Labor was cheap then and many did the work.
Today the parts are so cheap and in many cases fail so seldom, that
it's not worth it to fix. If its off in your hand, safer to put a new
one on.
Unless you live rurally and have a good Gen/Starter shop with a Good
Ole Boy working it for the last 40 years like I do.
Ray
On Sep 9, 2009, at 1:41 AM, Bill Watson wrote:
Today we live in a world pushing recycling, yet virtually everything
we buy cannot be repaired. The opposite was true 50 years ago.
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