T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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470.1 | | MANANA::RAVAN | Get WISE! | Fri Feb 12 1988 10:05 | 21 |
| I think you're right - "chivalry" can be harmful if it prevents
the recipient from learning how to take care of herself. Among the
many things I bless my Dad for is his insistence that I learn how
to use tools properly - including cars! He was always willing to
show me how to use something, or let me work it out myself, rather
than leaping in to do it for me. (He does like to help out, of course,
but only when invited; he knows how touchy I am about doing things
myself.)
I'm a bit surprised about the tire-changing, though. My driver's
ed. course included a session of tire-changing in the parking lot;
I'd assumed it was a standard part of the curriculum, like seeing
those movies about teenagers driving in front of trains...
Re learning these things: I'd recommend practicing your tire skills
(?) when you *don't* need them. It's a lot easier to read the manual
and find all the bits and pieces in daylight, in your driveway,
rather than on a twisty road at night (invariably the place where
flats occur).
-b
|
470.2 | | MILVAX::J_HANSEN | Julaine | Fri Feb 12 1988 10:18 | 15 |
| Having learned to drive in the snow (Upstate New York) and then
relearned in Massachusetts after many years on the West Coast, I
can sympathize.
While I can change a tire and the oil in my car, you will never
catch me doing it if there is a chivalrous male around to volunteer.
I believe we (women) should know how, but not necessarily feel we
have to.
Easy enough to learn -- might be a good excuse to meet an interesting
neighbor: "Excuse me, but could you show me how so I can be prepared?"
Good luck!
jh
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470.3 | you're both right!! | RDVAX::CLARK | take a chance on you | Fri Feb 12 1988 10:54 | 14 |
| You're right about learning to change the tire (I do change oil
and such myself, I learned when there was no one around to "teach"
me). Also, driver's education is (was) not required when I got
my driver's license, or at least not where I'm from.
It's just so important to know how to do these things myself, driving
in inclemant weather, etc. Yes, it's great to have someone who's
willing to do these things for me. But, it's even more important
to be able to do these things for myself. After all, I believe
that I'm the only person I can *realistically* rely on.
SandyC
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470.4 | Got to do it in the Wonder Years | SCSIJR::SHEFFIELD | Up, down, truth, beauty, strange, charm | Fri Feb 12 1988 11:27 | 14 |
|
By and large, I haven't known many women that ever had any inclination
to learn this sort of thing. My wife would never think of learning
to change the oil in her car, change a tire or do any of the hundred
and one myriad "dirty" things involved in maintaining a household.
It used to frustrate me completely until not too many years ago
I just gave up completely - it will never happen with her. HOWEVER,
I have two daughters (5 and 11) and you can be DAMN sure that they'll
be a little more self-sufficient.
Mark
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470.6 | tough nuts? | PARITY::SMITH | Penny Smith, TWO/B5, 247-2203 | Fri Feb 12 1988 13:21 | 12 |
| There are some things that I *know how* to do, like change a flat tire, but
just don't have the *physical* strength to carry it out! I wanted to learn
how.. so I could be prepared and self sufficient and all that... but when
it came down to actually having the flat, I couldn't get the lug nuts loose
from my wheels... in fact standing my weight on the bar wrench didn't do
it for me either, so I was thankful when a gentleman offered to *do it*
for me. I'm not a 98 lb. weakling either, but I do recognize that I do have
certain limitations! BTW, the gentleman couldn't *do it* either, and it
took having the car towed to a garage where they had some kind of electric
tool that unwound the lug nuts to get the tire off. Ugh.
Penny
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470.7 | I can count on me! | LAIDBK::RESKE | Life's a mystery & I have no clues | Fri Feb 12 1988 13:44 | 13 |
|
I agree, it's important to be able to know how to handle an
emergency whether that be car trouble or anything else. You never
know when you'll be in a situation when you only have yourself to
depend upon. When I have a flat, I usually prefer to use my AAA
card that I pay more and more for each year! :-)
As for this snow business, what are you talking about?? It suppose
to be 88 today in the L.A. area! ;->
Donna
|
470.8 | A tangent, but perhaps useful | AQUA::WAGMAN | QQSV | Fri Feb 12 1988 14:17 | 17 |
| Re: .6
>There are some things that I *know how* to do, like change a flat tire, but
>just don't have the *physical* strength to carry it out! . . . . but when
>it came down to actually having the flat, I couldn't get the lug nuts loose
>from my wheels. . . . it took having the car towed to a garage . . . to get
>the tire off. Ugh.
