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Started by nh_mopar_fan, June 17, 2009, 03:19:34 PM

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nh_mopar_fan

Anyone ever listen to these guys.

Kinda entertaining.

They have a weekly puzzler.

Here is this weeks:


RAY: This was submitted by Marty Kaponowski. Here it is:

    'It was a dark and stormy night. I was late getting out of work and I
    was hurrying a wee bit. Truth be known it was my wife's birthday and if
    I got home too late... well, need I elaborate?

    'I had decided on a short cut, a seldom used dirt road in the middle of
    nowhere. I took a turn a little too fast and found myself in the fight
    of my life trying to avoid crashing into a tree. When I finally came to
    a stop my car had three wheels touching the road, but the right front
    corner of the car was resting on the underbody and the right front
    wheel was dangling over the roadside drainage ditch about a foot from
    the mud and the twigs below.

    'I wasn't about to call my wife, obviously. And if I called for a tow
    truck my wife would problably have had the divorce papers filled out
    before he could even hook me up. I was on my own and I knew it. Boy, I
    wished I'd had a four-wheel-drive truck but I didn't. Instead I had a
    front-wheel-drive Corolla with one of those front wheels in the ditch.

    'Now everyone who's ever been stuck on ice or mud or whatever knows
    that the wheel with the best traction gets none of the engine's power
    with all of it going to the other wheels. So when you're on ice, the
    wheel on the ice spins like crazy and the wheel on dry pavement just
    sits there. And in this case the one dangling over the ditch was the
    one with no traction. What to do, what to do?

    'I opened the trunk and looked for inspiration. I thought about using
    the jack in some clever way, but I didn't have one. I opened the
    toolbox that I keep in the trunk and I found the following: a can of
    Bumble Bee tuna, a screwdriver, a pair of vice grips, a roll of
    electrical tape, a flashlight and a tube of hemorrhoid cream and no
    Fillipo Berio olive oil. So the question is which one of these did I
    use and how?

Anyone?

Magnumcharger

Stick the screwdriver into the can of fish, drain it on the wheel on the road, lather it with the ass cream, then the other tire should grab...huh?

Either that, or use the flashlight to beat the Corolla to pieces...
1968 Plymouth Barracuda Formula S 340 convertible
1968 Dodge Charger R/T 426 Hemi 4 speed
1968 Plymouth Barracuda S/S clone 426 Hemi auto
1969 Dodge Deora pickup clone 318 auto
1971 Dodge Charger R/T 440 auto
1972 Dodge C600 318 4 speed ramp truck
1972 Dodge C800 413 5 speed
1979 Chrysler 300 T-top 360 auto
2001 Dodge RAM Sport Offroad 360 auto
2010 Dodge Challenger R/T 6 speed
2014 RAM Laramie 5.7 Hemi 8 speed

1BAD68

I would try wedging the toolbox under the wheel and slowly feather it, after a few times it should be unstuck.

NHCharger

I'd let my wife divorce me.
72 Charger- Base Model
68 Charger-R/T Clone
69 Charger Daytona clone
79 Lil Red Express - future money pit
88 Ramcharger 4x4- current money pit
55 Dodge Royal 2 door - wife's money pit
2014 RAM 2500HD Diesel

lisiecki1

use the toolbox to hold the brake pedal down, then clamp the vise grips on the suspended tires brake line, remove tool box, back out onto road, remove vise grip, go home.
Remember the average response time to a 911 call is over 4 minutes.

The average response time of a 357 magnum is 1400 FPS.

http://www.dodgecharger.com/forum/index.php/topic,52527.0.html

Sublime/Sixpack

One idea would be to use the vice grips to clamp onto the right front brake rotor so it would hit against the caliper and cause the power to go to the left front wheel/tire. Once the right front tire is on solid ground just release the vice grips and be on your way. :shruggy:
1970 Sublime R/T, 440 Six Pack, Four speed, Super Track Pak

hemigeno

Shove the screwdriver through a slot in the wheel, thereby wedging either the handle or the blade between the wheel and the brake caliper?

