spitfires
[Top] [All Lists]

RE: Magic Cure In A Bottle

To: spitfires@autox.team.net
Subject: RE: Magic Cure In A Bottle
From: "Graziano, Michael" <michael.graziano@csfb.com>
Date: Wed, 3 Jan 2001 02:55:42 +0800
As much as I love my LBC,  I still shake my head when I hear of people using
these cars as their only vehicle.  I would be a nervous wreck any time I had
to go somewhere if this was my only car.  THey aren't exactly the most
reliable cars on the planet....

<grin>

Mike
'78 Midget
'87 300ZX
'96 Probe


-----Original Message-----
From: Ken Strayhorn [mailto:ken@dukecomm.duke.edu]
Sent: Tuesday, January 02, 2001 1:28 PM
To: spitfires@autox.team.net
Subject: Re: Magic Cure In A Bottle



Dave, on Stop Leak:

>  I used a similar product on my first car (many years ago), a 76 Honda
Civic.
>  I was getting white smoke from the tail pipe, and the car was already
over
>  10 years old and has rusted through floors.  I put in a bottle of
radiator
>  stop leak and it stop the coolant from getting into the combustion
>chamber.
>  That lasted for about 2 years till the timming belt broke.  My little
Civic
>  was a great little car, I still miss it :(.


Just the other day I was wondering: "It once seemed like every other car
was a Civic, and now you hardly see them at all. Wonder where they
all went?"  They _were_ nice little cars.

I used a bottle of Stop Leak on my '72 Spit once. Now that the gasps
from the gallery have subsided, I'll explain - I was in the middle
of nowhere headed north up through the rolling hills of the
central NC/VA borderlands when I got a wiff of the unmistakable
smell of hot coolant. Sure enough, when I checked there was a small
hairline crack where the top pipe joins the radiator. I limped
into a rural gas/bait/ammo store and the owner handed me a small
bottle of copper-colored liquid with a lable that proclaimed it
would "stop any leak in any car!"

Now, I wondered if this would ruin anything, or - worse yet - plug
up the heater element, something which had happened when I used
a sealer on another car. I pondered my choices, which didn't
seem very promising on a Friday night in rural Virginia. That,
plus the fact that I was on the way to a hot date with a woman
who was teaching for a year in an underserved community, made
me dump the contents of the bottle in the radiator.

Lo and behold, it worked. And it didn't plug up the heater
radiator, either. It kept the crack closed for the remainder
of the weekend and all the next week as well (the Spit was
my only transportation at the time) until I had time to
flush the system and take the radiator to a shop for a proper
soldering job.

I've kept a bottle in my emergency kit ever since.

Ken Strayhorn
Hillsborough NC

This message is for the named person's use only.  It may contain 
confidential, proprietary or legally privileged information.  No 
confidentiality or privilege is waived or lost by any mistransmission.
If you receive this message in error, please immediately delete it and all
copies of it from your system, destroy any hard copies of it and notify the
sender.  You must not, directly or indirectly, use, disclose, distribute, 
print, or copy any part of this message if you are not the intended 
recipient. CREDIT SUISSE GROUP and each of its subsidiaries each reserve
the right to monitor all e-mail communications through its networks.  Any
views expressed in this message are those of the individual sender, except
where the message states otherwise and the sender is authorised to state 
them to be the views of any such entity.
Unless otherwise stated, any pricing information given in this message is 
indicative only, is subject to change and does not constitute an offer to 
deal at any price quoted.
Any reference to the terms of executed transactions should be treated as 
preliminary only and subject to our formal written confirmation.

<Prev in Thread] Current Thread [Next in Thread>