Kudos to you for trying! If you have found that you can't get the lug nuts
off your car, it may help to buy a new lug wrench (should cost less than $10
from an auto parts store) that is cross shaped. (Make sure that you get one
that correctly fits the nuts on your car, though.) With one of those you can
easily put *much* more twisting force on the nuts than you can with the sort
of wrench that usually comes with the car. That may save you a trip to the
garage some day.
--Q (Dick Wagman)
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470.9 | further on the tangent? | STUBBI::B_REINKE | where the sidewalk ends | Fri Feb 12 1988 21:22 | 22 |
| Well the last time I got a flat I called my husband. Then I went
into the trunk to get out the spare and the jack and was trying
to get the jack to come out of the wheel well when he arrived to
help me out...turned out that I had to crank the dern thing to get
it off the fixture it was on. So in addition to knowing how to
change a tire it is also necessary to familiarize yourself with
out the various implements are stored in the particular car you
are driving.
and as to getting the lug nuts off. You can *jump* on the cross
shaped wrench which will often be enough to eventually losen the
nuts. To jump on it without stripping it you have to support the
other end of the wrench on a rock or something so that you get
a twisting motion not a twisting plus bending motion.
Also, the next time that you get new tires and they tighten
the nuts with the pneumatic drill ask them to make sure that they
don't do it so tightly that you can't undo them yourself if
necessary.
Finally there are driving schools that teach winter driving skills.
Bonnie
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470.10 | For the woman who has everything... :-) | SALEM::AMARTIN | Mars NEEDS Women | Sun Feb 14 1988 02:55 | 13 |
| Sorry Bonnie, I would not recomend jumping on the spanner wrench
for two reasons. 1 you could bend it or hurt yourself and 2 you
are exerting more force in a downward motion that in the twisting
that you are trying to get. My wife is VERY petite so I invested
in a spanner wrench, and a 2"x2' pipe to use as a sort of breaker
bar. at just over five foot and under a hundred pounds this comes
in handy. It works well. All you do is put the spanner on the
lug, then put the bar over the uppermost head of the spanner and
PULL. It works. The last time she had a flat she had to use this
method due to the A**H**ES at the garage putting the lugs on too
goddarn tight with the pneumatic drive. AND SHE ASKED THEM NOT
TO DO IT TOO. Some people are just plain jerks.
Hope this helps, @L
|
470.11 | Tutors | TUNER::FLIS | | Mon Feb 15 1988 08:36 | 24 |
| Should we rename this note 'How to change a tire'?
As far as auto repairs/maintinance goes, let's not get too one sided.
It is generally assumed that males know about cars and females
do not. This is not true all the time. It's frustrating when I
see a woman on the side of the road with the hood up and a gaggle
of men helping her out, yet I have to wait for AAA because I am
a man with car trouble. Problem is, with few exceptions, I know
squat about cars. Anywho, on to the topic...
While chivalry may often be misguided, it may also be a lost
opportunity. When you have car trouble, or plumbing problems or
what-ever, and help is offered, take *full* advantage of it. You
would be suprised at how much you can learn simply by watching,
and seldom are questions rejected out of hand. I have learned quite
a bit in this way and the lessons seem to stick better than those
learned in a classroom.
So don't look at it as 'he's doing it for me', because that is all
it will be. Rather see it as a private tutor lesson and gleen it
for all that it is worth!
jim
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470.12 | Practice Can Be Fun | GCANYN::TATISTCHEFF | Lee T | Mon Feb 15 1988 12:26 | 13 |
| re: winter driving skills
The way I learned was on a very slippery parking lot in the middle
of the night, skidding around at the direction of a friend. You
learn how to _play_ with the car when there is no traction and then
you know (both with your head and your body) how to handle the thing
in an emergency.
Unfortunately, my new car is front wheel drive and has different
reactions, so I've gotta get out there the next time it snows and
I'm not on my way to or from work.
Lee
|
470.13 | Someone call the incredible bulk | SALES::RFI86 | You are the eyes of the world | Mon Feb 15 1988 14:20 | 8 |
| I just wanted to say, don't feel bad about not being able to get
the lug nuts off. I'm 6'6" 260 pounds and I too have trouble getting
the lug nuts off after some of those aforementioned a**h**es have
taken thier Pneumonic(pre-moronic) wrench to it. It is impossible
to get the force that they get with those dumb wrenches from the
average human body.
Geoff
|
470.14 | | DSSDEV::JACK | Marty Jack | Mon Feb 15 1988 16:25 | 2 |
| Get a hunk of pipe that fits over the wrench to increase leverage.
