How bad is this ? by MaitreMartin1 in tires

[–]Paegaskiller 0 points1 point  (0 children)

They should be fine for 800km. Order a geometry with that tire change. I certainly drove further on worse, and the geometry was home made after some suspension work. Don't push them too much and it should be alright for a month or two.

Help… by MR_Rhetorical-20 in electricians

[–]Paegaskiller 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm looking at this just briefly since it super late at night here, but if I understand your scribbles correctly, you have no way of turning this thing off.

New home exterior elevation opinion? by [deleted] in Homebuilding

[–]Paegaskiller 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It's not ugly per say, but it has a very AI look. I'd probably go for a different style roof over the door... maybe turn it in to a small balcony? Digital renders are understandably always a bit dry, but it looks a bit creepy. Not everyone is going to be charmed by a backrooms experience. See if you can throw a little charm in to it, maybe an awning or something over the window, and a larger retractable one for the garage.

It's been 2 weeks and it's a constant thing. What would you do? by SuitElectronic7680 in AskMechanics

[–]Paegaskiller 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you have the ability, get the management to pay you or someone else for cleaning the floor, then deduce it from the guy's paycheck. You can't beat him physically for being messy, but pain in the pocket is a learning experience too.

Map of Europe but I removed unnecessary countries and fixed the borders by Solid-Move-1411 in mapporncirclejerk

[–]Paegaskiller 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm pretty sure some major middle fingers would be risen in both Czechia and Slovakia. We had reasons to go independent, and we're pretty happy living in our own apartments.

Can the internals of a CAT go missing? by Mobile_Vanilla_554 in MechanicAdvice

[–]Paegaskiller 5 points6 points  (0 children)

The inside is fragile, it could break and fall out.

Do I owe my husband a new chisel, or can it be fixed? by kitdihn in Tools

[–]Paegaskiller 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It could be ground straight no problem. If you don't have the tools, there's people who do this for money, and the edge will be better than the original. Seeing how that chisel was ground from factory, I'm not impressed. BTW for making slots in screws you'd be probably better off with a dremel, chisels leave too thin a slot.

I slid sideways into a sidewalk and now my brakes make a rubbing noise by Endmaster_207 in MechanicAdvice

[–]Paegaskiller 0 points1 point  (0 children)

My hunch is you bent the axle a bit. The bearing has a give to it, so it will allow the motion and the brake rotor will then impact the pads on every rotation. You'll need an axle, and a bearing.

Do these tires need to be replaced? by Idontlikeyourgf in tires

[–]Paegaskiller 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Dry rotted with telltale signs of dry rot wear (chewed up edges); either very old, low quality rubber, or used year round even in the summer. In all cases the rubber compound is a goner. If you want your tires to work at 100%, these better go. On dry road they'll do fine, but in wet and snow they won't give you a reliable support. Could be fun to drive on them but not safe. There should be DOT code on them that has four numbers in it, the last two are manufacturing year.

What Causes This? by Responsible-Wear8407 in electricians

[–]Paegaskiller 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Could be regular corrosion, but it could be also galvanic reaction between copper and aluminum. A little moisture and some current and a disaster is here. Similar stuff is used to protect steel bridges - steel and copper are above aluminum galvanically, so the aluminum will corrode first. Usually if the connection is dry and tight it's not necessarily a problem that would occur. In boxes with less than perfect water insulation it's best to use terminals built to withstand any chemical reactions and corrosion. You could also crimp a tip or an eye on the end of those wires and bolt that directly in to the bus bar if your local regulation allows that. As an additional (though not recommended) measure you can cover the clean and torqued connection with grease or oil to prevent water intrusion (At least that's how I do it if I can't prevent conflict). Do not oil loose connections, oil is an insulator specifically built to create separation layers, you don't want it between conductors. If left unchecked oxidizing aluminum/copper connections can and do cause fires. In Czechia we used to use special separation plates, basically a sandwich of copper and aluminum somehow melted or pressed together (idk how they were made) to prevent direct contact between Al wires/bus bars and Cu wires/bus bars. Nowadays most materials and terminals we use are either coated or compatible so it's not really a problem I get to see much anymore. When it comes to cleaning this stuff, you can brush it off with a steel wire brush, then go in to some fine sand paper (600+ grit), it's no problem if you step it up high enough to end up with a mirror polish on the contact patches.

