuck, I bet you're right about the Q7 power. Seems the U2 landing speed was 120 mph so the chase car had to accelerate and cruise comfortably at that speed.Might well be. Reason is that in Yurp Q7 TDIs were available with 500HP 6.0 litre V12. My business associate in Iceland has one - just detoxed to 600HP. Pretty impressive performance (ours is a 3.0 litre and does just fine but probably not up to SR71 intercept performance).
@Squankum, that W12 in front wheel drive configuration would be scary. I can't wrap my brain around the transmission that would handle the torque and horsepower. The Olds Toronado avoided the problem by using equal length half-shafts coming out of the transmission.That motor came to the US, in my limited knowledge, in the Touareg. I've actually seen one VW Touareg W-12 TDI, on an island off the coast of Maine. Not only did few sell, I generally am not ogling SUV's even from brands I otherwise grew up loving, so maybe others escaped my notice.
It's a W-12 in that each bank is basically two VW VR6 engines, which are a V-6 but only with a 15 degree angle between each three cylinders. IIRC that's almost the same good balance of an inline six, but only one exhaust manifold and cylinder head for those six, unlike a V-6. And most importantly, a lot less length so the VR6 fits into a transverse, front-wheel drive engine bay.
So, double that and you've got the W-12 block, which has also shown up in various gasoline superduper cars in the VW empire.
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W12 engine - Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org
Thank you Tony!Happy Thanksgiving Bob![]()
Thank you Dennis!Bob, hugs kisses and a speedy recovery to you sir
Given your quick wit here on the forums I have to wonder if are in demand at these weddings to give toasts and the like…you’d be top of my list![]()

@Squankum, that W12 in front wheel drive configuration would be scary. I can't wrap my brain around the transmission that would handle the torque and horsepower. The Olds Toronado avoided the problem by using equal length half-shafts coming out of the transmission.
Just to set the record straight, NO "W" blocks in VW/Audi were ever executed in compression ignition. ALL were gassers. The W12 (spark ignition) appeared in A8, Phaeton and Touareg but no "W"s ever in Audi Q7. The Touareg and A8 got the V10 TDI, but that was 2 x the 2.5 inline PD5 (BTW: all of the PDK cars were that engine). Best I can remember is the only use of the V12 TDI was in the Q7 (I believe one prototype A8 only).That motor came to the US, in my limited knowledge, in the Touareg. I've actually seen one VW Touareg W-12 TDI, on an island off the coast of Maine.
It's a W-12 in that each bank is basically two VW VR6 engines,
So, double that and you've got the W-12 block, which has also shown up in various gasoline superduper cars in the VW empire.
Thanks! My mind keeps getting the 10's and 12's all mixed up.Just to set the record straight, NO "W" blocks in VW/Audi were ever executed in compression ignition. ALL were gassers. The W12 (spark ignition) appeared in A8, Phaeton and Touareg but no "W"s ever in Audi Q7. The Touareg and A8 got the V10 TDI, but that was 2 x the 2.5 inline PD5 (BTW: all of the PDK cars were that engine). Best I can remember is the only use of the V12 TDI was in the Q7 (I believe one prototype A8 only).


@Squankum, I used to digest all the automotive trivia I could find but there's so much my brain has given up. Only thing I've discovered lately is that non-Bond Bentleys can fly.I may have been unclear there -- I was trying to talk about the VR6, which started out as a GTI motor, front-wheel drive, in the Golf /// (Mk 3) generation and Jetta and I guess some other cars.
As part of a corporate cost-raising measure, there was also an Audi V-6 of similar displacement but 90-degree, not 15, and used in VW/Audi platforms that did not have transverse engines, like VW Passat and Audis, and let's not forget the VW Phaeton (how can we forget it if we didn't know about it? I think I saw one once.)
Once you get into W12's, I'm assuming awd or rwd. (Mid-engined Audi sports car, big Bentleys.)
We now know that if a Bentley didn't wear nearly 3 tons, the modern W-12 engine might help you fly over a border checkpoint.
@cannuck, I learn something every day on this site.Just to set the record straight, NO "W" blocks in VW/Audi were ever executed in compression ignition. ALL were gassers. The W12 (spark ignition) appeared in A8, Phaeton and Touareg but no "W"s ever in Audi Q7. The Touareg and A8 got the V10 TDI, but that was 2 x the 2.5 inline PD5 (BTW: all of the PDK cars were that engine). Best I can remember is the only use of the V12 TDI was in the Q7 (I believe one prototype A8 only).
You made me look. Found two VW Toureg V10 TDIs about 650 miles away and both are priced at $10,500 and both have around 75,000 miles on them. One is a 2007 and the other is a 2008. My vision started to fade reading all the high tech and fancy pantsy stuff they come with (heated windshield washers?!). An all-wheel drive SUV with a 309 horsepower engine with 553 lb⋅ft of torque at 2,000 RPM sounds like a pretty cool tow vehicle for a 7,700 pound trailer. Then I read about the repair process. My C4 Corvette water pump is a walk in the park compared to the Toureg V10. Almost any repair to the engine requires the engine and entire drivetrain to be separated (lowered) from the body. There's special lift that VW designed to make that possible. A trained VW mechanic with all the special tools is expected spend 30 hours to replace one of the two turbos. I understand alternator, thermostat/cooling system work requires the same process. The thing has two batteries and will not start if either one goes bad:Thanks! My mind keeps getting the 10's and 12's all mixed up.
Found a pic of the V-10 TDI block:
Rian, my grandmother introduced me to the dish when I was a child. It was a standard side for Thanksgiving and Christmas tables. Liane acquired a taste for it so our daughter-in-law makes it special for her. This year the deep 13x9 creamed pearl onion tray was completely consumed by the end of the meal. Birdseye sells a frozen version.Creamed pearl onions
Best you explain and describe for us in the motherland
I Googled it.
I want it
Now

