The Mystery at Turn 14

The route I take to and from work each day — from my driveway to the parking space I normally use — involves 20 turns. That’s 20 turns to get to work and 20 turns to get home.

Earlier this year — on Friday, January 6, to be exact — while I was making turn 14 (from Algonquin Road unto Lincoln Avenue in Fox River Grove), on my way home from work, my car began making a high-pitched squeaking noise. It continued, off-and-on, during the remaining two miles of my trip. I figured the brakes were going bad.

I called the mechanic immediately and begged him to take a look at the car on Saturday. I was desperate, because on Sunday, I had to drive to Kansas City AND back, over 1,000 miles round trip, and I didn’t want to try it with bad brakes.

The mechanic looked the car over the next morning and called me to report that there was nothing whatsoever wrong with the brakes. He couldn’t find anything wrong anywhere. He rotated my tires (for free), but he didn’t think that was the source of the noise. He thought it might be a belt, but he said I didn’t need to worry about it. I asked him if he would feel comfortable taking the car on a 1,000-mile trip. He said yes.

I made the trip, all the way to Kansas City and back, and never heard a hint of the squeak. A day after I returned from Kansas City, I went to Orlando on business. While I was down there, my wife drove the car. She never heard a hint of the squeak.

A few days after I returned, while driving home from work and — this is the weird part — while making turn 14, I heard the squeak again.

Since then, the squeak has returned about six other times. EVERY SINGLE TIME IT HAS HAPPENED WHILE I WAS MAKING TURN 14 ON THE WAY HOME FROM WORK. It’s never happened when my wife was driving, even though she takes the same route to and from work. It’s never happened while we were driving to church or to the store or to visit family or friends. It’s never happened at any other spot.

Here is turn 14. I come from the left, on Algonquin Road and turn left onto Lincoln Avenue. I’ve drawn an arrow for those of you who are directionally challenged.

Oh, there have been a few times when the squeaking started at turn 14 and then continued off-and-on the rest of the way home. Other times it happens there and then stops immediately. I am not making this up.

At first, it worried us a bit. Now we just laugh.

But it is weird. We have no idea what the noise is or how it is connected to that particular turn.

Unless … Maybe it isn’t a problem after all. Maybe it’s a good noise. Perhaps turn 14 on my way home is the one place on the planet where my car and I are in perfect harmonic balance.

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From the Archives — Why Datsun Changed Its Name to Nissan

Shortly before I got married, it occurred to me that I needed to buy a car. But instead, I bought a Datsun.

My Dad knew a guy who knew a Datsun dealer who had a car for sale in my price range — a sickly-looking yellow Datsun B210 four-door sedan. (See the little yellow job in the back of this ad? That’s my car exactly — except without the rust and dents and missing pieces.) I knew nothing about cars, but I figured this guy was a friend of a friend of my Dad — surely he could be trusted. The price was $2,544. I put down $1,000 and borrowed the rest from a bank at 15.54% interest. Yes, you read that correctly.

I picked up the car on Halloween, which should have warned me, I guess. It had a clutch, which made things interesting. The only clutching I’d done was at the car wash where I worked for two years during college. I used to drive the cars from the front of the line out into the parking lot for detailing. I’d never gone beyond first gear.

But first gear is the toughest, so I was soon on the road and on my way home. Of course, the gas tank was empty. After two miles, I pulled into a gas station. The attendant came out — this was way back when gas stations had attendants — in fact I actually worked as a gas station attendant for a time … Anyway, the attendant came out and said, “Sounds like you need a tune-up.”

Great. I’d owned the car for seven minutes and already it needed a tune-up. The car had a 30-day warranty, and during those 30 days I had to take it back to the dealer about 10 times.

I kept the car for about two years. Here’s a short list of adventures.

