WORKING -- Dan Marsey
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-- Alex Coolman
HE IS
An artist of alignment.
IT’S ALL IN THE HANDS
As a kid, Dan Marsey liked to take apart bicycles, radios, and anything
else that had mechanical parts. When he grew up, he went to Golden West
College, studied general automotive maintenance and now works as an
alignment technician at Glenn’s Alignment and Brake Service in Costa
Mesa.
But Marsey says he’s long been interested in welding and machine shop
work in addition to the very technical work he does at Glenn’s.
“A lot of the guys who do this are trained in that kind of stuff,” Marsey
said. “They just like working with their hands.”
NEARLY ZERO TOLERANCE
The age of tinkering around on cars with a socket wrench and a little
curiosity is over.
“Alignments have come a long way from the days of the bubble gauge and
the tape measure,” Marsey said.
In his job, Marsey uses a computerized laser alignment system to adjust
the wheels of cars to tolerances of within 1/128th of an inch. He tweaks
the toe-in and camber on sports cars in micro-increments that are
meticulously documented on a digital readout.
Marsey says he tells his amateur mechanic friends to abandon ideas of
duplicating this kind of high-tech work in their home garages.
“Nowadays, you can do a lot more harm than good to cars if you do things
improperly,” he said. “Your average guy nowadays can’t really do much
anymore.”
THE ZEN OF ALIGNMENT
Marsey discussed tire wear with the owner of a Porsche on a recent
afternoon. The owner had Pirelli tires on his car, and was worried about
the wear the tires were showing.
Marsey adjusted the alignment of the car until it was as good as he could
make it -- until it was fantastically good, in other words.
But even so, he warned the Porsche owner that the Pirellis would wear out
quickly.
“They’re high-performance tires,” he explained philosophically. They were
made to drive hard and wear out quickly.
And not even perfect alignment can change that.
EASY ON THE GREASE
Marsey, 37, has been working at Glenn’s for more than 18 years, all the
while watching automotive technology growing steadily more complex. He
operates the most sensitive and expensive alignment equipment in the
shop, while other older equipment is used for jobs that don’t need to be
quite so precise.
Alignment is a nice gig, Marsey thinks, because for all the hands-on
nature of the job, it’s actually less grimy and greasy work than other
mechanical work.
“It’s one of the cleaner aspects of working on a car,” he said. “You
don’t get too dirty.”
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