GORV - Digital Magazine Issue #32 | Page 54

THE WALLABY TRACK WITH LIONEL MUSSELL A QUICK TRIP? NOT SO FAST WHAT WAS SUPPOSED TO BE A FEW DAYS VISITING FAMILY IN ADELAIDE STRETCHED INTO A WEEK. WHY? MURPHY. THAT’S WHY. I left you last week as I headed to Adelaide for a few days with my son Chris and daughter-in-law Marijana. At least, it started as a few days but Yemmy managed to turn it into a week! Parking outside Chris' home I noticed a leak of something under Yemmy's engine. At first it looked like water but it turned out to be diesel. It was leaking from the diesel pump and the repairer had to order some ‘O’ rings from Melbourne to fix it. Chris was off work with broken bones in his foot and that meant we had more time together – a good thing from bad. While in Adelaide I cooked a lamb curry and Marijana's son came over to have dinner with us. He had just bought a Mini Cooper and took me for a burn in it. As well as looking good it's a herby little beast and I enjoyed the ride. I once had an unfortunate incident with a Mini – I was working under the bonnet and caused a short circuit because a metal wrist-watch strap came in contact with a live wire on the starter motor! I threw the watch and strap across the workshop and shouted words that I dare not put in this column! The burn went to the 54 \ bone and I still have the scar. The lesson? Never wear a watch with a metal strap when working on engines! Not content with delaying my home-coming for a few days in Adelaide, Murphy ensured I stayed alert by making Yemmy drop into ‘limp home mode’ every so often – particularly if I let the engine revs go too high when accelerating. I took him to my Sprinter genius friend in Gippsland, Vic, and we fitted another transmission computer that lives under the driver's seat. Then we did a scan that seemed to show all was well. After a road test when everything appeared to be fine, I drove home only to have a repeat limp-home episode when accelerating back up to cruising speed after Ballarat. Fortunately, when that happens I can stop, switch off, wait a few minutes and everything is back to normal. It's done it again a couple of times since then so my friend is reconditioning an automatic transmission for a future gearbox swap. See you down the track. + FULL STORY