‘Spuddy’ good show from AA patrol

Wednesday, February 18, 2015 - 14:55
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speed

Food for thought

Ingenious repair to a failed ignition system

An AA patrol has received a prize for fixing a car with a… potato?

The humble root vegetable came to the rescue when an old 1960s-vintage Land Rover failed to start due to a broken condenser, which is part of the ignition system on older vehicles.

With no replacement part available, North-east London AA patrol Mario Papademetriou, 59, decided to fabricate one. Unfortunately, his first attempt using tin foil and silicone repair tape didn’t work so he was faced with a non-starting Land Rover and 12 miles to the nearest garage.

Mario Papademetriou: “As the vehicle was on a farm, there were a lot of vegetables around, so I thought I’d try wiring up a potato with a couple of screws to act as a condenser. Amazingly, it started instantly, so I followed the member to the garage and he said the vehicle had never driven so well!”

For his feat of ingenuity, Mario won an internal AA competition to find the most original and inventive roadside repair among its patrols.

Donald MacSporran, AA technical director, says: “Although vegetables are best left on the dinner plate, Mario’s use of a potato was definitely a chip above the others – an excellent example of thinking outside the box, or should that be sack.”

The potato isn’t the only foodstuff that has been used to fix or run a car. In the old days, a raw egg could sometimes be cracked into a car’s radiator to seal a leak, chewing gum can temporarily fix a windscreen seal; and baking soda and warm water can clean battery terminals.

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