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RE: Help looking for funny Lucas article.

To: "List" <triumphs@autox.team.net>,
Subject: RE: Help looking for funny Lucas article.
From: "Randall" <tr3driver@comcast.net>
Date: Thu, 17 Nov 2005 15:21:17 -0800
"A Treatise on the Importance of Smoke" by Joseph Lucas 

All electrical components and wiring harnesses depend on proper 
circuit functioning, which is the transmission of charged ions by 
retention of the visible spectral manifestation known as "smoke". 
Smoke is the thing that makes electrical circuits work. Don't be 
fooled by scientists and engineers talking about excited electrons 
and the like. Smoke is the key to all things electrical. 

We know this to be true because every time one lets the smoke out of 
an electrical circuit, it stops working. This can be verified 
repeatedly through empirical testing. For example, if one places a 
large copper bar across the terminals of a battery, prodigious 
quantities of smoke are liberated and the battery shortly ceases to 
function. In addition, if one observes smoke escaping from an 
electrical component such as a Lucas voltage regulator, it will also 
be observed that the component no longer functions. 

The logic is elementary and inescapable! The function of the wiring 
harness is to conduct the smoke from one device to another. When the 
wiring harness springs a leak and lets all the smoke out of the 
system, nothing works right afterward. 

Starter motors were considered unsuitable for British motorcycles for 
some time largely because they regularly released large quantities of 
smoke from the electrical system. 

It has been reported that Lucas electrical components are possibly 
more prone to electrical leakage than their Bosch, Japanese or 
American counterparts. Experts point out that this is because Lucas 
is British, and all things British leak. British engines leak oil, 
British shock absorbers, hydraulic forks, and disk brake systems leak 
fluid, British tires leak air and British Intelligence leaks national 
defence secrets. 

Therefore, it follows that British electrical systems must leak 
smoke. Once again, the logic is clear and inescapable. 

Sometimes you may miss the component releasing the smoke that makes 
your electrical system function correctly, but if you sniff around 
you can often find the faulty component by the undeniable and 
telltale smoke smell. Sometimes this is a better indicator than 
standard electrical tests performed with a volt-ohm meter. 

In conclusion, the basic concept of transmission of electrical energy 
in the form of smoke provides a clear and logical explanation of the 
mysteries of electrical components and why they fail. 

"A gentleman does not motor about after dark." 
- Joseph Lucas, 1842 - 1903 


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