new meaning to "serpentine belt"
#11
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: new meaning to "serpentine belt"
lol...Great story!
Jeff
"Jeff Strickland" <crwlr@yahoo.com> wrote in message
news:TsidnbHOmrnoug_ZnZ2dnUVZ_qmdnZ2d@ez2.net...
>
> "Captain Purple" <someone@somewhere.com> wrote in message
> news:be8f8$44920e46$186010f8$22141@KNOLOGY.NET...
>> ...so the other day, the cat and the dog are out by the driveway, and I'm
>> hearing this "activity" out there...
>> and the cat has an almost 3 foot even gray snake cornered. Pretty soon
>> the snake wrangles under the jeep and
>> disappears.
>>
>> The cat and the dog give up after 1/2 hour, but I'm still standing there
>> trying to figure out what to do. I
>> usually coax animals out with tuna fish or doggie biskits but that's not
>> gonna work.
>>
>> So my wife sez to open the hood. And there it is on top of the radiator,
>> you might say "blending in". I kind
>> of drop the hood and then think, well, why don't I start the engine, and
>> the thing'll get too hot and maybe
>> come out. (the engine was cold)
>>
>> So I start it up. It idles for a three or four minutes or so, and now
>> it's starting to get suspenseful. Do I
>> peek under the hood just to "check"? Then, just like in an old
>> roadrunner cartoon, we hear a THWACK THWACK
>> THWACK and the head comes flying out underneath and then the end of the
>> tail comes out underneath and then...
>> silence.
>>
>
> Dude! You shoulda seen that coming ...
>
>
>
>
Jeff
"Jeff Strickland" <crwlr@yahoo.com> wrote in message
news:TsidnbHOmrnoug_ZnZ2dnUVZ_qmdnZ2d@ez2.net...
>
> "Captain Purple" <someone@somewhere.com> wrote in message
> news:be8f8$44920e46$186010f8$22141@KNOLOGY.NET...
>> ...so the other day, the cat and the dog are out by the driveway, and I'm
>> hearing this "activity" out there...
>> and the cat has an almost 3 foot even gray snake cornered. Pretty soon
>> the snake wrangles under the jeep and
>> disappears.
>>
>> The cat and the dog give up after 1/2 hour, but I'm still standing there
>> trying to figure out what to do. I
>> usually coax animals out with tuna fish or doggie biskits but that's not
>> gonna work.
>>
>> So my wife sez to open the hood. And there it is on top of the radiator,
>> you might say "blending in". I kind
>> of drop the hood and then think, well, why don't I start the engine, and
>> the thing'll get too hot and maybe
>> come out. (the engine was cold)
>>
>> So I start it up. It idles for a three or four minutes or so, and now
>> it's starting to get suspenseful. Do I
>> peek under the hood just to "check"? Then, just like in an old
>> roadrunner cartoon, we hear a THWACK THWACK
>> THWACK and the head comes flying out underneath and then the end of the
>> tail comes out underneath and then...
>> silence.
>>
>
> Dude! You shoulda seen that coming ...
>
>
>
>
#12
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: new meaning to "serpentine belt"
lol...Great story!
Jeff
"Jeff Strickland" <crwlr@yahoo.com> wrote in message
news:TsidnbHOmrnoug_ZnZ2dnUVZ_qmdnZ2d@ez2.net...
>
> "Captain Purple" <someone@somewhere.com> wrote in message
> news:be8f8$44920e46$186010f8$22141@KNOLOGY.NET...
>> ...so the other day, the cat and the dog are out by the driveway, and I'm
>> hearing this "activity" out there...
>> and the cat has an almost 3 foot even gray snake cornered. Pretty soon
>> the snake wrangles under the jeep and
>> disappears.
>>
>> The cat and the dog give up after 1/2 hour, but I'm still standing there
>> trying to figure out what to do. I
>> usually coax animals out with tuna fish or doggie biskits but that's not
>> gonna work.
>>
>> So my wife sez to open the hood. And there it is on top of the radiator,
>> you might say "blending in". I kind
>> of drop the hood and then think, well, why don't I start the engine, and
>> the thing'll get too hot and maybe
>> come out. (the engine was cold)
>>
>> So I start it up. It idles for a three or four minutes or so, and now
>> it's starting to get suspenseful. Do I
>> peek under the hood just to "check"? Then, just like in an old
>> roadrunner cartoon, we hear a THWACK THWACK
>> THWACK and the head comes flying out underneath and then the end of the
>> tail comes out underneath and then...
>> silence.
>>
>
> Dude! You shoulda seen that coming ...
>
>
>
>
Jeff
"Jeff Strickland" <crwlr@yahoo.com> wrote in message
news:TsidnbHOmrnoug_ZnZ2dnUVZ_qmdnZ2d@ez2.net...
>
> "Captain Purple" <someone@somewhere.com> wrote in message
> news:be8f8$44920e46$186010f8$22141@KNOLOGY.NET...
>> ...so the other day, the cat and the dog are out by the driveway, and I'm
>> hearing this "activity" out there...
>> and the cat has an almost 3 foot even gray snake cornered. Pretty soon
>> the snake wrangles under the jeep and
>> disappears.
>>
>> The cat and the dog give up after 1/2 hour, but I'm still standing there
>> trying to figure out what to do. I
>> usually coax animals out with tuna fish or doggie biskits but that's not
>> gonna work.
