Evening Republican, Volume 18, Number 253, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 26 October 1914 — Keeping Parts Together. [ARTICLE]
Keeping Parts Together.
In the motor car repair shop considerable time and trouble can be savqtj by keeping component parts together when disassembling the car or parts thereof. The carelessness in this respect, which exist in so many motor car repair shops, is really appalling. For example, a carburetor may be removed for inspection. To remove it several nuts are taken off. Often these nuts are laid on the running-board or inside the channel of the frame, or perhaps placed on the bench near the carburetor. On inspection it is found that the carburetor needs a new nozzle, or a part of it requires repairs that require a delay of some hours or days before it is replaced. The huts are forgotten. Often it is necessary to remove the bottom cover from the crank case or the cylinders from the crank case. In either case as soon as the parts are taken off the nuts should be screwed back on their studs.
