[T2] 3rd annual father son trip
Bob Pratt ka1dza at verizon.netThu Jul 6 19:33:58 PDT 2017
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BTW.... I got some Trip Tix from AAA, an AAA card and a fire extinguisher! Bob > On Jul 6, 2017, at 8:09 PM, Joseph Delecki <jdelecki at msn.com> wrote: > > Hello Bob, > > This being your first road trip, before doing the long haul to Georgia during this summer(?) , I suggest first taking a shorter > road trip visiting the New England region and some of the many interesting destinations either in Mass., Maine, New Hampshire or the Canadian > maritime provinces . By doing so you will learn about the importance of preplanning your route and the limits and discomforts of your vehicle. > > I believe you have a 71 1600 dp. Driving a 1600 dp down to Georgia during the summer months has its challenges. Heat is one of the first that comes to mind. > > > Joe, 71 1600dp, Vermont > > > > Sent from Mail<https://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=550986> for Windows 10 > > From: david raistrick<mailto:keen at icantclick.org> > Sent: Thursday, July 6, 2017 6:32 PM > To: Bob Pratt<mailto:ka1dza at verizon.net> > Cc: type2 at type2.com<mailto:type2 at type2.com> > Subject: Re: [T2] 3rd annual father son trip > >> On Thu, Jul 6, 2017 at 6:02 PM, Bob Pratt <ka1dza at verizon.net> wrote: >> Hi all, >> I hope everyone is enjoying the beautiful weather in the Northeast. >> My son and I are departing Massachusetts and traveling to Georgia stopping at various points of interest along the way. >> I have checked, replaced, and repaired everything on "Myles." >> My question is what tools should I carry with me? I'm a bit nervous taking the bus for the first time, but it's on my bucket list. I know it will be fun as long as nothing goes wrong. >> I do have a fire extinguisher and a AAA card! >> TIA!!! > > the most important these days: > > spare cell phone power. :) (portable battery pack) > > > things I like to take on out of town trips: > > jumper cables (for me or them) - these days I tend to grab my jump > box, instead, so I can jump myself... it can even ride on the spare > battery tray. > > tow strap (slid into a ditch more times than I want to remember in > snow or wet shoulders) > > spare fan belt x2 (and make sure it's the right one. I like to put a > new one on before I go, and add the just-removed belt to the spares so > I KNOW it fit...) > > spare oil. how much depends on your leak/burn rate, of course. > refill the spares on the road! I usually dont travel with spare GL4 > gear oil since a major gear oil leak is more than a road side > fix-and-limp IME. and most NAPAs have it (or used to) > Hello Bob, > > This being your first road trip, before doing the long haul to Georgia during this summer(?) , I suggest first taking a shorter > road trip visiting the New England region and some of the many interesting destinations either in Mass., Maine, New Hampshire or the Canadian > maritime provinces . By doing so you will learn about the importance of preplanning your route and the limits and discomforts of your vehicle. > > I believe you have a 71 1600 dp. Driving a 1600 dp down to Georgia during the summer months has its challenges. Heat is one of the first that comes to mind. > > > Joe, 71 1600dp, Vermont > > > > Sent from Mail<https://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=550986> for Windows 10 > > From: david raistrick<mailto:keen at icantclick.org> > Sent: Thursday, July 6, 2017 6:32 PM > To: Bob Pratt<mailto:ka1dza at verizon.net> > Cc: type2 at type2.com<mailto:type2 at type2.com> > Subject: Re: [T2] 3rd annual father son trip > >> On Thu, Jul 6, 2017 at 6:02 PM, Bob Pratt <ka1dza at verizon.net> wrote: >> Hi all, >> I hope everyone is enjoying the beautiful weather in the Northeast. >> My son and I are departing Massachusetts and traveling to Georgia stopping at various points of interest along the way. >> I have checked, replaced, and repaired everything on "Myles." >> My question is what tools should I carry with me? I'm a bit nervous taking the bus for the first time, but it's on my bucket list. I know it will be fun as long as nothing goes wrong. >> I do have a fire extinguisher and a AAA card! >> TIA!!! > > the most important these days: > > spare cell phone power. :) (portable battery pack) > > > things I like to take on out of town trips: > > jumper cables (for me or them) - these days I tend to grab my jump > box, instead, so I can jump myself... it can even ride on the spare > battery tray. > > tow strap (slid into a ditch more times than I want to remember in > snow or wet shoulders) > > spare fan belt x2 (and make sure it's the right one. I like to put a > new one on before I go, and add the just-removed belt to the spares so > I KNOW it fit...) > > spare oil. how much depends on your leak/burn rate, of course. > refill the spares on the road! I usually dont travel with spare GL4 > gear oil since a major gear oil leak is more than a road side > fix-and-limp IME. and most NAPAs have it (or used to) > > spare brake fluid. > > spare water. the drinking kind. I like to keep a separate stash > with the emergency supplies (refreshed for a trip) away from my normal > trip supplies in case I drink the normal supply. nothing like being > stuck in the heat without it. > > the spare tire. with air in it. A compact air pump, tire plug kit > (and/or slime), and a jack and lug wrench you're comfortable using. > A few spare lug bolts tucked away don't hurt either... and tire > pressure gauge. > > the jack: I travel with an alum floor jack that I know has enough > lift to get my tires off. I hate the space it kills, but I haven't > found anything better that's more compact. (I've been looking > lately, though). I guess I could fall back on my stock jack since my > jack points are solid. but if they're not, you need something that > can lift at the torsion beams.. I usually use my jack at least once > on any trip, though usually for another bus along the way, not mine. > > > the usual hand tools assortment. a basic metric socket and combo > wrench set (or at minimum a deep 1/4 drive 10mm socket for the distr, > a 13mm combo for the carb, an 8mm combo (the 8/13 stock tools are good > here) for the accel and heater cables, and whatever your battery > clamps need. probably a 13mm socket for the battery hold down). a > small assortment of the usual screwdrivers. tools to adjust valves > (unless you're hydraulic), tools to adjust brakes. and of course > that lug wrench. that's usually a 19mm deep socket and breaker bar. > whatever you need to get your hub caps off, if you run them. a > basic slip joint plier, and maybe a diag cutter. a hammer. elec tape. > how far this kit goes is up to you... :) Depends on your level of > road side repair skills/desire. You can always tool-up at the auto > parts store that you find whatever you need to fix whatever is broken > as an alternative. > _______________________________________________ > type2 mailing list > type2 at type2.com > https://www.type2.com/lists/type2/listinfo > > _______________________________________________ > type2 mailing list > type2 at type2.com > https://www.type2.com/lists/type2/listinfo
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