This is my new blog. I like to write and i like cars so i am starting a blog here about them. in this i will do reviews and also DIY tips for all the common problems that can be done in the simplest amount of time.
If i get enough readers i may even get into larger projects like camming motors and doing modifications. this is new for me and i am a horrible English student. So you will have to bear with me as i remember things from high school. if you have any questions i can do an entire blog just for your Q&As.
In this first installment i am going to talk about Auto shops and some of the newer scams that are running around. Personally i think this is deplorable,but there are a few shops in my home town here that i can't work for and have quit over the debate of service legitimacy. now i am not talking about needing stuff like "turn signal fluid" or having a "loose nut behind the wheel". There are far more serious things like the "fungal"/ Bacterial" sprays. this is the kind of thing i am going to cover. along with there legitimacy and how they work and IF there even a good deal.
- The Modern Shop Services You Can Trust
- The Latest Fads and Trends
- The Future of Auto Mechanics
- The Modern Shop
- Services You Can Trust
My mother She is my biggest fan (or at least until my son was born) she took her car to the shop up the street ( a totally different place that my girlfriends parents take there cars) and the Mechanic there said you need brakes. Pads, rotors, and a couple of bulbs and quoted her $900 for the inspection and emissions and the brakes. After i looked at her car, and i don't play favorites when it comes down to my inspections licenses, i found that while it needed brake pads it did not need anything else like the rotors he said it needed or the front left tire and so on. these are the things i am talking about.
So the moral to the story? Check out what your mechanic is up too, compare labor rates and part prices, most of the time you can actually save money by getting the part from a parts store or at least mention that you can get a better price on the part, remember You are the customer, he is there to service your car!
- The Latest Fads and Trends
The latest fad i have seen are these CAI (or Cold Air Induction), these are quite fashionable today. the reason? well the idea of motors, is this MORE IN= MORE OUT, that's the theory but the reality of it is this the modern motor relies on back pressure to generate the right resonance to create a "turbo" effect on the motor it's actually done with what is called a resonator on some cars. Like early 90's BMWs and Later80's VWs. neat stuff i know. So why do i give it the Ebert thumb's down seal of disapproval? Simple you need that back pressure to keep in some of the gases so that your cylinder heads don't over heat and make the knock sensor or the crank sensor over work itself to death.
the next thing i really want to dive into (and i am going to have to write a separate blog on). but here's the idea you put this propeller styled fan in your air intake and wallah it "turbo charges" your engine. PFFFT!!! that's a joke, this little fan thing is a scam and when i do the write up I'll provide actual web source of claims on this piece of junk. As I am positive they're out there.
Fuel boosters are good if you don't over use them I have seem all kinds of things from Lucas Oil Stabilizer and STP Octane Booster do damage to motors and they're all in there own world. These things CAN help an old motor get a few thousand miles out of old Bessy but if used wrong they are sure for eminent doom.
- The Future of Auto Mechanics
The recent exchange with the "employee pricing", and 1million mile warranty, and now with the newest scheme to get the poor into debt "CASH FOR CLUNKERS!!!!!". gimme a f*ck*n break! Really I'm gonna buy a car and you take the old one that is paid off and all i have to do is keep up the maintenance? PFFFT! Right i ain't going for that, i drive a 91' Toyota 4Runner, and it doesn't owe mew a GD thing. and NO Toyota you can't have it back MINE!!!
All Our lives we have had some corporate deal thrown in our lap as this is the deal of the century!!!! but they never were, I'm 34 and i remember my mother buying her first import a 1988 Subaru Brat. I drove that car to high school my freshman year bought it for almost what she paid for it! but after that summer i owned a Brat, and not too many people can say that my age. it ran till i was 22 and joined the ARMY. i never owned a new car and i don't ever want to (my choice).
This is the problem with the car companies and the indie jobber or your local mechanic. he has to wait til the warranty is up on most cars because well, who wants to pay for something that is free somewhere else? but what most people don;t know is that most local mechanics got MOST of THERE experience FROM the DEALER! LOL it's 6 to a half dozen. if you really research your local area you will see that most of the older mechanics in the local shops worked at one time or another at the dealership or A dealership. so where's the savings? and meanwhile the local mechanic is waiting to SEE first hand the 'newest' cars (don't get me wrong we read and research and look at new cars all the time). but we really don't see the newer cars for at least 3 years or so. and that can complicate things some times when you get a new car in and all you've done is read about it, i mean yeah it's still a car but it's new you may not have the known facts about the car and have to go to the computer in the middle of the shop to read up on the latest thing WHILE its in the shop,man what a drag, so consider your local shop for all you work, if your from out of town you may even be able to get a reimbursement in some cases.
These are the topics i will be covering in the next few weeks hope you enjoyed this time, an now for a "Zen moment"
If you put your conditioned intellect to rest for a long time, suddenly it will be like the bottom fallin out of a bucket -- then you will naturally be happy and at peace.
- Yaunwu
D00D, you suck
ReplyDeleteNo I don't!
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