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Author Topic: Now the truth is out there  (Read 6128 times)

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Anonymous

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Now the truth is out there
« on: November 24, 2006 3:04 am »
The world's first automobile was made in France, in 1871 by Nicolas Joseph Cugnot. Powered by a two-cylinder steam engine, it had a top speed of 2.3 mph. Walking speed is 3 mph.

Anonymous

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more fun facts
« Reply #1 on: November 24, 2006 3:05 am »
In total, 18 million Model T Fords were built. That's approximately one for every eight men, women and children in America. Where are all these Tin Lizzies now?


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Old Tin Lizzie jokes:

"What time is it when a Ford passes a Ford?

Tin past tin."

"Why, the only shock absorbers in the Model T are the passengers."

Bibliography -48


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Ford Model A cars had only 5,500 parts. A bicycle has over 1,000 parts, although more than half (typically 512) of these are in the chain. There are over a quarter-million Model A's still running. Bibliography -48

Anonymous

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everything happens in Europe first
« Reply #2 on: November 24, 2006 3:07 am »
Most people think the Wright brothers were first to fly. The first real flight happened in France on October 9, 1890 by Clement Ader in a steam powered airplane. The altitude was only a few inches. The Wright brothers knew about and studied this flight.

Anonymous

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more
« Reply #3 on: November 24, 2006 3:09 am »
The guy who founded Buick was a plumber. He also invented the process of coating metal with porcelain, which is how millions of bathtubs were made.

In Germany is Volkswagenwerk, the largest car making factory in the world. There are over 43 miles of railroad tracks at the plant. Sixty-five thousand people work there. But General Motors employs more people at all of its many factories. They have nearly one million workers, more than the population of a good-size city. If you had all the GM workers stretch out their arms and hold hands, the chain of people would stretch from New York to Georgia. It would take 15 hours of nonstop driving to pass all those people. One out of every 200 adults in America works at General Motors.

A police officer stopped a car in Jackson, Mississippi because the driver was weaving. The driver was blind and was being guided by a passenger who was drunk.

Anonymous

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Did you guys know this
« Reply #4 on: November 24, 2006 3:10 am »
Driving with your windows down can cut gas mileage by as much as 5 miles per gallon.

Here's a gas station scam that still happens occasionally: When the service station attendant checks your oil, he pulls out the dipstick and wipes it off as he is supposed to do. Then, he pushes it only part way back into the engine, so that it will indicate that the oil level is low. You, of course, purchase of a quart of oil. This brings extra money to the owner of the station, and perhaps a commission to the attendant. If you are lucky, the attendant only pretends to put more oil in your engine, using an already empty can. Otherwise, too much oil may end up in your engine, causing damage to internal rubber seals and possibly contributing to clogged oil passages.

Eight thousand times a year, a car battery explodes in America because someone didn't observe safe procedure when jump starting a car. The battery releases hydrogen gas, especially when a heavy load is demanded, such as trying to start the car. The trick is to avoid setting the invisible cloud of hydrogen on fire. Since the electrical system negative side (except on some older cars) is grounded to the whole car, connect a jumper cable to the positive terminals first. Then connect the negative cable, not to the battery terminals, but to a substantial piece of metal on each engine away from the batteries. The spark of closing the circuit will happen away from the hydrogen. Wear safety goggles. The car which has a healthy battery should not be running. The change in load can damage its charging system.

Speaking of batteries, here's a hint that can save you cost and trouble if your battery goes dead, and almost all motorists have this problem at one time or another.

There are really only two reasons batteries fail. Either the battery is shot, or there is something wrong elsewhere in the electrical system. To find out if it is simply a bad battery, and therefore save yourself the cost of professional diagnosis, do this: Take the caps off the battery. Most 'sealed' batteries actually have removable caps. Take the center wire off the distributor so the car won't start. Have someone hold the key in the start position for 15 seconds while you look into the top of the battery (wearing safety goggles). If you see bubbles forming in only one cell of the battery, that cell is bad and the battery must be replaced. If no bubbles form, or all cells form equal amounts of bubbles, the problem is elsewhere. Check for corrosion on the battery connections.

Please remember that battery acid can cause skin and eye irritation and destroy clothing.

Anonymous

  • Guest
People never think about this
« Reply #5 on: November 24, 2006 3:15 am »
While we are talking about cars, 90% of tires on the road are under inflated.

On average, every motorist wastes 13 gallons of gas per year on under inflated tires. That works out to 2 billion wasted gallons in America every year.

According to calculations made by the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety, 550 of the 2485 deaths that happened on roads with a 65 mph speed limit would not have happened if the speed limit was still 55 mph. Deaths on these roads were up 34% over 1982-1986, when the speed limit was 55. Overall traffic fatalities were up only 1.5% on all roads.