The guy who wrote the article apparently STILL doesn't know anything about cars! Left hand lug nuts or bolts are always on the left side, not because of normal direction of rotation loosening the nuts, but because of braking tending to do so. This was very common on many european cars, especially upmarket ones, from the 20's into the 70's. I learned about them on a 1963 Alfa Romeo I owned. I remember a friend telling me how he'd watched a thief in Malta (near Italy) tightening the nuts on one wheel on his Armstrong-Siddeley (not too many of those around today), so he walked out to tell the guy he needed to try leaning the other way...... apparently the thief jumped out of his skin and ran away leaving a really nice lug wrench behind that my friend still had 30 years later. So now I ask if anyone knows why thread direction is normally right hand? (You might send the kids to bed here). The concept of the screw is derived from nature. The penis of a boar is threaded like a corkscrew (helically), and the sow's vagina is a matching female thread. No doubt thousands of years ago this was noted by some curious guy with a mechanical knack who adapted the idea. I am NOT making this up! Our word "screw" is derived directly from the latin word "scrofa" for a sow. Needless to say the pig's penis and vagina have a right hand thread, and so that's still the universal norm. Screwy, huh! Bob O., Oregon -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- 2003 Calendar voting results and ordering information is online! Please visit: http://www.forwardlook.net/calendar2003 for more information.
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