>>
>> So my wife sez to open the hood. And there it is on top of the radiator,
>> you might say "blending in". I kind
>> of drop the hood and then think, well, why don't I start the engine, and
>> the thing'll get too hot and maybe
>> come out. (the engine was cold)
>>
>> So I start it up. It idles for a three or four minutes or so, and now
>> it's starting to get suspenseful. Do I
>> peek under the hood just to "check"? Then, just like in an old
>> roadrunner cartoon, we hear a THWACK THWACK
>> THWACK and the head comes flying out underneath and then the end of the
>> tail comes out underneath and then...
>> silence.
>>
>
> Dude! You shoulda seen that coming ...
>
>
>
>
#13
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: new meaning to "serpentine belt"
lol...Great story!
Jeff
"Jeff Strickland" <crwlr@yahoo.com> wrote in message
news:TsidnbHOmrnoug_ZnZ2dnUVZ_qmdnZ2d@ez2.net...
>
> "Captain Purple" <someone@somewhere.com> wrote in message
> news:be8f8$44920e46$186010f8$22141@KNOLOGY.NET...
>> ...so the other day, the cat and the dog are out by the driveway, and I'm
>> hearing this "activity" out there...
>> and the cat has an almost 3 foot even gray snake cornered. Pretty soon
>> the snake wrangles under the jeep and
>> disappears.
>>
>> The cat and the dog give up after 1/2 hour, but I'm still standing there
>> trying to figure out what to do. I
>> usually coax animals out with tuna fish or doggie biskits but that's not
>> gonna work.
>>
>> So my wife sez to open the hood. And there it is on top of the radiator,
>> you might say "blending in". I kind
>> of drop the hood and then think, well, why don't I start the engine, and
>> the thing'll get too hot and maybe
>> come out. (the engine was cold)
>>
>> So I start it up. It idles for a three or four minutes or so, and now
>> it's starting to get suspenseful. Do I
>> peek under the hood just to "check"? Then, just like in an old
>> roadrunner cartoon, we hear a THWACK THWACK
>> THWACK and the head comes flying out underneath and then the end of the
>> tail comes out underneath and then...
>> silence.
>>
>
> Dude! You shoulda seen that coming ...
>
>
>
>
Jeff
"Jeff Strickland" <crwlr@yahoo.com> wrote in message
news:TsidnbHOmrnoug_ZnZ2dnUVZ_qmdnZ2d@ez2.net...
>
> "Captain Purple" <someone@somewhere.com> wrote in message
> news:be8f8$44920e46$186010f8$22141@KNOLOGY.NET...
>> ...so the other day, the cat and the dog are out by the driveway, and I'm
>> hearing this "activity" out there...
>> and the cat has an almost 3 foot even gray snake cornered. Pretty soon
>> the snake wrangles under the jeep and
>> disappears.
>>
>> The cat and the dog give up after 1/2 hour, but I'm still standing there
>> trying to figure out what to do. I
>> usually coax animals out with tuna fish or doggie biskits but that's not
>> gonna work.
>>
>> So my wife sez to open the hood. And there it is on top of the radiator,
>> you might say "blending in". I kind
>> of drop the hood and then think, well, why don't I start the engine, and
>> the thing'll get too hot and maybe
>> come out. (the engine was cold)
>>
>> So I start it up. It idles for a three or four minutes or so, and now
>> it's starting to get suspenseful. Do I
>> peek under the hood just to "check"? Then, just like in an old
>> roadrunner cartoon, we hear a THWACK THWACK
>> THWACK and the head comes flying out underneath and then the end of the
>> tail comes out underneath and then...
>> silence.
>>
>
> Dude! You shoulda seen that coming ...
>
>
>
>
#14
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: new meaning to "serpentine belt"
Ick.
I had a similar experience with our Kawasaki Mule: We keep it at our cabin
in northern Michigan, and when we went up in April I started it up and heard
a "THUNK" and then a high-pitch noise that varied with engine speed. We have
field mice everywhere up there so I'm thinking there's a damn nest in the
transmission. It has a belt-drive constantly variable transmission, similar
to a snowmobile, and the exhaust vent tube isn't screened, although the
intake vent is.
So I end up removing the housing cover and lo and behold, there's a HUGE
mouse nest in there, and when I pull the housing cover out and dump it I see
about 4 large pieces of mouse, with the rest sprayed on the inside of the
housing and all over the belt. So I use hot water and a scrub brush to clean
the mouse parts off the belt and the inside of the cover, and blow out all
the nest parts. Once everything's clean it all seemed to work. I went to the
local hardware and got a steel straining screen to cover the vent tube.
It took a couple hours for the cooking mouse smell to go away, though.
"Captain Purple" <someone@somewhere.com> wrote in message
news:be8f8$44920e46$186010f8$22141@KNOLOGY.NET...
> ...so the other day, the cat and the dog are out by the driveway, and I'm
> hearing this "activity" out there...
> and the cat has an almost 3 foot even gray snake cornered. Pretty soon the
> snake wrangles under the jeep and
> disappears.
>
> The cat and the dog give up after 1/2 hour, but I'm still standing there
> trying to figure out what to do. I
> usually coax animals out with tuna fish or doggie biskits but that's not
> gonna work.
