Friday, November 23, 2018

At Least A-Cad Got a Charge Out of It

You've gotta get up pretty early in the morning to fool Hick about the particulars of an automobile. He knows make and model and years manufactured just by looking at fins or grills. He can take an engine apart and put it back together, without any extra parts left over! He even sawed off part of a semi truck and converted it to a dump truck for his buddy.

A-Cad almost stumped Hick.

I mentioned yesterday that Hick went against my orders and left in A-Cad before I got up. Even Steven, it seems, gave Hick his comeuppance for his trouble. Here's the story, according to Hick.

"I knew something was wrong when I opened the door to get in, and no lights came on. I figured maybe the battery was dead, so I raised the hood. I couldn't find the battery! I looked all over! It had a place to JUMP the battery, some connectors...but it didn't have a battery! I connected my cables and jumped it from T-Hoe, to get it running. Then I took it to Mick the Mechanic to have him take a look at it. I left it running while I talked to him, maybe 20 minutes, and when we came out and hooked up the battery tester, it showed the battery was low, so I didn't want to take a chance on our trip, and had him put in a new one."

"So Mick knew where the battery was?"

"NO! He said he'd never worked on an Acadia like that. I finally got my phone connection to work, and looked it up. The battery is under the floor panel in the back passenger seat!"

"You mean you lift the mat, and there it is?"

"Well, it's in a little compartment. There's a kind of trap door. But if you get an acid leak, that's not good!"

Let the record show that A-Cad is a 2016, which means we got him in the fall of 2015. No reason for a battery to go dead yet! Not in my opinion. Like Hick said, T-Hoe hasn't had one in five years. Then again, Hick is the one who bought T-Hoe's battery back then and put it in, and he got a good battery. I guess we're lucky Hick didn't open up that trapdoor and find dead hamsters draped over their wheel like subjects in a Salvador Dali painting.

I guess if we had bothered to crack open A-Cad's manual over the past three years, we might have known where to find the battery...

8 comments:

  1. We don't need no stinkin' batteries (or is that badges?)!!

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    1. That will probably be Hick's reply if I ask him to pick up some batteries while he's in town, using his Storage Unit Store profits.

      Even though he used up the first batch I bought on gewgaws he was re-selling, and the second batch replacing all the batteries in every house clock at once.

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  2. That is a weird place for a battery I'd never find it. Sometimes the battery is good but the contacts just have to be cleaned up till they are shiny, The smallest amount of corrosion will block the connection. That is my only car expertise but it has saved the day for a few people through the years. I suspect Hick knows that and certainly a science teacher would know.

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    1. Yeah! I would have been really disappointed, thinking they'd tricked me into buying a car without a battery!

      I know nothing about batteries or engines. Hick sometimes uses a can of Coke to bubble away such corrosion. Couldn't do it on THIS ONE, because he couldn't find the battery!

      Anyhoo...after letting A-Cad run for 20-30 minutes to charge up the battery, Hick had Mick test it, and since it was still low, he bought a new one.

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  3. That seems like a very odd place to put the battery. Who designed it?

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    1. It's not even like an Acadia has a small engine compartment. The front end of that car is plenty big!

      I don't know who designed it, but I'm sure Hick would answer, condescendingly, "Some ENGINEER!" He says they're all book knowledge and know nothing practical. At least that was his experience with them at his knife/saw blade manufacturing plant.

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  4. Chevy HHR did the same thing. I had to look at the owner's manual to figure it out. Just a strange place to put it.

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    1. I wonder if it's just a General Motors thing, or if Ford does it, too. Maybe prospective car buyers should ask the salesman to show them the battery!

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