Winters over, spring is in the air

safrane

Member
Messages
16,916
Well it must be...the cherry blossom on my drive is out already...warm days to come I hope.
 

conaero

Forum Owner
Messages
34,678
Thank God, have had enough of the dark and cold, now lets get those Masers out there!
 

lozcb

Member
Messages
12,586
Thank God, have had enough of the dark and cold, now lets get those Masers out there!


I'll 2nd that Matty , been a hard long one for me this time , had no xmas break summer sun in the middle like i usually do , told the missus im taking control of her holliday entitlement so it doesn't happen again ........ or she'll get another blackeye


regards loz
 

marcos

Member
Messages
1,362
Collect the Aston tomorrow after a brake rebuild and with new and exciting wheels and tyres. First drive of it in a while, should be able to do roof off the whole way home hopefully, shame it isn't going to be quite as nice today. As long as it' dry, the roof stays down!

Took the 911 to the beach last weekend though roof down, lovely, lovely day! Got to make sure you get the cars out every time you can. Although that reminds me, the 911 needs de-salting, what a mess :(
 

lozcb

Member
Messages
12,586
Collect the Aston tomorrow after a brake rebuild and with new and exciting wheels and tyres. First drive of it in a while, should be able to do roof off the whole way home hopefully, shame it isn't going to be quite as nice today. As long as it' dry, the roof stays down!

Took the 911 to the beach last weekend though roof down, lovely, lovely day! Got to make sure you get the cars out every time you can. Although that reminds me, the 911 needs de-salting, what a mess :(

Has she been done at Newport works service Lewis , also wondered if you have heard of Chiltern Aston , one of there techs has moved in up the road from me



regards loz
 

Parisien

Moderator
Messages
34,927
Courtesy of the Lancia forum...and Alan Wesson........

SALT!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!


Here are some things to look for:

a) random 'wet spots' on the pavement or at the sides of the road when it is otherwise dry (these are bits of grit or salt lying uncrushed by car wheels, and attracting moisture from the air)
b) the road looks wet or damp at night even when it hasn't rained for ages (this is the salt attracting mosture from the dew)
c) the main roads are 'wet' and the side roads are dry (this is because there isn't any salt on the side roads and so they don't attract moisture from the dew!)
d) when you begin a journey your tyres look as if they have just been done with rubber dressing (all shiny) - this is because the salt has attracted moisture and it has made a glossy-looking film all over the rubber. As soon as you drive off and the wheels heat up from the brakes, they begin to look all white, which is the dry salt. But as soon as you stop and the dew falls again it all happens all over again, because the moisture in the atmosphere searches out
the salt and reconstitutes it (which is why it is so damaging and corrosive - it does this EVERYWHERE on the car, inside and out, underneath and on top).
e) on a damp road, cars make wet tracks instead of dry ones. Usually, when the road is damp, cars going along it tend to make dry tracks, as the heat of the tyres evaporates the moisture. But when there is salt present the opposite happens. The car's wheels crush the salt granules and spread them, and they form a film where the wheel tracks are, and this film attracts moisture. So you tend to get the odd effect of a quite dry road with two wet strips along it, even when there is no water for the cars to spread.

That's what it is like here (Dartmoor) tonight - I just went to Okehampton Services to get a pint of milk, and the road was like it the whole way there (needless to say, I am in a scruffy old Mk 3 Golf rather than a nice classic).

The other way to identify road salt is one I discovered by mistake, many years ago. I had driven my Fiat Uno, which was then nearly new, to Derby, and when I got there I saw that, although it hadn't rained, the car was all wet and white down both sides (this was the salty film that had got thrown up from the road). As I got out I accidentally caught a 'dirty' (which was what I though it was) bit, and then I caught my lip with my finger - and it tasted of pure salt.

I was appalled (I hadn't realised they were even salting!), and ever since then (1985) I have made sure that I know if the road is salty or not. And if it is, I don't go anywhere near it with a nice car if I can help it. And if I absolutely have to, I wash all the salt off very thoroughly afterwards and then dry the car with the compressor.




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