>
> So my wife sez to open the hood. And there it is on top of the radiator,
> you might say "blending in". I kind
> of drop the hood and then think, well, why don't I start the engine, and
> the thing'll get too hot and maybe
> come out. (the engine was cold)
>
> So I start it up. It idles for a three or four minutes or so, and now it's
> starting to get suspenseful. Do I
> peek under the hood just to "check"? Then, just like in an old roadrunner
> cartoon, we hear a THWACK THWACK
> THWACK and the head comes flying out underneath and then the end of the
> tail comes out underneath and then...
> silence.
>
> So we wait a minute and the fact that it's gotta be dead sinks in, so I
> turn it off and...open the hood. And
> there wrapped around the fan blade mechanism - almost in a knot - is the
> rest of the snake, and I see that
> there is a certain amount of snake guts splayed under the hood.
>
> Eventually I worked the pieces out with a stick and hosed off everything
> (it needed it anyway...) and that was
> that.
> Yikes !
>
> C.P.
>
>
I had a similar experience with our Kawasaki Mule: We keep it at our cabin
in northern Michigan, and when we went up in April I started it up and heard
a "THUNK" and then a high-pitch noise that varied with engine speed. We have
field mice everywhere up there so I'm thinking there's a damn nest in the
transmission. It has a belt-drive constantly variable transmission, similar
to a snowmobile, and the exhaust vent tube isn't screened, although the
intake vent is.
So I end up removing the housing cover and lo and behold, there's a HUGE
mouse nest in there, and when I pull the housing cover out and dump it I see
about 4 large pieces of mouse, with the rest sprayed on the inside of the
housing and all over the belt. So I use hot water and a scrub brush to clean
the mouse parts off the belt and the inside of the cover, and blow out all
the nest parts. Once everything's clean it all seemed to work. I went to the
local hardware and got a steel straining screen to cover the vent tube.
It took a couple hours for the cooking mouse smell to go away, though.
"Captain Purple" <someone@somewhere.com> wrote in message
news:be8f8$44920e46$186010f8$22141@KNOLOGY.NET...
> ...so the other day, the cat and the dog are out by the driveway, and I'm
> hearing this "activity" out there...
> and the cat has an almost 3 foot even gray snake cornered. Pretty soon the
> snake wrangles under the jeep and
> disappears.
>
> The cat and the dog give up after 1/2 hour, but I'm still standing there
> trying to figure out what to do. I
> usually coax animals out with tuna fish or doggie biskits but that's not
> gonna work.
>
> So my wife sez to open the hood. And there it is on top of the radiator,
> you might say "blending in". I kind
> of drop the hood and then think, well, why don't I start the engine, and
> the thing'll get too hot and maybe
> come out. (the engine was cold)
>
> So I start it up. It idles for a three or four minutes or so, and now it's
> starting to get suspenseful. Do I
> peek under the hood just to "check"? Then, just like in an old roadrunner
> cartoon, we hear a THWACK THWACK
> THWACK and the head comes flying out underneath and then the end of the
> tail comes out underneath and then...
> silence.
>
> So we wait a minute and the fact that it's gotta be dead sinks in, so I
> turn it off and...open the hood. And
> there wrapped around the fan blade mechanism - almost in a knot - is the
> rest of the snake, and I see that
> there is a certain amount of snake guts splayed under the hood.
>
> Eventually I worked the pieces out with a stick and hosed off everything
> (it needed it anyway...) and that was
> that.
> Yikes !
>
> C.P.
>
>
#15
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: new meaning to "serpentine belt"
Ick.
I had a similar experience with our Kawasaki Mule: We keep it at our cabin
in northern Michigan, and when we went up in April I started it up and heard
a "THUNK" and then a high-pitch noise that varied with engine speed. We have
field mice everywhere up there so I'm thinking there's a damn nest in the
transmission. It has a belt-drive constantly variable transmission, similar
to a snowmobile, and the exhaust vent tube isn't screened, although the
intake vent is.
So I end up removing the housing cover and lo and behold, there's a HUGE
mouse nest in there, and when I pull the housing cover out and dump it I see
about 4 large pieces of mouse, with the rest sprayed on the inside of the
housing and all over the belt. So I use hot water and a scrub brush to clean
the mouse parts off the belt and the inside of the cover, and blow out all
the nest parts. Once everything's clean it all seemed to work. I went to the
local hardware and got a steel straining screen to cover the vent tube.
It took a couple hours for the cooking mouse smell to go away, though.
"Captain Purple" <someone@somewhere.com> wrote in message
news:be8f8$44920e46$186010f8$22141@KNOLOGY.NET...
> ...so the other day, the cat and the dog are out by the driveway, and I'm
> hearing this "activity" out there...
> and the cat has an almost 3 foot even gray snake cornered. Pretty soon the
> snake wrangles under the jeep and
> disappears.
>
> The cat and the dog give up after 1/2 hour, but I'm still standing there
> trying to figure out what to do. I
> usually coax animals out with tuna fish or doggie biskits but that's not
> gonna work.
>
> So my wife sez to open the hood. And there it is on top of the radiator,
> you might say "blending in". I kind
> of drop the hood and then think, well, why don't I start the engine, and
> the thing'll get too hot and maybe
> come out. (the engine was cold)
>
> So I start it up. It idles for a three or four minutes or so, and now it's
> starting to get suspenseful. Do I
> peek under the hood just to "check"? Then, just like in an old roadrunner
> cartoon, we hear a THWACK THWACK
> THWACK and the head comes flying out underneath and then the end of the
> tail comes out underneath and then...