The technical term for one of these is "breaker bar".
|
470.16 | Just filling a space. :-) | SALEM::AMARTIN | Mars NEEDS Women | Tue Feb 16 1988 01:29 | 4 |
| The major reason for the "breaker bar" is to be able to remove the
lugs WITHOUT jumping of the wrench. Bulk or strength has nothing
to do with it, leverage is the key. BTW: I am 6'3" at 250lbs and
even I HAVE had to use it. @L
|
470.17 | whodathunkit ? | HEFTY::CHARBONND | What a pitcher! | Tue Feb 16 1988 06:36 | 10 |
| Story : Back about 15 years ago I had a Dodge van. I went to remove
the rear tire, and couldn't get the lug nuts off. I took the truck
to a local garage and asked him to loosen them with the air driver.
When I got home I *still* couldn't remove them. Back to the garage.
That's when I learned that on one side of the car, the lugs were
LEFT hand thread. Supposedly so that the rotation of the wheels
wouldn't loosen the lugs. I believe this is no longer done, but,
is your car perchance an ancient Chrysler ?
Dana
|
470.18 | | QUARK::LIONEL | We all live in a yellow subroutine | Tue Feb 16 1988 10:59 | 5 |
| Can we please continue discussion of the ons and offs of lug nuts
in CARBUFFS, and accept "tire changing" as just an example of typical
chivalrous behavior?
Steve
|
470.19 | digress, and regress | LEZAH::BOBBITT | I call all times soon, said Aslan | Tue Feb 16 1988 11:57 | 30 |
| in re: changing tires. I used to help my dad switch from regular
tires to snow tires every fall, and back again every spring. I
LIKED helping him with those bothersome little chores (like checking
the car's vital fluids, and getting it started when it flooded and
all).
in re: chivalry misplaced. YES. One place I have seen it happen
often (having spent so much time in electronics labs through high
school and college) is when there is a male/female set of lab partners
and rather than explain what he is doing, or let her do it, the
male of the couple just goes ahead and does all the work and lets
the young lady (with her neat handwriting, I presume) write up the
lab and do all the calculations. I was once in a chem course in
college and my male lab partner started in on this. So I switched
and got a female partner...we both learned a lot and neither of
us felt "stupid" or "belittled" while sitting around while someone
else did the work.
Then there's the male teachers, some of whom will crane their neck
over at a female struggling to get some lab done and shake their
head and either do it for them, or say, "there, there, that's okay,
don't bother," with an implied "I understand, you're a girl and
it's hard for girls to understand these technical things."
Chivalry my foot.
-Jody
|
470.21 | Too many disappointments | MEMORY::FRECHETTE | Use your imagination... | Tue Feb 16 1988 16:23 | 4 |
|
I've learned that you can't rely on anyone but yourself, so if you
want it done right...you must learn to do it yourself.
|
470.22 | a word from the author of this note | RDVAX::CLARK | take a chance on you | Wed Feb 17 1988 14:19 | 24 |
| When I was leaving HL0 Friday around noon, there were several cars
just spinning their wheels trying to get out of their parking places.
I was reaching my car when I saw another woman trying to push someone
who was stuck out of her parking space. I'm rather small, but I
thought that maybe between the two of us could manage to push the
car out, since it was a small car. We did, getting soaking wet
in the process. We went our way, and, of course I couldn't get
mine out of its parking place. I looked up and three "gentlemen"
appeared and helped me. I can't tell you how much I appreciated
that, also the woman who I helped push the other car had waited
to make sure that I got out. That just goes to show that chivalry
(today) isn't necessarily the actions of a man towards a woman, it
the actions of a person towards another person. I wanted to tell
them and anyone else who helps a stranger how much I appreciate
their assistance.
This note really wasn't intended to knock anyone who helped another
person, rather to encourage people to think about whether you are
actually helping that person, or doing it for that person. I'm
learning things now that I wish I had years ago. At the time it
was great that someone wanted to do it for me, but now that I have
to do it myself, I realize I should have stressed the word *help*.
Sandy
|
470.23 | prepare in advance | BUSY::GTEMPLE | | Thu Mar 03 1988 16:18 | 9 |
| I am surprised that throughout this discussion regarding the difficulty
of loosening lug nuts none have mentioned the use of ANTI-SIEZE
COMPOUND available at almost all auto parts stores. Simply brush
on all threads (brush provded in can) prior to putting the nuts
on. Of course this may not solve the problem when you have the flat,
therefore you may want to remove all tires when you have the time
and help captive. If you don't have the compound available, simply
oiling the threads will work as well.
SORRY STEVE......I COULDN'T RESIST!
|