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Re: Fuel Regulator

To: Bill Babcock <BillB@bnj.com>
Subject: Re: Fuel Regulator
From: "Michael D. Porter" <mporter@zianet.com>
Date: Tue, 30 Sep 2003 05:59:43 -0600
Bill Babcock wrote:

> Had a funny incident at the track though. A guy came by to look over my
> shoulder while I was feverishly working on some things unrelated to the
> chain (unfortunately) and started pointing out all the important facets of
> the Radical to me and his wife. Out of roughly twenty things he said he
> didn't get a single one right--or even close. Now that's talent. He
> decided my Kawasaki motor was a Honda--and nothing I said to the contrary
> registered at all. What reminded me of him was the subject line for this
> email--he started his tirade by explaining that the fuel regulator was
> very clever because it was from a gas barbeque.
> 
> Normally I enjoy the folks who come by the paddock, but lately I've been
> getting a lot of nuts. Is there something going on with the moon, or is it
> my cologne?

Nah, not the cologne. Probably not the phase of the moon, either. It's mostly 
the wide distribution of information which 
people largely don't understand. In 2001, while I was trying to do an 
inspection of a TR7 at the VTR for the supposed 
introduction of the daily driver award named for John Macartney's father, 
someone walked up and announced to his fellow 
show-goer, "that engine was originally a GM design." I abjured, and suggested 
that perhaps he had confused it with the 
B-O-P aluminum v-8 that Rover and Triumph licensed from GM. "NO! That's a GM 
design." Umm, I said, perhaps if you look 
at the cam cover and compare that to the Stag v-8, which was a British-Leyland 
design, and, the engine was licensed by 
British-Leyland to Saab. If what he asserted was the case, why didn't the 
original licensing come from GM? The answer? 
"Look, I'm not arguing with someone who doesn't know what he's talking about. I 
won't waste my time on this...." And, he 
stomped off with his acquaintance in tow, in high dudgeon at having been 
possibly contradicted.

I thought about this some, and did some web searches, thinking I was wrong, and 
finally had to conclude that this idiot 
saw a TR7, thought it was a TR8, and without knowing (or recognizing) that it 
was a TR7 with a 4-cylinder, assumed that 
the engine in it was the B-O-P 215 ci GM-based engine, which he'd probably 
never seen in his life (but had vaguely heard 
of), since he looked to be many years younger than the cars GM put that engine 
into....

 From that, I can only conclude that either the TR7 engine was so bad, even 
compared to the loathsome Chevette engine, 
that GM has refused to acknowledge its parentage, or that I'd met just another 
asshole from this country, which has been 
raising more than its fair share of assholes lately.

I don't think it's altogether bad manners to tell an insistently arrogant and 
stupid asshole he doesn't have a clue. The 
other option is to simply hand the interloper the wrench, and say, "okay, 
smartass, your turn. Go to it."

I think this phenomenon is a reflection of how many people in this country have 
gotten away with lying on their resumes. 
It's gone to their heads. *smile*

Cheers.

-- 
Michael D. Porter
Roswell, NM
[mailto:mporter@zianet.com]

Never let anyone drive you crazy when you know it's within walking distance.

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