> silence.
>
> So we wait a minute and the fact that it's gotta be dead sinks in, so I
> turn it off and...open the hood. And
> there wrapped around the fan blade mechanism - almost in a knot - is the
> rest of the snake, and I see that
> there is a certain amount of snake guts splayed under the hood.
>
> Eventually I worked the pieces out with a stick and hosed off everything
> (it needed it anyway...) and that was
> that.
> Yikes !
>
> C.P.
>
>
I had a similar experience with our Kawasaki Mule: We keep it at our cabin
in northern Michigan, and when we went up in April I started it up and heard
a "THUNK" and then a high-pitch noise that varied with engine speed. We have
field mice everywhere up there so I'm thinking there's a damn nest in the
transmission. It has a belt-drive constantly variable transmission, similar
to a snowmobile, and the exhaust vent tube isn't screened, although the
intake vent is.
So I end up removing the housing cover and lo and behold, there's a HUGE
mouse nest in there, and when I pull the housing cover out and dump it I see
about 4 large pieces of mouse, with the rest sprayed on the inside of the
housing and all over the belt. So I use hot water and a scrub brush to clean
the mouse parts off the belt and the inside of the cover, and blow out all
the nest parts. Once everything's clean it all seemed to work. I went to the
local hardware and got a steel straining screen to cover the vent tube.
It took a couple hours for the cooking mouse smell to go away, though.
"Captain Purple" <someone@somewhere.com> wrote in message
news:be8f8$44920e46$186010f8$22141@KNOLOGY.NET...
> ...so the other day, the cat and the dog are out by the driveway, and I'm
> hearing this "activity" out there...
> and the cat has an almost 3 foot even gray snake cornered. Pretty soon the
> snake wrangles under the jeep and
> disappears.
>
> The cat and the dog give up after 1/2 hour, but I'm still standing there
> trying to figure out what to do. I
> usually coax animals out with tuna fish or doggie biskits but that's not
> gonna work.
>
> So my wife sez to open the hood. And there it is on top of the radiator,
> you might say "blending in". I kind
> of drop the hood and then think, well, why don't I start the engine, and
> the thing'll get too hot and maybe
> come out. (the engine was cold)
>
> So I start it up. It idles for a three or four minutes or so, and now it's
> starting to get suspenseful. Do I
> peek under the hood just to "check"? Then, just like in an old roadrunner
> cartoon, we hear a THWACK THWACK
> THWACK and the head comes flying out underneath and then the end of the
> tail comes out underneath and then...
> silence.
>
> So we wait a minute and the fact that it's gotta be dead sinks in, so I
> turn it off and...open the hood. And
> there wrapped around the fan blade mechanism - almost in a knot - is the
> rest of the snake, and I see that
> there is a certain amount of snake guts splayed under the hood.
>
> Eventually I worked the pieces out with a stick and hosed off everything
> (it needed it anyway...) and that was
> that.
> Yikes !
>
> C.P.
>
>
#16
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: new meaning to "serpentine belt"
Ick.
I had a similar experience with our Kawasaki Mule: We keep it at our cabin
in northern Michigan, and when we went up in April I started it up and heard
a "THUNK" and then a high-pitch noise that varied with engine speed. We have
field mice everywhere up there so I'm thinking there's a damn nest in the
transmission. It has a belt-drive constantly variable transmission, similar
to a snowmobile, and the exhaust vent tube isn't screened, although the
intake vent is.
So I end up removing the housing cover and lo and behold, there's a HUGE
mouse nest in there, and when I pull the housing cover out and dump it I see
about 4 large pieces of mouse, with the rest sprayed on the inside of the
housing and all over the belt. So I use hot water and a scrub brush to clean
the mouse parts off the belt and the inside of the cover, and blow out all
the nest parts. Once everything's clean it all seemed to work. I went to the
local hardware and got a steel straining screen to cover the vent tube.
It took a couple hours for the cooking mouse smell to go away, though.
"Captain Purple" <someone@somewhere.com> wrote in message
news:be8f8$44920e46$186010f8$22141@KNOLOGY.NET...
> ...so the other day, the cat and the dog are out by the driveway, and I'm
> hearing this "activity" out there...
> and the cat has an almost 3 foot even gray snake cornered. Pretty soon the
> snake wrangles under the jeep and
> disappears.
>
> The cat and the dog give up after 1/2 hour, but I'm still standing there
> trying to figure out what to do. I
> usually coax animals out with tuna fish or doggie biskits but that's not
> gonna work.
>
> So my wife sez to open the hood. And there it is on top of the radiator,
> you might say "blending in". I kind
> of drop the hood and then think, well, why don't I start the engine, and
> the thing'll get too hot and maybe
> come out. (the engine was cold)
>
> So I start it up. It idles for a three or four minutes or so, and now it's
> starting to get suspenseful. Do I
> peek under the hood just to "check"? Then, just like in an old roadrunner
> cartoon, we hear a THWACK THWACK
> THWACK and the head comes flying out underneath and then the end of the
> tail comes out underneath and then...
> silence.
