Rain, Rain, Go Away
Posted: Thu Jun 11, 2009 9:45 pm
The leaves in my alley covered up my drain... Yikes! My neighbor's too! With nowhere for the rain to go in a recent thunderstorm, it flowed over the alley door threshold, right into the garage... Two inches of standing water. Not like the North Sea Flood of '53, but unfortunate anyway. My headliner material was standing in there! Fortunately, Marie rescued it, removed it from its plastic wrapper, and rolled it out -- the edge dried out fine, seems no harm done.
Tonight, I got the call from my mechanic friend in Jersey -- the garage is clear, can I bring Faulkner over? 50% chance of rain this afternoon, 70% chance tonight, with thunderstorms. Hmm... Kinda dreary, but nothing happening at the moment... I decide to go for it. Rush hour traffic in Philly is brutal; by the time I get to the Ben Franklin Bridge, I'm a half hour out. Then, there's a light mist on the windshield... It's OK, I keep going. By the time I make Haddonfield-Berlin Road, it's starting to rain lightly. Then I get close to my destination -- and the skies open! I duck for the cover of a Sunoco station with an overhead, and wait it out for 5 minutes. Then, off again, and safely make it to Bill's garage.
One of the things I never put back in the dash, was the windshield wiper control. I realize that I can turn it on without the knob, but it helps to push it through the dash so it can hold it. Hey! There's a spark -- not a "blow a fuse" zap, but sort of an induction spark -- like, the control's got current flowing through it without being grounded, and induces a current when the housing comes close to dash ground. I push the control back out, and leave it hanging down below the metal of the dash, and turn it off and on from there.
Hey again! The wipers aren't parking when I turn them off. Seems to me that worked before... Could it be, that without the control grounded properly, it doesn't park?
I dunno. Time to study the wiring diagram, I guess. But I do remember this thread:
https://59plymouth.net/59forum/viewtopi ... iper#p2651
At any rate, soon the mechanical stuff on Faulkner will be done -- maybe even Sunday! -- then time to take it to have the headliner done. And, oh yeah, Dick -- you were right about those side clips for the headliner. They sure do come in handy for holding the panels in place, while you install the upper rails.
Dan
Tonight, I got the call from my mechanic friend in Jersey -- the garage is clear, can I bring Faulkner over? 50% chance of rain this afternoon, 70% chance tonight, with thunderstorms. Hmm... Kinda dreary, but nothing happening at the moment... I decide to go for it. Rush hour traffic in Philly is brutal; by the time I get to the Ben Franklin Bridge, I'm a half hour out. Then, there's a light mist on the windshield... It's OK, I keep going. By the time I make Haddonfield-Berlin Road, it's starting to rain lightly. Then I get close to my destination -- and the skies open! I duck for the cover of a Sunoco station with an overhead, and wait it out for 5 minutes. Then, off again, and safely make it to Bill's garage.
One of the things I never put back in the dash, was the windshield wiper control. I realize that I can turn it on without the knob, but it helps to push it through the dash so it can hold it. Hey! There's a spark -- not a "blow a fuse" zap, but sort of an induction spark -- like, the control's got current flowing through it without being grounded, and induces a current when the housing comes close to dash ground. I push the control back out, and leave it hanging down below the metal of the dash, and turn it off and on from there.
Hey again! The wipers aren't parking when I turn them off. Seems to me that worked before... Could it be, that without the control grounded properly, it doesn't park?
I dunno. Time to study the wiring diagram, I guess. But I do remember this thread:
https://59plymouth.net/59forum/viewtopi ... iper#p2651
At any rate, soon the mechanical stuff on Faulkner will be done -- maybe even Sunday! -- then time to take it to have the headliner done. And, oh yeah, Dick -- you were right about those side clips for the headliner. They sure do come in handy for holding the panels in place, while you install the upper rails.
Dan