Drives, good eye! Five of the men in the picture are significantly taller than me. The missing Groom would have made it six, he's 6'5".Nice looking family!! Funny it looks like you’re 7 foot tall compared to all your family so congrats for taking the high ground.
Pea soup sounds tasty!!
Philip, the meal was outstanding. The dining table in the house, with extra leaf installed, was covered end-to-end with restaurant size chafing dishes. Another dining table was covered with plates full of appetizers. Everyone left with take-home dinners.Happy Black Friday! I hope your holiday meal was a good one. We had a dozen people for dinner, and then 5 after-dinner guests. Three pies, apple, pumpkin, and my favorite, pecan! I had a piece w/my morning coffee today.
Speaking with our son, who was there w/his family, he told me about new hardware he got at Black Friday prices for our vintage car project. You had a good eye for that post where Old Man Roger was wondering about what station wagon it was, in another thread.
Your ad for the 1956 Chevy line is a good one.
Thanks Nick! I agree with you on the smoked turkey. It was extra juicy this year (our son has a fancy new smoker). Liane is not a fan but she's looking forward to the pea soup.Congrats on your grandson’s wedding and happy thanksgiving Bob! Looks warm and pleasant there!
3 turkeys and a ham, wow! So which turkey was the best? We did a smoked turkey at my in-laws for the first time this year and I think it’s one of the better ones I’ve had.
I've got an 88 'vert:Shorty, it is indeed a small world. Hard to believe the SR-71 started flying in 1966, almost 60 years ago. Mach 3 at 80,000 feet is still an amazing feat today.
The U2 started flying in 1955 and the last flight from Beale was in June 2022.
Takeoff and landing that flying unicycle is a hoot. The wings are held off the ground by two wheeled struts that fall off during takeoff. The landing requires a chase car, which I assume ensures a wing tip doesn't hit the pavement. In this video it's a pretty snazzy Audi:
My father was in the Army Air Corps during WWII and then was in the Air Force Reserves from 1947 until 1957. My bedroom in the '50s had several model airplanes hanging from the ceiling, including a wooden B-17 (dad supervised the build) and plastic P51, P38, Sopwith Triplane and Bell X-1 (built poorly by me without supervision). In the '50s the Bell X1 was a big deal.
@Squankum, it was the War Department until 1949. When they renamed it the Department of Defense it grew quite a bit.
Trust me, I am very familiar with the idiosyncrasies of my C4 Corvette. Fortunately mine is a 1987 so the metal window mechanisms still work fine at 37 (the '84-6 C4s had Chinese toy grade plastic window mechanisms). I've had the front of the engine apart a couple of times. First time was for the water pump a couple of years before Y2K. By the time I got the old one out I looked for the fanciest and most expensive aluminum one available and spent several days polishing it. More recently I have had to replace crumbling plastic pieces, including a coolant temperature sensor and its connector.
When I tried to pull the connector off, the top of the sensor came off with it.
Parts start arriving, including the sensor, connector and its wires and a new U-shape throttle body heater hose. You can see how bulged the one in the photo above is.
While I had it opened up I cleaned the area a bit. The water pump could use another buffing session but I realized I'm the only one who will ever see it so I installed the new sensor and moved on...
...to the wiring. Using a second (third?) hand, I soldered the new connector wires to the old loom with shrink tubing over the joints. There wasn't a whole lot of space available and I discovered I couldn't feed the connector through that jumble without more disassembly but I could feed the bare wires through.
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@Great white, I like it! A lot. You get the 17" rims, bigger brakes, improved suspension and higher horsepower. I like the more subtle Greenwood ground effects as well but the triple black would be hard to live with in South Florida. When I bought my '87 in '91 it had a weird hodge-podge of ground effects pieces.



Mine is a z52 triple black. Z52 is as close as you can get to the Z51 package on a vert. Pretty close actually, Biggest difference is the spring rates are lower.@Great white, I like it! A lot. You get the 17" rims, bigger brakes, improved suspension and higher horsepower. I like the more subtle Greenwood ground effects as well but the triple black would be hard to live with in South Florida. When I bought my '87 in '91 it had a weird hodge-podge of ground effects pieces.
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In 2007 I replaced the banged up front and non matching rocker extensions and had the car re-painted. The rear bumper and ground effect surround had 14 coats of paint on them before I took a heat gun and scraper to them before handing it over to the body shop. They got rid of the latex caulk and reflective red stripe as well.
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I had a HFT fiber-optic camera which had a pistol-grip hand-held video camera, it worked to locate first one cat/kitten and a couple days later, another kitten, in a hollow wall of my in-law's home. Pregnant Mama found a way into the home crawlspace, and those were the only two kittens I found on my beneath the floor exploration. Any others were not present. Both cats went to new owners. Our Manchester terrier mix helped to identify the cavity where the cat was, and a 3/4" plaster wall hole followed by the fiber-optic line revealed a small head staring back at me. A reciprocating saw opened the wall to remove the kitty.I have a Harbor Freight Cen-Tech inspection camera and it works fine.