>
> So we wait a minute and the fact that it's gotta be dead sinks in, so I
> turn it off and...open the hood. And
> there wrapped around the fan blade mechanism - almost in a knot - is the
> rest of the snake, and I see that
> there is a certain amount of snake guts splayed under the hood.
>
> Eventually I worked the pieces out with a stick and hosed off everything
> (it needed it anyway...) and that was
> that.
> Yikes !
>
> C.P.
>
>
I had a similar experience with our Kawasaki Mule: We keep it at our cabin
in northern Michigan, and when we went up in April I started it up and heard
a "THUNK" and then a high-pitch noise that varied with engine speed. We have
field mice everywhere up there so I'm thinking there's a damn nest in the
transmission. It has a belt-drive constantly variable transmission, similar
to a snowmobile, and the exhaust vent tube isn't screened, although the
intake vent is.
So I end up removing the housing cover and lo and behold, there's a HUGE
mouse nest in there, and when I pull the housing cover out and dump it I see
about 4 large pieces of mouse, with the rest sprayed on the inside of the
housing and all over the belt. So I use hot water and a scrub brush to clean
the mouse parts off the belt and the inside of the cover, and blow out all
the nest parts. Once everything's clean it all seemed to work. I went to the
local hardware and got a steel straining screen to cover the vent tube.
It took a couple hours for the cooking mouse smell to go away, though.
"Captain Purple" <someone@somewhere.com> wrote in message
news:be8f8$44920e46$186010f8$22141@KNOLOGY.NET...
> ...so the other day, the cat and the dog are out by the driveway, and I'm
> hearing this "activity" out there...
> and the cat has an almost 3 foot even gray snake cornered. Pretty soon the
> snake wrangles under the jeep and
> disappears.
>
> The cat and the dog give up after 1/2 hour, but I'm still standing there
> trying to figure out what to do. I
> usually coax animals out with tuna fish or doggie biskits but that's not
> gonna work.
>
> So my wife sez to open the hood. And there it is on top of the radiator,
> you might say "blending in". I kind
> of drop the hood and then think, well, why don't I start the engine, and
> the thing'll get too hot and maybe
> come out. (the engine was cold)
>
> So I start it up. It idles for a three or four minutes or so, and now it's
> starting to get suspenseful. Do I
> peek under the hood just to "check"? Then, just like in an old roadrunner
> cartoon, we hear a THWACK THWACK
> THWACK and the head comes flying out underneath and then the end of the
> tail comes out underneath and then...
> silence.
>
> So we wait a minute and the fact that it's gotta be dead sinks in, so I
> turn it off and...open the hood. And
> there wrapped around the fan blade mechanism - almost in a knot - is the
> rest of the snake, and I see that
> there is a certain amount of snake guts splayed under the hood.
>
> Eventually I worked the pieces out with a stick and hosed off everything
> (it needed it anyway...) and that was
> that.
> Yikes !
>
> C.P.
>
>
#17
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: new meaning to "serpentine belt"
Last spring when I changed my air filter on the TJ I found the airbox to be
full of nuts and seed...I'm guessing one or more of the thousands of
Chipmunks in the area spent the winter in my engine...lol...no biggie :)
Jeff
"Matt Macchiarolo" <matt@nospamplease.com> wrote in message
news:hKydnQLZxfiBRAjZnZ2dnUVZ_tednZ2d@comcast.com. ..
> Ick.
>
> I had a similar experience with our Kawasaki Mule: We keep it at our cabin
> in northern Michigan, and when we went up in April I started it up and
> heard a "THUNK" and then a high-pitch noise that varied with engine speed.
> We have field mice everywhere up there so I'm thinking there's a damn nest
> in the transmission. It has a belt-drive constantly variable
> transmission, similar to a snowmobile, and the exhaust vent tube isn't
> screened, although the intake vent is.
>
> So I end up removing the housing cover and lo and behold, there's a HUGE
> mouse nest in there, and when I pull the housing cover out and dump it I
> see about 4 large pieces of mouse, with the rest sprayed on the inside of
> the housing and all over the belt. So I use hot water and a scrub brush to
> clean the mouse parts off the belt and the inside of the cover, and blow
> out all the nest parts. Once everything's clean it all seemed to work. I
> went to the local hardware and got a steel straining screen to cover the
> vent tube.
>
> It took a couple hours for the cooking mouse smell to go away, though.
>
> "Captain Purple" <someone@somewhere.com> wrote in message
> news:be8f8$44920e46$186010f8$22141@KNOLOGY.NET...
>> ...so the other day, the cat and the dog are out by the driveway, and I'm
>> hearing this "activity" out there...
>> and the cat has an almost 3 foot even gray snake cornered. Pretty soon
>> the snake wrangles under the jeep and
>> disappears.
>>
>> The cat and the dog give up after 1/2 hour, but I'm still standing there
>> trying to figure out what to do. I
>> usually coax animals out with tuna fish or doggie biskits but that's not
>> gonna work.
>>
>> So my wife sez to open the hood. And there it is on top of the radiator,
>> you might say "blending in". I kind
>> of drop the hood and then think, well, why don't I start the engine, and
>> the thing'll get too hot and maybe
>> come out. (the engine was cold)
>>
>> So I start it up. It idles for a three or four minutes or so, and now
>> it's starting to get suspenseful. Do I
>> peek under the hood just to "check"? Then, just like in an old
>> roadrunner cartoon, we hear a THWACK THWACK
>> THWACK and the head comes flying out underneath and then the end of the
>> tail comes out underneath and then...