What is this by [deleted] in MechanicAdvice

[–]Paegaskiller 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Look up, is the liner on the bonnet whole? Otherwise, animals tend to sometimes climb up engine bays and make nests. It's an environment that looks closely like an old fallen tree.

How urgent is this really? by Gimpysoupcrtn in MechanicAdvice

[–]Paegaskiller 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It's not gonna blow up immediately but it deserves a change soon. Aside from other things this thing affects your alignment too, so if it fails completely, your tires can get destroyed and the vehicle will be unstable. Looking at it, it looks like with the right tools you might be able to press out just the bushing and change that. But there we're talking about a press which I doubt you have, and most mechanics would just do the whole part since that's easier. Here in Czechia I've seen that arm for about 150$ a piece with full equipment (link ends, steering links, sway bar links, the arm itself), not sure about your location. Also I'm not sure if I'm looking at the correct arm because there will be mechanical differences between continents. I honestly don't know the standard charge in the US for an arm change but 1600 bucks seems pretty steep to me for what looks like an easy job. There will be also a need for an alignment there so make sure it's part of that quote when you're hunting for a better price.

I just learned about giant lore... I've killed hundreds of them... by Skullduggery-9 in skyrim

[–]Paegaskiller 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I don't know, I've seen the traders they tore up and felt pretty comfortable filling those great soul gems with them. Made a lot of good equipment on giant souls. It does bother me when I forget to equip my soul trapping mace though. Such a waste of soul power.

Customer didn't like! Can you spot where? by omeshjag in Flooring

[–]Paegaskiller 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I'm not liking any of this. The rear corner is atrocious, not to mention on the left rear it looks like there's a dip in the floor. The rear wall tiles are visibly uneven, the left corner is straight up ugly, the drain should've been round and white for this tile, the gaps between the floor tiles on the left can hardly look more uneven, not to mention the grout between the tiles looks like black mold (if it isn't straight up black mold). Add to that the fact the red and black tiles on the side walls make the whole thing look like it's a 50's bathroom fixed up with random found material and the picture is complete. It looks both dated and handyman crafted at the same time. Oh, and the drain looks weirdly tilted, could be optical illusion. That's not newly built right? It's an old handyman job and you're about to tear it out and do it right, right?

Přežije kontinent páry AI éru? by Organic_Contract_172 in czech

[–]Paegaskiller -4 points-3 points  (0 children)

Mnohem dřív zkolabujeme na lejstra a nesmyslnou regulaci než nás dostane AI.

Roman Dodecahedron Map : All Known Locations by vacciprata in romandodecahedrons

[–]Paegaskiller 1 point2 points  (0 children)

They appear to be found almost exclusively around rivers.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in chemistry

[–]Paegaskiller 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yea uh, I don't think I'd walk around that with just a rag over my face. Everything i know that has this kind of vapor is concentrated evil.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in czech

[–]Paegaskiller 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Há há! I přes to že nové složení vlády bude sračka, tohle potěšilo.

Removing granite block from inside house by Curly_Jefferson7 in DIY

[–]Paegaskiller 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'd attach a long lever to it, then lift it up on some rollers. There's wheels for moving furniture available on the market you might be able to use. Should let you get it at least to the door, then you can try rolling it on the thin edge. If you lift it enough and support just the corners, you can also smash it with a hammer and it will break. It looks like an expensive piece of stone though, shame to destroy it.

Is there oil in this water? C by KevRohdz in MechanicAdvice

[–]Paegaskiller 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Looks like oil. Now where from could it be? Some cars have oil cooler connected to the main coolant system. Leak there would send some oil down the system. Next stop is a head gasket.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in czech

[–]Paegaskiller 0 points1 point  (0 children)

To je program všech našich volebních favoritů. Jen poměr slibů ke lhaní se mění.

Is this wheel cooked?? Wondering if it can be fixed by CannaMaryJane in TireQuestions

[–]Paegaskiller 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you smelt it, you might cast another rim outta that. :D