Infernal Combustion Engines

I’m not what you would call very mechanical.  I wish I was, and darn it mechanical skills should be innate. Shouldn’t they?  Luckily I live in a place where everyone…

I’m not what you would call very mechanical.  I wish I was, and darn it mechanical skills should be innate. Shouldn’t they?  Luckily I live in a place where everyone else is a small engine mechanic. It is not unusual to come across someone on the land, tarp filled with parts spread out beside their snowmobile, replacing a piston in their machine. I’ll walk over with the rest of the men and play the part, peer and nod knowingly, but truthfully my mind is going "How could anyone do this out here? Look at all of those parts. I wonder what those pieces are for? I wonder if tea is ready? Where did I put that chocolate bar?"

Leah’s brothers and father are all part of this cult of engine wizards. This, is a good thing. Honestly you need to be up here, there are no garages, no dealers, no warranty work. Resourcefulness is a common trait up here, and probably has been for untold generations.

One of my favourite stories of resourcefulness comes from when I was still a member, and involved in search and rescue.  One summer day the Search and Rescue committee got a call that a couple of men from the community failed to return from an evening of hunting the day before.  They were only expected to be gone for a couple of hours and it was now almost 24 hours later.  When we finally got a boat and search team organized a thick fog had rolled in, and the searchers and searchees missed each other as the searchees returned to town. 

They had been out in the middle of Admiralty Inlet when the prop fell off their boat! After a bit they rooted around the bottom of the boat and found some metal from which they fashioned their own prop! To be sure they could only travel very slowly but they could travel, so they headed over to the nearest shore and began walking back.  After a little while they found an old boat prop on the shore and so they headed back to their boat. It was, of course, the wrong make of prop that wouldn’t fit their motor, but that wasn’t a really a problem, they modified it so it would fit!

My point is that I am not like that. Sorry to say if it had been me I’d have been bobbing around in the middle of Admiralty Inlet, hoping that someone found me before I’d be forced to eat my companions. 

Our four-stroke snowmobile needs a new alternator, which is very expensive. I finally found someone down south to rebuild our old alternator, a much cheaper (but not cheap) solution. Three bolts and two electrical connections and its still sitting there, undone.  I was flummoxed at the first electrical connection I tried to disconnect.

A couple of weeks ago I dug the ATV out of its snowbank, and over the course of a couple of days got it started again.  It did not want to stay running, but after I took it on a short run it stayed idling, until the moment I went back in the House. Then it stopped, and would not start again, and there had been something leaking from it. So there it sat.

Getting around town on her snowmobile was becoming increasingly problematic. We are rapidly losing our snow cover in town, and most of the roads are increasingly bare. So on Friday one of Leah’s brothers stopped by to look at the ATV. After a couple of nanoseconds he pronounced the problem as a frozen carberator and took the ATV back to his place.

So on Saturday I needed to whip down to the store to pick up some stuff for the baking Leah was taking to a table sale. One of the tires on the truck was low and rather than pump it up, I hopped on Leah’s snowmobile, went down the hill to the ice, scooted across the bay and parked across from the store, only one road to cross.  I ran in, jumped on the machine and scooted back across the bay, almost. The snowmobile suddenly stopped, and wouldn’t start again so I walked home. There I pumped up my tire  and drove Leah to the table sale.

Then her brother brought back the ATV, fixed.  Leah once again had a vehicle to get around in, and her brother went and got the snowmobile and took it home to fix. Sunday we learned that the oil reservoir had broken and the oil drained out. Even I know that when it comes to engines, oil is a good thing, and while he initially thought that one of the pistons was blown (we had a spare) he later determined it was only stuck. No idea when it would be fixed though.

But I wanted to go check out the Gyrfalcons. "Why don’t you take the four-wheeler?" Leah asked. Great idea, it would be a slower trip covering the eight or nine kilmetres out there, and colder as it doesn’t have a windshield, but the way is smooth and snow packed, shouldn’t be a problem. Wrong. About a kilometre out the ATV slowed, and slowed, and stopped, and wouldn’t start again. So, once again I was walking home. I borrowed another machine and once again I was towing one of ours back to Leah’s parent’s place. And there it sits, a bit more of a puzzle for her brother.

I’m pretty sure that I’m going to be barred from anything other than the truck, and Leah was forced to hitch a ride out of town to meet the dog team racers from Nunavut Quest. Tomorrow they finish their last leg of the race here in town.  I’ll be there. I’m walking down to watch.

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