>> silence.
>>
>> So we wait a minute and the fact that it's gotta be dead sinks in, so I
>> turn it off and...open the hood. And
>> there wrapped around the fan blade mechanism - almost in a knot - is the
>> rest of the snake, and I see that
>> there is a certain amount of snake guts splayed under the hood.
>>
>> Eventually I worked the pieces out with a stick and hosed off everything
>> (it needed it anyway...) and that was
>> that.
>> Yikes !
>>
>> C.P.
>>
>>
>
>
full of nuts and seed...I'm guessing one or more of the thousands of
Chipmunks in the area spent the winter in my engine...lol...no biggie :)
Jeff
"Matt Macchiarolo" <matt@nospamplease.com> wrote in message
news:hKydnQLZxfiBRAjZnZ2dnUVZ_tednZ2d@comcast.com. ..
> Ick.
>
> I had a similar experience with our Kawasaki Mule: We keep it at our cabin
> in northern Michigan, and when we went up in April I started it up and
> heard a "THUNK" and then a high-pitch noise that varied with engine speed.
> We have field mice everywhere up there so I'm thinking there's a damn nest
> in the transmission. It has a belt-drive constantly variable
> transmission, similar to a snowmobile, and the exhaust vent tube isn't
> screened, although the intake vent is.
>
> So I end up removing the housing cover and lo and behold, there's a HUGE
> mouse nest in there, and when I pull the housing cover out and dump it I
> see about 4 large pieces of mouse, with the rest sprayed on the inside of
> the housing and all over the belt. So I use hot water and a scrub brush to
> clean the mouse parts off the belt and the inside of the cover, and blow
> out all the nest parts. Once everything's clean it all seemed to work. I
> went to the local hardware and got a steel straining screen to cover the
> vent tube.
>
> It took a couple hours for the cooking mouse smell to go away, though.
>
> "Captain Purple" <someone@somewhere.com> wrote in message
> news:be8f8$44920e46$186010f8$22141@KNOLOGY.NET...
>> ...so the other day, the cat and the dog are out by the driveway, and I'm
>> hearing this "activity" out there...
>> and the cat has an almost 3 foot even gray snake cornered. Pretty soon
>> the snake wrangles under the jeep and
>> disappears.
>>
>> The cat and the dog give up after 1/2 hour, but I'm still standing there
>> trying to figure out what to do. I
>> usually coax animals out with tuna fish or doggie biskits but that's not
>> gonna work.
>>
>> So my wife sez to open the hood. And there it is on top of the radiator,
>> you might say "blending in". I kind
>> of drop the hood and then think, well, why don't I start the engine, and
>> the thing'll get too hot and maybe
>> come out. (the engine was cold)
>>
>> So I start it up. It idles for a three or four minutes or so, and now
>> it's starting to get suspenseful. Do I
>> peek under the hood just to "check"? Then, just like in an old
>> roadrunner cartoon, we hear a THWACK THWACK
>> THWACK and the head comes flying out underneath and then the end of the
>> tail comes out underneath and then...
>> silence.
>>
>> So we wait a minute and the fact that it's gotta be dead sinks in, so I
>> turn it off and...open the hood. And
>> there wrapped around the fan blade mechanism - almost in a knot - is the
>> rest of the snake, and I see that
>> there is a certain amount of snake guts splayed under the hood.
>>
>> Eventually I worked the pieces out with a stick and hosed off everything
>> (it needed it anyway...) and that was
>> that.
>> Yikes !
>>
>> C.P.
>>
>>
>
>
#18
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: new meaning to "serpentine belt"
Last spring when I changed my air filter on the TJ I found the airbox to be
full of nuts and seed...I'm guessing one or more of the thousands of
Chipmunks in the area spent the winter in my engine...lol...no biggie :)
Jeff
"Matt Macchiarolo" <matt@nospamplease.com> wrote in message
news:hKydnQLZxfiBRAjZnZ2dnUVZ_tednZ2d@comcast.com. ..
> Ick.
>
> I had a similar experience with our Kawasaki Mule: We keep it at our cabin
> in northern Michigan, and when we went up in April I started it up and
> heard a "THUNK" and then a high-pitch noise that varied with engine speed.
> We have field mice everywhere up there so I'm thinking there's a damn nest
> in the transmission. It has a belt-drive constantly variable
> transmission, similar to a snowmobile, and the exhaust vent tube isn't
> screened, although the intake vent is.
>
> So I end up removing the housing cover and lo and behold, there's a HUGE
> mouse nest in there, and when I pull the housing cover out and dump it I
> see about 4 large pieces of mouse, with the rest sprayed on the inside of
> the housing and all over the belt. So I use hot water and a scrub brush to
> clean the mouse parts off the belt and the inside of the cover, and blow
> out all the nest parts. Once everything's clean it all seemed to work. I
> went to the local hardware and got a steel straining screen to cover the
> vent tube.
>
> It took a couple hours for the cooking mouse smell to go away, though.
>
> "Captain Purple" <someone@somewhere.com> wrote in message
> news:be8f8$44920e46$186010f8$22141@KNOLOGY.NET...
>> ...so the other day, the cat and the dog are out by the driveway, and I'm
>> hearing this "activity" out there...