:shruggy:

cpthowdy1369

Ya, let the wife divorce me, if she's going to divorce me after the crap I just went through to get home, then who needs that bitch around? :nana:
DRIVE IT LIKE YOU STOLE IT!!!

last426

Quote from: hemigeno on June 17, 2009, 08:51:27 PM
Shove the screwdriver through a slot in the wheel, thereby wedging either the handle or the blade between the wheel and the brake caliper?

That's what I thought of when I heard it last week.  But that seems a little to ... something.  Kim

dodgecharger-fan

Disable the traction control on the car. Drive out.

FlatbackFanatic

Its just a Corolla, you go down in the ditch pick-up the front of the car and push it out. No problem. be a man.... :D :Twocents:
Flatback Fanatic, Kurt  , MN

lisiecki1

Quote from: dodgecharger-fan on June 19, 2009, 08:07:41 AM
Disable the traction control on the car. Drive out.

that wouldn't work....traction control cuts the amount of power to the wheels with less traction....if anything you should turn traction control on....
Remember the average response time to a 911 call is over 4 minutes.

The average response time of a 357 magnum is 1400 FPS.

http://www.dodgecharger.com/forum/index.php/topic,52527.0.html

dodgecharger-fan

but the wheel in the air has less traction... and you don't want power going to it at all...

Quote'Now everyone who's ever been stuck on ice or mud or whatever knows
    that the wheel with the best traction gets none of the engine's power
    with all of it going to the other wheels. So when you're on ice, the
    wheel on the ice spins like crazy and the wheel on dry pavement just
    sits there. And in this case the one dangling over the ditch was the
    one with no traction. What to do, what to do?

lisiecki1

Quote from: dodgecharger-fan on June 19, 2009, 12:44:07 PM
but the wheel in the air has less traction... and you don't want power going to it at all...

Quote'Now everyone who's ever been stuck on ice or mud or whatever knows
    that the wheel with the best traction gets none of the engine's power
    with all of it going to the other wheels. So when you're on ice, the
    wheel on the ice spins like crazy and the wheel on dry pavement just
    sits there. And in this case the one dangling over the ditch was the
    one with no traction. What to do, what to do?

right, but if you disabled traction control, it would let power go to the wheel with less traction, which would defeat your purpose in this case..
Remember the average response time to a 911 call is over 4 minutes.

The average response time of a 357 magnum is 1400 FPS.

http://www.dodgecharger.com/forum/index.php/topic,52527.0.html

nh_mopar_fan

Correct answer:

>a can of Bumble Bee tuna, a screwdriver, a pair of vice grips, a roll
    >of electrical tape, a flashlight and a tube of hemorrhoid cream

    RAY: Here's the answer. He used the vise grips.

    TOM: Let me think about it for a few hours.

    RAY: How about a week? Well, since the dawn of humankind,
    front brakes on vehicles have had flexible rubber hoses
    going to them. In order for the wheels to turn left and right, you
    can't have a rigid brake line going, you have to have a flexible
    tubing.

    TOM: Of course.

RAY: With the vise grips, Marty clamped off or restricted the flow of
    fluid to the left front brake - the one that was on the pavement. And
    then he got in the car, started it up and stepped on the brakes.

    When he stepped on the brakes he stopped the right wheel from turning
    because pressure is going to the right front wheel but no pressure is
    going to the left front wheel. And even though some pressure is going
    to the back wheels, he managed to get enough power going to that left
    front wheel for which there was no braking action and that got him out.


lisiecki1

So......I was half right?  :rofl:
Remember the average response time to a 911 call is over 4 minutes.

The average response time of a 357 magnum is 1400 FPS.

http://www.dodgecharger.com/forum/index.php/topic,52527.0.html