  • The gas gauge quit working shortly after I bought it. From that time forward, I had to remember to reset the trip tachometer whenever I filled up. When the mileage got to 250, I filed the tank.
  • The eject button on the cassette deck didn’t work. We carried a pair of needle-nose pliers in the glove compartment and used them to remove tapes.
  • The bottom of both door panels had totally rusted out and been filled with Bondo, then repainted. The paint and Bondo began flaking off almost immediately.
  • When I worked at the car wash, I got in the habit of leaving the driver’s door open and driving with my left foot hanging out of the car. This enabled me to get in and out a lot faster and made a lot of sense when pulling out of a wide car-wash door. It made no sense when backing out of the narrow garage at my house. I pulled out one afternoon and caught the edge of the car door on the side of the garage. The driver’s door folded back against the front quarter-panel and the window shattered. I bought a new window and installed it myself. Because the door was crumpled, the window wouldn’t open after that. It wouldn’t close either — there was a one-inch gap at the top.
  • The front driver-side floorboard soon rusted out. One day when I was driving in the rain, my feet got wet. I decided that it was time to do something about the problem, so I fit a piece of plywood into the space. My Dad warned me that it could be dangerous — the exhaust might come in through the floor and asphyxiate me. I told him not to worry. Any exhaust that entered through the floor would exit through the window gap.

The most exciting adventure took place one winter when my wife and I drove the car to her folk’s house in Arkansas. We left for the long drive home (about 14 hours at the 55-mph speed limit of those times) early on a Sunday morning. It was raining and cold as we drove through the dull and dirty Mississippi mudflats around Memphis. The rain and fog obscured everything, which is why I didn’t notice the steam coming out of my engine. I was about four miles north of West Memphis, Arkansas on Interstate 55 when the car died. I managed to pull over to the shoulder, but there we were, stuck in the rain in the middle of nowhere. We’d passed an exit about half a mile back, so that’s where we walked. We were drenched when we arrived at the closest of two gas stations. It had no repair facilities, so we walked under the highway bridge to the other station, a Shell. They had a tow truck and a mechanic, but they were in no hurry. We sat in the dirty chairs in the front room for two hours before the driver decided to help. We climbed into the cab of his truck with him and headed out for our car.

Datsun adBack at the station, we sat in the front room for another two hours (during most of which time our car sat unattended in the dock). We finally got the news — our heater hose had split, and all the water had drained out of the car. That, of course, caused the engine to overheat. It was a Sunday, remember, and the regular mechanic wasn’t on duty. We were given a choice. We could get a room at the local motel and have the regular guy fix it in the morning, or the genius on hand could plug the heater hose with a spark plug, fill the radiator with water and we could be on our way. We chose option #2, and for this (and the tow) we were charged $55.

When the “repairs” were finished, we climbed in with the guy as he took the car for a test drive on the frontage road. He decided to see how fast it would go and actually managed to get it up to 80. It was mid-afternoon before we got back on the road.

And it was still raining. We’d gone approximately 10 miles when the driver-side windshield-wiper blade — not just the rubber part, but the entire blade assembly, flew off and disappeared into the gathering dusk. I couldn’t see a thing. I managed to get to the next exit and pulled off the road. I got drenched all over again as I stepped out of the car. I pulled the blade off the passenger side and stuck it on the driver side. This worked fine the rest of the day. However, the blade arm on the passenger side wore a arced grove into the windshield that was there for as long as we owned the car.

As dark descended, it continued raining and getting colder. (We had no heat, remember?) The windows were fogging up, and the only way to keep them clear was to open the passenger-side window. (The driver-side window wouldn’t open — or close — remember?) It wasn’t long before we were completely numb. We took turns driving, and the driver would alternate hands: one hand on the wheel and the other hand being warmed by the passenger. We struggled on in this fashion through northeastern Arkansas, the boot-heel of Missouri and on into Illinois.

By the time we reached Mattoon, we were frozen solid. We stopped at a restaurant to eat supper and bask in the warmth. We ordered hot chocolates, but before they arrived, I realized I didn’t have my keys. I ran out to the car and, sure enough, there they were, hanging from the ignition. I borrowed a hanger from a passer-by and 10 cold and wet minutes later I got the door open and grabbed the keys. (Fortunately, the driver-side window didn’t close all the way.) I went back inside to my now-cold hot chocolate.

It was 9:00 pm, but I’d had enough. There was no way I was getting back on the road this night. We didn’t have much money, but we got a room at a Best Western. We slept the sleep of the dead and woke up somewhat refreshed. We ate breakfast at the McDonald’s next door and headed for home.