>> and the cat has an almost 3 foot even gray snake cornered. Pretty soon
>> the snake wrangles under the jeep and
>> disappears.
>>
>> The cat and the dog give up after 1/2 hour, but I'm still standing there
>> trying to figure out what to do. I
>> usually coax animals out with tuna fish or doggie biskits but that's not
>> gonna work.
>>
>> So my wife sez to open the hood. And there it is on top of the radiator,
>> you might say "blending in". I kind
>> of drop the hood and then think, well, why don't I start the engine, and
>> the thing'll get too hot and maybe
>> come out. (the engine was cold)
>>
>> So I start it up. It idles for a three or four minutes or so, and now
>> it's starting to get suspenseful. Do I
>> peek under the hood just to "check"? Then, just like in an old
>> roadrunner cartoon, we hear a THWACK THWACK
>> THWACK and the head comes flying out underneath and then the end of the
>> tail comes out underneath and then...
>> silence.
>>
>> So we wait a minute and the fact that it's gotta be dead sinks in, so I
>> turn it off and...open the hood. And
>> there wrapped around the fan blade mechanism - almost in a knot - is the
>> rest of the snake, and I see that
>> there is a certain amount of snake guts splayed under the hood.
>>
>> Eventually I worked the pieces out with a stick and hosed off everything
>> (it needed it anyway...) and that was
>> that.
>> Yikes !
>>
>> C.P.
>>
>>
>
>
full of nuts and seed...I'm guessing one or more of the thousands of
Chipmunks in the area spent the winter in my engine...lol...no biggie :)
Jeff
"Matt Macchiarolo" <matt@nospamplease.com> wrote in message
news:hKydnQLZxfiBRAjZnZ2dnUVZ_tednZ2d@comcast.com. ..
> Ick.
>
> I had a similar experience with our Kawasaki Mule: We keep it at our cabin
> in northern Michigan, and when we went up in April I started it up and
> heard a "THUNK" and then a high-pitch noise that varied with engine speed.
> We have field mice everywhere up there so I'm thinking there's a damn nest
> in the transmission. It has a belt-drive constantly variable
> transmission, similar to a snowmobile, and the exhaust vent tube isn't
> screened, although the intake vent is.
>
> So I end up removing the housing cover and lo and behold, there's a HUGE
> mouse nest in there, and when I pull the housing cover out and dump it I
> see about 4 large pieces of mouse, with the rest sprayed on the inside of
> the housing and all over the belt. So I use hot water and a scrub brush to
> clean the mouse parts off the belt and the inside of the cover, and blow
> out all the nest parts. Once everything's clean it all seemed to work. I
> went to the local hardware and got a steel straining screen to cover the
> vent tube.
>
> It took a couple hours for the cooking mouse smell to go away, though.
>
> "Captain Purple" <someone@somewhere.com> wrote in message
> news:be8f8$44920e46$186010f8$22141@KNOLOGY.NET...
>> ...so the other day, the cat and the dog are out by the driveway, and I'm
>> hearing this "activity" out there...
>> and the cat has an almost 3 foot even gray snake cornered. Pretty soon
>> the snake wrangles under the jeep and
>> disappears.
>>
>> The cat and the dog give up after 1/2 hour, but I'm still standing there
>> trying to figure out what to do. I
>> usually coax animals out with tuna fish or doggie biskits but that's not
>> gonna work.
>>
>> So my wife sez to open the hood. And there it is on top of the radiator,
>> you might say "blending in". I kind
>> of drop the hood and then think, well, why don't I start the engine, and
>> the thing'll get too hot and maybe
>> come out. (the engine was cold)
>>
>> So I start it up. It idles for a three or four minutes or so, and now
>> it's starting to get suspenseful. Do I
>> peek under the hood just to "check"? Then, just like in an old
>> roadrunner cartoon, we hear a THWACK THWACK
>> THWACK and the head comes flying out underneath and then the end of the
>> tail comes out underneath and then...
>> silence.
>>
>> So we wait a minute and the fact that it's gotta be dead sinks in, so I
>> turn it off and...open the hood. And
>> there wrapped around the fan blade mechanism - almost in a knot - is the
>> rest of the snake, and I see that
>> there is a certain amount of snake guts splayed under the hood.
>>
>> Eventually I worked the pieces out with a stick and hosed off everything
>> (it needed it anyway...) and that was
>> that.
>> Yikes !
>>
>> C.P.
>>
>>
>
>
#19
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: new meaning to "serpentine belt"
Last spring when I changed my air filter on the TJ I found the airbox to be
full of nuts and seed...I'm guessing one or more of the thousands of
Chipmunks in the area spent the winter in my engine...lol...no biggie :)
Jeff
"Matt Macchiarolo" <matt@nospamplease.com> wrote in message
news:hKydnQLZxfiBRAjZnZ2dnUVZ_tednZ2d@comcast.com. ..
> Ick.
>
> I had a similar experience with our Kawasaki Mule: We keep it at our cabin
> in northern Michigan, and when we went up in April I started it up and
> heard a "THUNK" and then a high-pitch noise that varied with engine speed.
> We have field mice everywhere up there so I'm thinking there's a damn nest
> in the transmission. It has a belt-drive constantly variable
> transmission, similar to a snowmobile, and the exhaust vent tube isn't
> screened, although the intake vent is.
