Look, happy-go-lucky folks fog
up the people viewing software in my head. I admit it. I couldn’t walk around
with a smile on my face all the time even if I had a Guardian Angel at my
shoulder, and a Leprechaun feeding me money from the pot at the end of the
rainbow. It doesn’t work for me… period. I see and meet people all the time
with dazzling smiles for no apparent reason. Sometimes it’s a result from too
many reality TV shows, and sometimes it’s just that they’re outwardly happy
people who want to show off their inner glow. I have no problem with any of
them, which brings me to the more humorous type, who wear the smile, but can go
from zero to troll in a split second. I have some experience with those, and
their antics often times make me smile. Yesterday’s encounter with a woman I
will call Tina Tempest graces my blog today.
Tina drove in yesterday morning
behind the wheel of a misfiring 2004 Chrysler Town and Country. It was all
black and looked very sharp. I walked out of the office where I had been
putting stamps on my tax envelopes on their way to appease my government gatekeepers.
Tina popped out from the driver’s seat. Fashionably attired in dark blue dress,
black high heels, and tan leather coat, thirty-something Tina wore a brilliant
smile. Another trick I’ve never mastered is smiling while talking. Tina could
do it, and I call it a trick or skill because gee whiz, that must take
practice.
“Hi, can you help me understand
something?” Tina asks without any drop in the radiance or spread of her smile.
Even the tenor of her voice evokes thoughts of smiles.
I’m game. “Sure, what can I do
for you?”
She ducks back into her car and
comes out with a few invoices. “Could you look at these and tell me what you
think?”
I took the invoices with
confidence. I knew they weren’t mine, so at least this interrogation wouldn’t
have anything to do with me… at least directly. Tina had been to three shops,
one in Sacramento, and two more in our North Bay Area. They had done extensive
work replacing a myriad of tune-up parts and sensors to cure codes indicating
random misfires, sensor problems, and power loss. I look up at her attentive
happy face without a clue other than the obvious.
“Well, it looks like you’ve had
a lot of performance work done. How-”
The change from Jekyll to Hyde
was so sudden I nearly lost the grip on her papers.
“Tell me something I don’t
know!” Gone was the smile, the sweet voice, and any semblance of patient
interest.
I may have stuttered
momentarily because Tina (Pit Viper) struck before I could speak.
“Look… do you even know what
you’re looking at?!!”
My mind filled in what Tina
left out of her question – probably idiot, asshole, or moron. I glanced down at
my bright, clean nametag wishing it still had the smudge making it into Bennie
instead of Bernie. “I was about to say that you’ve spent a lot of money on
repairs.” I quickly held up my hand because the fangs emerged ready to strike
before I could go on. “Let me finish. I heard a distinct misfire when you drove
in, so I imagine the repairs done didn’t fix your problem.”
The Viper look receded into a
snarl. “Wow, you guys in the repair business are real honest to God rocket
scientists. Anything else, Einstein?”
I couldn’t help it. I laughed. She
smirked because I kept an eye on her to make sure she didn’t take a swing at me
while I controlled my short outbreak of amusement. “Okay… let’s start over. Hi,
I’m the owner/tech here. I see you have a misfire problem. Would you like to
have a diagnostic done to find out what’s wrong? I can’t tell anything from the
invoices you’ve handed me other than you’ve had a lot of work done.”
“Yeah, but can you fix it?” The
set of her mouth promised instant retribution if she didn’t get the right
answer.
“Of course.” I hope. “If I have
any trouble figuring it out I’ll call you and tell you so. Otherwise, I’ll call
with an estimate of what I think should be fixed to solve the problem. May I
ask why you didn’t take it back to one of the shops where you originally had
work done? I’m sure-”
“Because they’re parts changing
at my expense until they luck into what’s wrong! That’s why!” The Viper was
back and she wasn’t havin’ any.
She may have a point. We’re not
infallible out here in auto repair land. Some intermittent problems on these
buggies with space shuttle technology don’t always reveal their secret maladies
to even us concerned professionals.
“Okay then… I’ll write up an
invoice, and I’ll call you when I have some word.”
I quickly wrote up her
diagnostic estimate, had her sign it, and gave her a copy. As she grimly
accepted it from my hand, I decided I liked the Viper better than the engaging
Smiler. She was all business. I can do that. She got a ride home and I went to
work on the Town & Country. It had one of my favorite Chrysler engines, the
3.3L six cylinder. After scanning it with my more in depth notebook computer
software, I found it had set a myriad of codes including random misfire, cam
position sensor, and three dealing with throttle problems. Since studying her
old invoices I saw the other shops had changed most everything having to do
with those codes.
I’m not hard-headed enough to
ignore what’s already been done other than confirming it, which I did. It was
time to get into my computer manuals and see if any of these malfunctioning
items had a common ground or power source. After looking at the wiring diagrams
for fifteen minutes I didn’t find a common power or ground, but I did find they
all shared a 5 volt computer reference signal with the EGR (Exhaust Gas
Recirculation) solenoid. I confess I got a little excited about this and ran
out to test my theory. I started the ill running mechanical beast, hearing the
rolling misfire and seeing the engine shudder. I located the solenoid, pulled
the harness connector off, and all hint of roughness went away. See, if the 5
volt reference signal gets screwed up by a shorted sensor in series, it will
cause all other sensors sharing that reference signal to throw fits, and the
offending sensor doesn’t always set a code. I found out how much the solenoid
was and called Tina to give her the good news.
“So, you’re sure you’ve found
the problem?” The Viper was on line and suddenly as I heard the Viper voice, I wasn’t
so sure.
“When I get it fixed I’ll let you
test drive it before you pay me. How’s that.” I never do this except in cases
of extreme duress. It was a perfect fit.
“Fine. Go ahead.”
With new EGR solenoid in place,
Tina took the Town & Country out for a spin. She was gone nearly forty-five
minutes, which meant she was either being very thorough, or she’d be coming back
on a tow truck. Yes… I may have prayed a little. In came the T & C, and out
came the smiling Tina Tempest to pay her bill.
Thank you, Lord. :)
4 comments:
You lucked in there brother. I remember when I was a boy, my father had a 1968 Town & Country but it had a 440 v8 4 barrel. Man could that car move...and drink gas...He use to tow a trailer with it and you'd can actually see the needle moving.
I remember those 383's and 440's very well, RJ. Changing spark plugs and ignition wires on those beasts was a real treat. They gave off so much heat under the hood, they would cook a set of wires in no time. I can only imagine the heat when your Dad pulled a trailer with the T & C. :)
I always thought "town and country" was one of the most awkward names for a vehicle ever.
It doesn't exactly pop into the mind easily, Charles. Come to think of it I've never seen a Chrysler T & C commercial. :)
Post a Comment