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  • Day 51

    Luigi, Luigi...

    March 3 in Italy β‹… β˜€οΈ 16 Β°C

    Luigi is the name I gave to the Peugeot πŸš— that I borrowed from Martinello during my stay here. Luigi is a bit decrepit, one eye πŸ‘οΈ‍πŸ—¨οΈ is crossed, he limps 🦢 a bit in the front right (drive shaft or universal joint) and it seems like the radiator circuit thermostat is broken, because he is always cold ❄️.

    He therefore burns uncleanly and therefore smells 🦨 bad. Of course, this isn't exactly good for the lifespan of the engine either.

    I help Luigi where I can, so a great idea emerged: Covering half the cooler with a piece of cardboard πŸ“œ helps him get up to operating temperature 🌑️ and then he feels much more comfortable 😊. With the thermostat-cardboard-substitute πŸ€ͺ, regular checks of air πŸ’¨, water πŸ’§ and oil πŸͺ” and, above all, continuous monitoring of the temperature 🌑️, he drives really happily 😊 and reliably.

    Or rather, drove. 😱

    On Friday on the way to Agrigento the engine got too warm πŸ”₯ and even taking out the cardboard didn't help. I had the feeling he was losing coolant πŸ’§ and that's how it was. I filled up 3l πŸ’§ for the next 10km.

    Luckily, Diana found a repair πŸ› οΈ shop as we drove past. We barely made it, the radiator was almost empty and the engine just below the red zone πŸ”΄.

    Ignazio, the mechanic, said it just needs to be bled πŸ’¨. I really tried to convince him that the circuit was leaking. He was a bit annoyed by the German know-it-all woman πŸ€“.

    As life goes, the temperature 🌑️ didn't really go down. He was about to send us off again when Matteo, his son, intervened. I had worked on him too 🀣 that there must be a leak.

    He blew 🌬️ into the radiator and there you go... a pressure drop. Hush hush up on the lift and looking πŸ‘€ where it's dripping. Aha, let's remove the air filter to have a better view. Then he connected the pressure tester and THERE was the leak.

    Oh. Uh. Yes, a leak. Ignazio said that I'm definitely not good to go. Aha. See! He said that car πŸš— had to stay there. Aha hear hear πŸ˜‚.

    Ignazio was embarrassed 😳. The German know-it-all woman πŸ€“ was right. He gave us a very good bottle of prosecco πŸ€ͺ and drove us to the bus to Agrigento. He also agreed to let us pick up the car on Sunday 😳. A guilty conscience can be a good thing πŸ˜‰.

    On the way to the bus stop I tried to convince him on the thermostat 🌑️ thing. I had already tried that with Matteo - that the thermostat was also broken. You could have changed it in the same repair. But again no one believed the German know-it-all woman πŸ€“.

    Whatever, I'll just stick with the cardboard πŸ“œ, as long as I can drive at all.

    Today we picked up Luigi again. Since there are no buses on the route on Sundays and there is no train we needed another solution. Maybe hitchhiking? Spontaneously I had another idea πŸ’₯. I just "convinced" πŸ€ͺ two guys just under 30 on the street - you know me.

    In short: Flo and Valentin drove us 27km to the workshop for gas money and were extremely sweet ❀️. Ignazio also came promptly and was again remarkably friendly, really a bit too attentive πŸ˜‚.

    Someone must have noticed when the motor was running that it wasn't getting up to operating temperature. Well, the thermostat was probably broken 🀣. Ignazio invited us to a coffee β˜• and handed me 3 liters of rosé wine 🍷.

    Well, well, the guilty conscience πŸ˜‚. The German know-it-all woman πŸ€“ was probably right again 🀣.

    But that's no problem, I've already gotten used to my cardboard πŸ“œ πŸ€ͺ.

    In any case, once again a great adventure with a good outcome and getting to know Flo and Valentin, as well as the beginning of a wonderful German-Italian mechanic-friendship (I will definitely drop by Ignazio when I’m here in Sicily once more, there is wine, coffee and prosecco 🀣).
    Life is truly wonderful! ❀️❀️❀️
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