I watched a coil of wire as the strap that held it in place snapped. The wire looked like a giant toy Slinkey moving as the wire slowly to uncoil until the whole coil created another pile. I do not know what started the coil moving unless it was the sun heating the steel.
While working as a rural United States Post Officer
substitute mail carrier, I was on my maiden voyage when the rubber band holding
a cluster of slick magazines broke sending the large bundle all over my mail
vehicle. The unique characteristic of rubber bands is they only work when under
pressure. I suppose that the bundle of magazines created more pressure than the
rubber band could hold.
There was time I was repairing a starter for my John
Deere riding lawn mower. I removed a screw that released four springs and
ball-bearings hurling them out the garage door and into infinity and beyond. I
retrieved all but one spring that remains traveling somewhere out there in
space.
Pull cords on small engines recoil due to a spring connected
to a pulley. A couple of things can create uncontrolled chaos. One, if the cord
breaks, the remaining cord will suddenly disappear into the mower and the
recoil spring will unwind. A second thing is the recoil spring can break or disconnect.
As the spring unravels, the pull cord will not recoil, or it can become knotted
inside the mower.
There are thousands of ways to hold things together.
There are all kinds of clips that hold stuff together. There are magnets that
hold all those precious grandchildren’s pictures on the refrigerator. One of the
greatest inventions is the zip tie. The possibilities are unlimited.
Another priceless invention for holding things
together is glue. You have Elmer’s glue, gorilla glue, superglue, flex glue, JB
weld, Tite-bond, and Tester’s plastic cement to name a few.
My first experience with glue happened in Beloit,
Illinois at kindergarten. We used water and flour to make some paste to hold colored
cutouts on paper. We graduated into Elmer’s glue, and it was an item students
must have for school.
I was introduced to “airplane” glue after I received an
AMT model car as a school Christmas gift. Back in the 1960’s, the Tester’s
model car/airplane glue actually glue the parts together. The bonus was it had
this wonderful smell. Remember it was the sixties and hippies enjoyed the smell
so much that the changed the chemical makeup of the glue making model car
assembly difficult. It did not set up as quickly as before and that wonderful
smell was gone too.
When I graduated high school, I started work at
Keystone Metal Molding in Clanton, Alabama. Keystone fabricated molding for automobiles.
I worked in the boxing department making boxes for shipping the parts.
One of the pieces of trim had vinyl glued to it. It
was a new glue which became known as “Superglue.” I was young, naïve, and
trusting. A co-worker said, “Hopper, give me your pointer finger.” Knowing what
I know now, I should have given him my middle finger!
I held out my pointer finger, and he placed a small
drop of a clear substance on it. He said, “Hold your thumb on the finger for a
little bit.” Like a dumb country redneck, I did. For the next hour I tried to
unglue my finger. I used mineral spirits, acetone, and other solvents. I worked
it almost loose, but one tiny place held my fingers together. I finally took my
pocketknife and cut my fingers loose.
I keep Super glue handy. My wife has me repairing all
manners of stuff that gets broken. Since she is decorating for Christmas, I
have reattached a “naughty/nice” roll in Santa’s hand back to his arm, attached
the head of Wise back to his body, and attached a redbird to a figurine.
Walking down the hall, a nightlight Santa with springy
legs and head stuck his nose in the laundry hamper. He was the headless Santa.
It took some “redneck ingenuity.” Using a cotton Q-tip, I super glued the
cotton tip to Santa’s body sliding the spring over the stem of the Q-tip.
I love working with wood. Tite-bond is my favorite
glue for turning scrap wood into beautiful things. When properly prepped, a
glued joint is stronger than the wood. I tried it and it worked.
The Apostle Paul reminds believers that Jesus is the
glue that holds everything together. All of creation as vast as it is, is held
in place by God. Scientist have discovered in the human body there is a cell
adhesion molecule called Laminin. Ironically, it looks like a cross.
For by him were all things created, that are in heaven, and
that are in earth, visible and invisible, whether they be thrones, or dominions, or principalities, or
powers: all things were created by him, and for him: And he is before
all things, and by him all things consist. Colossians 1:16-17 KJV