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The Laws for British Sports Cars

The Laws for British Sports Cars

Most of us are familiar with the physical laws thought up by Isaac Newton, the guy who invented gravity. He said things like "For every action there is an equal and opposite reaction'' and "lf you sit under an apple tree long enough, an apple will fall on your head, provided you sit under the same apple tree''.

Isaac was considered very intelligent and was eventually responsible for the invention of calculus, which was a kind of new math for people who thought math wasn't already hard enough. He is also the reason why, even today, people who work in apple orchards often wear large, protective hats.

Newton's laws made sense for hundreds of years, and everybody believed them. They believed them right up until the time when British sports cars were invented, when it was suddenly realized that a whole new bunch of laws was going to be needed.

Many distinguished scientists have worked their entire lives to try and figure out why British autos never seem to obey any scientitic laws known to man.

These eminent scientists, with names like Morris, Healy, Leyland, and Jaguar etc. shook the scientitic community when they published their new theory of mechanical behavior called "The Laws for British Sports Cars". Many people are not familiar with the five major laws, so they are listed below with a brief explanation of each.

1. Law of Peculiar Random Nomenclature

The name of a British Sports Car shall consist primarily of letters and numbers, with said letters and numbers chosen in random fashion so that the resultant vehicle name is wholly devoid of meaning. This law explains why British cars always have spectacularly bad names like "MGBGT'' or worse yet "XKE''

 

2. Law of Cryptic lnstruction

Any book, manual, pamphlet, or text dealing with the maintenance, repair, or restoration of a British Sports Car shall be written so that at least every fourth word will be unknown to the average reader. ln the event that any portion of the text is understandable, the information contained therein shall be incorrect.

Most people are familiar with this law. Here is an excerpt from page 132 of the MGA shop manual: "Before rebushing the lower grunnion banjos, you must remove the bonnet facia and undo the A-arm nut with a no. 3 Spanner''. All attempts to publish an English language version of this manual have failed.

 

3.Love of Hardship Law

The more a British Sports Car malfunctions, breaks, and/or falls apart, the more endearing it becomes to the owner.

You can buy a British Sports Car. You have it a year and a half, and have replaced every item on the car at least twice. When the engine is started and it sounds as if someone has thrown a handful of ball bearings into a blender. But when someone offers to buy it, you are offended because "It’s like part of the family, and besides, it's so much fun to drive"'.

British Sports Car owners often stare into space and smile a lot. This is referred to as the "Foolish Person Syndrome''

 

4. Law of Non-Functional Attributes

All British Sports Cars, regardless of condition or age, shall always have at least one system or sub-system of components, which is entirely non-functional, and cannot be repaired except on semi-permanent or semi-functional basis.

This is also known as the famous Lucas Electronics Law.

 

5. Recently Discovered Component Failure Law

Any component of a British Sports Car, which is entirely unknown to the owner, shall function perfectly, until such time that the owner becomes awm'e of the component's existence, when it shall instantly fail.

Case in point: l have owned a rather natty MGB for six years. l never knew there was such a thing as a "Gulp Valve"' until l saw new ones for sale by Moss Motors. The next day, driving my MGB to work, the Gulp Valve fell off the motor and was run over by a truck.

I do not know what the Gulp Valve gulps nor do I particularly care to know, since it sounds messy and dangerous. But I figured l would buy a new Gulp Valve and install it myself. One look at the shop manual and I decided to have somebody else install it (seeLaw of Cryptic lnstructions, above)

While l'm driving the car over to the local repair establishment, I notice that the MGB is performing just as well as it did and that the loss of the mysterious Gulp Valve has not had any effect on its behavior. I figured this is due to the Non-Functional Attribute Law, which means that the Gulp Valve probably wasn't gulping anything anyway, so I decided not to replace it after all.

Three days later the engine had no more oil in it and promptly seized into a solid mass of metal. The tow truck operator, being ignorant of the Love of Hardship Law, offered to take the car off my hands for £100.00. I just smiled.

Article found on the Internet by Gavin Knowles Thanks Gavin

 
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