
Encore Puzzler Answer from August 1, 1998: Vinnie and the Vacuum
RAY: Our buddy Vinnie Gumbattzi decided to do a tune up on his
brother's car, and, being the good brother and backyard wrench that he
was, even figured he'd change the spark plugs. He knew it was important
when removing the plugs not to allow the dirt, grime chunks and other
matter that accumulates around the plug over the years to fall into
spark plug holes.
Being particularly diligent, he went to the trouble
to vacuum the dirt away from the plugs with the official "Click: and
Clack Power Shop Vac."
But because the space in the cylinder head where
the plugs go was so confined, he couldn't do the best job. So he
decided to remove the plugs and vacuum the space with them removed.
TOM: Maybe we could get him to be so diligent around my house.
RAY: For a fee. Anyway, the results of Vinnie's decision to vac the
plug holes with the plugs removed were absolutely disastrous.
Question: What had happened?
Puzzler Answer:
The resulting effect wasn't bad for the car, but for the vacuum it was
very, very bad. What had happened toVinnie was that his vac was blown
to pieces. What had happend was that on one particular cylinder, the
intake valve was in the open position. When he held the vac's suction
hose on the spark plug hole of that cylinder, he had unwittingly sucked
in a gas-and-air mixture into the cylinder from the carbuerator just as
a decending piston would. Except in this case, it went up the vacuum
hose and through the catchbag, only to be ignited by the electrical
current at the motor's electrode. This sent Vinnie's trusty Electrolux
into many airbourne pieces. Fortunately, they all missed Vinnie.
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