After more than 40 years in the automotive business I still use some of the
lessons I learned from Dick O'Kane. (fuel, air spark, right place, right
time, right amount)
How can you not love a book that starts off by telling you that you need to
own 2 copies, one to read at home and one to keep in the car when it
breaks? Or has a chapter that starts off with "What is the most useless
thing you can think of? A bird cage full of bat manure?... Rating right up
in there is the average foreign car owner's tool kit.
Or has a chapter entitled "Why if Britannica rules the waves, will her cars
not go though a puddle?"
I need to pull out a copy of How to Repair Your Foreign Car (A guide for
your wife, the beginner, and the mechanically inept) and read it again.
Take this as fact, if you ever see a copy of any book written by O'Kane, buy
it. You will thank me when you stop laughing.
Rick
On Tue, Oct 6, 2009 at 5:17 PM, Michael Shepard <shepard7107@msn.com> wrote:
> My favorite was Dick O'Kane who said "carburettor is a French word which
> means 'leave it alone" !. I still love to read my 1970 copy of "Stories of
> Road & Track". I was 16 and just thought that O'Kane, Manney and Walker
> were
> terrific.
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