Shop Press

Shop Press is the news and idea hub for everything related to working on cars and trucks, focusing on repair, technology, and wrenching lifestyle.

From the creative minds at:

FEATURE STORY

Hot Off the Press

The first step I now take in vehicle diagnostics

The following four vehicles (which certainly are varied) all came to me for repair and I did not identify the root of their problems immediately. And that’s because I was staying stuck in my ways and not adapting to changing vehicles. Let’s examine. Situation One: A...

PSA: Stop throwing away brake rotor screws

Hello. My name is Lemmy, and I am guilty of throwing away brake rotor screws. At least I was guilty. I no longer commit this sin. You know the pieces I’m talking about. They’re the little screws with the huge heads that get boogered up when you try to remove them...

Best of Shop Press 2024

As 2024 draws to a close, the Shop Press team assembled some of the most notable articles, videos, and more of the year. Our goal all along has been to provide a unique voice on a mix of topics that speaks to mechanics and the mechanically inclined like no other...

Watch how magnetizer/demagnetizer tools work in this excellent video

During some recent work on an older SUV, I was absolutely fed up. I couldn’t take it anymore. I had just finished a fair bit of grinding and filing, and when I reached for my screwdriver to start installing some parts, I saw that the tool’s tip looked like the Wooly...

Tool review: Klein 3255 bull pin

Disclaimer: I purchased this tool at full retail price at my own expense, with no compensation to write about the item. Most mechanics I know value tools that have either of the following characteristics: Useful, but from another industry (because it might be useful...

What does horsepower really mean? (VIDEO)

Horsepower is a strange measurement, isn’t it? Think about it. When was the last time you used a horse for any kind of work or travel? Like candlepower, the original horsepower attempted to express the output of a newer technology in comparison to its predecessor....

GARAGE GALLERY

Photo gallery: Auto repair (and a few motorcyclists) in Indianapolis, Indiana

Shop Press Staff Photographer Mike Apice recently visited Franklin, Indiana and the surrounding area. Once the focus of a Life magazine article depicting the idyllic “Smalltown, USA,” Franklin is as photogenic now as it was then. Here’s a look around from his perspective.

The tail fins of a ’59 Chevy caught Mike’s eye, where he soon found Ken’s Auto Electric, a family-owned business. Ken was walking about the place, and his oldest son was at the counter when Mike strolled in.

Ken’s second-youngest son was working in a bay, providing a slice of life in a shop that’s been operating for years. One of Ken’s techs showed off his rack of 10mm sockets, insurance against that little guy that always seems to go missing when you need it most. The tools, like the Chevy, have changed a bit over the years, but the mission of the business—getting customers back on the road—never does.

Franklin, shown in the left photo, is a suburb of Indianapolis. The two locations are separated by a half-hour drive, and the flavor of the city permeates the suburb. While meandering through Indy, Mike caught a couple of people filming a hip-hop video. He ventured on and came across Morgantown, another suburb, home to Whitaker Auto, a multi-generational family-owned business that’s been operating for nearly a hundred years.

Motorcycles from the Distinguished Gentleman's Ride parked in Indianapolis.

In another anachronistic juxtaposition of the modern and antique, Apice found himself amidst the Distinguished Gentleman’s Ride, a charity motorcycle event where riders in dapper dress climb aboard classic, classically-styled, and custom motorcycles to raise funds for prostate cancer research and men’s mental health. Like Franklin and Morgantown as compared with the Circle CIty, new and old live cheek-by-jowl.  

General store dining area, Cross Plains, TN
General store interior, Cross Plains, TN

And right before completing his journey, Mike had the serendipity to bring an OE FIX™ guide highlighting Dorman cam phaser testing into the bays at Franklin Auto Care just as the mechanic there was replacing a set in a GM Ecotec engine. A fitting end to the journey, wouldn’t you say? Mike finished up his trip watching some Dorman parts getting installed and getting back on the road, headed home—just as the owner of the car did!

0
Click to leave a comment!x
()
x

Get Articles In Your Inbox

Subscribe to receive a monthly email summary of our latest Shop Press stories.

Shop Press

I agree to the above privacy statement and T&Cs

Thanks! You're now subscribed.