About 100 miles later, my wife realized she’d left her purse on the seat in the McDonald’s. We pulled off at the next exit and found a pay phone at a Stuckey’s. Amazingly, some honest person had found the purse and turned it in intact. They took our address and mailed it to us. It arrived a few days later with nothing missing.

The ordeal had taken its toll on the car. Over the next few months, it became apparent that something was seriously wrong. A good friend of our family was an auto shop teacher in a small town in north-central Illinois. He offered to fix the car as a class project. It just so happened that he was attending a seminar my Dad was giving in Pontiac and was willing to drive the car home from there. I found a friend to follow me down and drive me home. When we got to my parents’ hotel, they were nowhere to be found. We sat around for an hour or so, but my friend had to be back home for an obligation, so we couldn’t wait any longer. I don’t remember why we didn’t go into the office and talk to the management about leaving the car and the keys. Instead, we climbed into my parents’ hotel room — in the middle of the day in the middle of Pontiac — through a partly-opened window and left the key with a note. It’s amazing that we didn’t spent the afternoon in jail, but nobody noticed us.

The rest of the story is short. My mechanic friend picked up the car that night and drove it home. Before he arrived, the engine froze up and he had to go the final 35 miles at a speed not greater than 14 mph. The overheating in West Memphis had torn the engine to bits and pieces of the pistons were floating around in the cylinders. My friend put in a totally rebuilt engine (which cost me $100), and from that time on, the car drove like a dream.

It drove like a dream, but it looked like a nightmare. Pieces continued to fall off regularly. I can still remember the day that the entire muffler/tailpipe assembly just dropped off without warning as we drove down a road near home. We finally decided to get rid of the car and took it to a Chevy dealer to trade it in. The guy who looked at it had a very frightened expression on his face. When he opened the hood and saw the pristine rebuilt engine, his look turned to one of absolute amazement. I don’t remember if we got any money for it, but he did take it off our hands.

I think it’s fitting that the only photograph we have of this car was taken on the morning of our wedding. The hood is up, and one of my friends is repairing the head gasket. We had noticed it was leaking oil rather badly — it turns out that the person who had replaced the head gasket had missed one of the holes.

This is a scan of a blurry, 28-year-old Polaroid photograph, but some of you might recognize the guy standing in front of the car. I believe he’s now working as an electrician down south somewhere.

(7/13/07)

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The Red Chair AND a Moving Train!

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Having a Good Day?

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Always the Lady

It wasn’t like I sneaked up on her at a bad moment. She was sitting like this for several minutes and remained sitting like this as I stepped over her to get my camera and back over her to get to where I took the shot. And as I aimed the camera, she lifted her leg higher for the photo.

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The Key Incident

It was Saturday. I’d spent the last three days serving in the Awana booth at the Children’s Pastors’ Conference in Orlando — most of the time heavily medicated to dull the symptoms of a cold. And I’d spent the last three hours helping the booth crew disassemble the booth. It was done at last. We had a couple hours to kill before heading to the airport for the flight home.

The conference was at the Coronado Springs Resort in Disney World. Several of my coworkers were attending the conference, and the final session was due to close in about half an hour, so those of us on the booth crew were waiting.

I don’t wait very well. Coronado Springs has a huge lobby area with a high ceiling outside the exhibition hall, and it was completely empty. I began tossing the rental car key up in the air and catching it. This entertained me for about three minutes.

Then I decided to make it more challenging. The lobby contained several skylights that extended another 20 feet above the floor. I tossed the key as high as I could up into one of these skylights.

As soon as I threw it, I knew I’d made a mistake. The key drifted toward the side of the skylight and landed on a ledge at least 35 feet above the floor.

I immediately yelled at myself “I did not do that! I did not just do that!”

The thought that ran through my mind at that moment was this: Worst case, my coworkers would head off to lunch while I waited around for four  hours or so until somebody at Disney could figure out what to do. Best case, one of my coworkers would have to drive me to the rental car place at the airport and I’d have to buy a new key. It said right on the key chain — Replacement of a lost key — up to $250.

About seven of my coworkers were in the lobby with me. One of them pointed way down the hallway to where a woman was about to walk out a door. “Get her, she works at the hotel.” I ran down the hallway calling to her, and when she stopped I said, “I just did something really stupid.” She followed me back down the lobby and I pointed to the ledge.