>
> So I end up removing the housing cover and lo and behold, there's a HUGE
> mouse nest in there, and when I pull the housing cover out and dump it I
> see about 4 large pieces of mouse, with the rest sprayed on the inside of
> the housing and all over the belt. So I use hot water and a scrub brush to
> clean the mouse parts off the belt and the inside of the cover, and blow
> out all the nest parts. Once everything's clean it all seemed to work. I
> went to the local hardware and got a steel straining screen to cover the
> vent tube.
>
> It took a couple hours for the cooking mouse smell to go away, though.
>
> "Captain Purple" <someone@somewhere.com> wrote in message
> news:be8f8$44920e46$186010f8$22141@KNOLOGY.NET...
>> ...so the other day, the cat and the dog are out by the driveway, and I'm
>> hearing this "activity" out there...
>> and the cat has an almost 3 foot even gray snake cornered. Pretty soon
>> the snake wrangles under the jeep and
>> disappears.
>>
>> The cat and the dog give up after 1/2 hour, but I'm still standing there
>> trying to figure out what to do. I
>> usually coax animals out with tuna fish or doggie biskits but that's not
>> gonna work.
>>
>> So my wife sez to open the hood. And there it is on top of the radiator,
>> you might say "blending in". I kind
>> of drop the hood and then think, well, why don't I start the engine, and
>> the thing'll get too hot and maybe
>> come out. (the engine was cold)
>>
>> So I start it up. It idles for a three or four minutes or so, and now
>> it's starting to get suspenseful. Do I
>> peek under the hood just to "check"? Then, just like in an old
>> roadrunner cartoon, we hear a THWACK THWACK
>> THWACK and the head comes flying out underneath and then the end of the
>> tail comes out underneath and then...
>> silence.
>>
>> So we wait a minute and the fact that it's gotta be dead sinks in, so I
>> turn it off and...open the hood. And
>> there wrapped around the fan blade mechanism - almost in a knot - is the
>> rest of the snake, and I see that
>> there is a certain amount of snake guts splayed under the hood.
>>
>> Eventually I worked the pieces out with a stick and hosed off everything
>> (it needed it anyway...) and that was
>> that.
>> Yikes !
>>
>> C.P.
>>
>>
>
>
full of nuts and seed...I'm guessing one or more of the thousands of
Chipmunks in the area spent the winter in my engine...lol...no biggie :)
Jeff
"Matt Macchiarolo" <matt@nospamplease.com> wrote in message
news:hKydnQLZxfiBRAjZnZ2dnUVZ_tednZ2d@comcast.com. ..
> Ick.
>
> I had a similar experience with our Kawasaki Mule: We keep it at our cabin
> in northern Michigan, and when we went up in April I started it up and
> heard a "THUNK" and then a high-pitch noise that varied with engine speed.
> We have field mice everywhere up there so I'm thinking there's a damn nest
> in the transmission. It has a belt-drive constantly variable
> transmission, similar to a snowmobile, and the exhaust vent tube isn't
> screened, although the intake vent is.
>
> So I end up removing the housing cover and lo and behold, there's a HUGE
> mouse nest in there, and when I pull the housing cover out and dump it I
> see about 4 large pieces of mouse, with the rest sprayed on the inside of
> the housing and all over the belt. So I use hot water and a scrub brush to
> clean the mouse parts off the belt and the inside of the cover, and blow
> out all the nest parts. Once everything's clean it all seemed to work. I
> went to the local hardware and got a steel straining screen to cover the
> vent tube.
>
> It took a couple hours for the cooking mouse smell to go away, though.
>
> "Captain Purple" <someone@somewhere.com> wrote in message
> news:be8f8$44920e46$186010f8$22141@KNOLOGY.NET...
>> ...so the other day, the cat and the dog are out by the driveway, and I'm
>> hearing this "activity" out there...
>> and the cat has an almost 3 foot even gray snake cornered. Pretty soon
>> the snake wrangles under the jeep and
>> disappears.
>>
>> The cat and the dog give up after 1/2 hour, but I'm still standing there
>> trying to figure out what to do. I
>> usually coax animals out with tuna fish or doggie biskits but that's not
>> gonna work.
>>
>> So my wife sez to open the hood. And there it is on top of the radiator,
>> you might say "blending in". I kind
>> of drop the hood and then think, well, why don't I start the engine, and
>> the thing'll get too hot and maybe
>> come out. (the engine was cold)
>>
>> So I start it up. It idles for a three or four minutes or so, and now
>> it's starting to get suspenseful. Do I
>> peek under the hood just to "check"? Then, just like in an old
>> roadrunner cartoon, we hear a THWACK THWACK
>> THWACK and the head comes flying out underneath and then the end of the
>> tail comes out underneath and then...
>> silence.
>>
>> So we wait a minute and the fact that it's gotta be dead sinks in, so I
>> turn it off and...open the hood. And
>> there wrapped around the fan blade mechanism - almost in a knot - is the
>> rest of the snake, and I see that
>> there is a certain amount of snake guts splayed under the hood.
>>
>> Eventually I worked the pieces out with a stick and hosed off everything
>> (it needed it anyway...) and that was
>> that.
>> Yikes !
>>
>> C.P.
>>
>>
>
>
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WillysGuy
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10-12-2003 01:18 PM
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