She smiled and said she’d return shortly. She walked off. My friends ribbed me pretty mercilessly, and I stood there and took it. They couldn’t come close to giving me what I was giving myself at that point.

After about 10 minutes the woman returned. She’d talked to somebody and said some guys would show up shortly with a scissor lift. While we waited, the final conference session ended and about 12 other coworkers began filtering down the hall toward us in groups of two or three. As each group arrived, they were filled in on the excitement, and I got some very interesting looks.

Finally the scissor-lift came chugging down the hallway. Two guys were in it, and they had big grins on their faces.  I pointed to where the key had landed, and they maneuvered the lift up into the skylight. I can be seen on the right in this photo, looking stupid.

All my coworkers formed a semi-circle around the lift and took photographs and video. There were even a few strangers who stopped by and joined the fun. I was standing on the opposite side of the lift, and after a few minutes, I noticed that several cameras were being pointed in my direction. I walked around behind everyone and watched the proceedings from the back row.

There were no complications. The guys managed to fit the lift into the skylight and grab the key. On the way down, they were laughing. One said that they’d never had the lift that high before. They were treating the whole thing like a grand adventure. You can see where the key landed in the photo below — on the ledge where the blue skylight frame joins the wall above the round lights.

I realized that I couldn’t remain in the background. I was my penance to take the walk of shame out into the circle and take the key from the guy. I thanked him and immediately tossed it to a coworker.

I don’t think a half hour passed from the time I made the stupid throw until I had the key back in my hand. It occurred to me that it was a good thing I’d done it at Disney. There are a lot of places that would have told me I was out of luck.

Once I realized how quickly and easily the problem was going to be solved, I wasn’t as upset, but it was embarrassing. I also found out who my friends were.

I got a lot of teasing, and that’s fine. I had it coming. But before the day was over, almost every one of my coworkers found an opportunity to say …

  1. that they felt badly for me and hoped I wasn’t too upset.
  2. that they could very easily see themselves doing something similar.
  3. that they were impressed that I’d gotten the key so high and that I should be proud.

We all went out for lunch and made it to the airport with three hours to spare, so it turned out to be nothing more than a bit of entertainment. But in the future, I think I’ll hang on to my keys.

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EPCOT — Part 4

When we began exploring again, it was dark. We wandered past Germany.

and China

and into Norway, where we went on the Maelstrom boat ride. None of my pictures turned out, but if you think of a dark tunnel with a lot of giant eyeballs, you’ll get the general idea.

Our next stop was Mexico.

Mexico also had a boat ride called the Gran Fiesta Tour Starring The Three Caballeros.

We left the World Showcase and went on the Soarin” ride, which made us feel like we were in a hang-glider over California and was very cool except that my cold kept me from smelling any of the odors that were part of the experience.

We then did Mission: SPACE, which didn’t do much for me. I had made a bet with Michayla earlier in the week and lost — my “payment” was that I was only allowed five snarky comments while at EPCOT, and I used one of them here. (For the record, I was only dinged for two all day, and I was awarded with a bonus one, so I had four to spare when the day was done.)

After trying some delightful Italian soda flavored with alkali (really), we went on the Test Track ride, which was pretty cool, but didn’t seem to fit in the park somehow.

The only photographic evidence I have that I was at EPCOT.

It was about time for the grand fireworks display, so we headed back to Mexico. Our plan was to buy and eat Mickey Mouse ice cream bars while watching the show, but a mad search by three of us from Mexico to Italy was in vain. By the time we got back to Mexico, the show was half over and I couldn’t find a good place to steady my camera for photos. This one is blurry, but you can get the general idea.

After the show, we were herded out with the other cattle and caught the shuttle bus back to Coronado Springs where the convention was being held. As we walked from the bus stop to the car, we passed the front door of the hotel and I wondered out loud if they might sell Mickey Mouse ice cream bars. Michayla made it her mission to find out (she was feeling badly that she hadn’t delivered them at EPCOT, but it was the only glitch in an otherwise great performance as our guide).

Sure enough, we tracked them down in the gift shop and the day was complete.

I found out later than one of Linda’s friends, who had joined us for the second half of our visit, told Margaret that I was a very nice young man, especially considering I was a Marine. Since the only conversation I’d had with her prior to that point hadn’t consisted of more than a few sentences, none of which involved my career or the military, I have no idea where she got this idea.

A final word on EPCOT — I had a good time. It was very well done, clean and efficient and all that. But weird, like it doesn’t know its own identity. I enjoyed Soarin’ and Living with the Land, but the other stuff in Future World was sorta odd. The World Showcase was better, although I mostly liked it for the photo ops. Would I go back? Probably not. It’s not the kind of thing I generally do on vacation, and $66 for six hours seems a bit steep. I might try one of the other parks, given the opportunity, but I won’t fight for that opportunity. But yes, I’m glad I went.

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EPCOT — Part 3

It was suppertime, and after the usual difficulty getting five people to agree on what they want to eat, we decided on Via Napoli in Italy.

I’m glad we did, because the thin-crust pizza we ordered was some of the best I’ve ever had.

Two friends of my sister’s joined us shortly after we sat down. Here she is watching for them.

I’d been fighting a cold all week, and after sitting in the restaurant for a while I began to feel the effects. I excused myself and went outside. I wandered about for a bit and took these photos …

Then I sat down on some steps and observed people, which was a great deal of fun.

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EPCOT — Part 2

We toured the World Showcase, stopping in some countries to see the sights and walking past others.

Canada — Our guide explained to us how the windows in this building are smaller the higher they are to make it look much taller than it actually is.

O Canada! Circle-Vision hosted by Martin Short, a 15-minute film on the scenic beauty of Canada on a 360 degree screen only 180 of which could actually be seen by any given person at any given time. After trying for a few minutes to grasp the whole thing I gave up and just enjoyed the part right in front of me.

Great Britain — We didn’t stop here.

France

We paused for a few moments to watch a performer juggle wine bottles while incessantly blowing on a whistle.

Morocco — We didn’t stop here, not even to watch the belly dancer.

Japan — didn’t stop here either. I don’t even remember walking past it or taking this photo, but it was on my camera, so I must have.

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EPCOT — Part 1

In mid-January, I spent five days in Orlando with a group of coworkers manning a booth at the Children’s Pastors Conference. We were kept busy from early in the morning to late at night and didn’t have much time to see the sights — except on Thursday when the exhibit hall closed mid-afternoon, and that’s when we went to Disneyworld.

I went to Disneyland in California when I was six or so — all I remember is a submarine ride. So when I heard that my sister and three of our friends were heading to Epcot, I invited myself along. One of those friends, Michayla, is the world’s foremost Disney enthusiast. She’d actually been to the park two weeks earlier with her husband. And not only was she willing to make all the arrangements, she acted as our guide. In six hours, we saw the vast majority of things there were to see.

Let me say up front that paying $66 to tour an amusement park is not how I generally vacation. And while I’m very glad I did it once, I’m not sure I’ll ever go back. So with that in mind, I will attempt to cover our visit in detail so, should the urge hit me, I can revisit this post and save the money.

Immediately in front of me as I entered was the giant silver golf ball, which was about all I knew about Epcot before this visit.

It houses a ride called Spaceship Earth which attempts to show the planet as a time machine, but I must confess I didn’t really get it. We rode past many scenes featuring animatronics portraying advances in human communication. They were very impressively done.

Our next stop was The Land building where we hopped right on a boatride — called Living with the Land — that took us through greenhouses, experimental gardens and fish farms. It wasn’t a very popular attraction with tourists, but I thought it was one of the best parts of our visit. It was also the part where I took the most photographs because it was outdoors and my camera takes lousy indoor photos.

 Margaret and Linda looking at the land.

Julie and Michayla

The fish farm. There are alligators in the tank on the right.

Part of the experimental gardens.

In the Imagination! building, we took a ride called “Journey Into Imagination With Figment.” Eric Idle and a purple dinosaur attempted to convince us to use our imaginations. Perhaps I’m not susceptible to purple dinosaurs — I was never a fan of Barney’s either — but I found this underwhelming.

My sister “laughing and learning” in the ImageWorks play area at the end of the ride.

 Margaret, Julie and Michayla attempted to splash me in one of the funky fountains outside the building.

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