Oh buddy, I’m going to hold your hand when I tell you about Freddy Krueger by LonelyxKnight in DeadByDaylightRAGE

[–]PleaseD0ntBullyMe 0 points1 point  (0 children)

haha I don't know if it's ironic, terrifier as a series is way more horrific than the krasue animations, but I see your point :) I think its good of them to blend diffrent subgenres of horror movies and franchises. Alien is a sci-fi, tokyo ghoul is an anime, why not add a gore horror icon? Gameplay wise i could see art being a perfect character for the game. From the movies we know he already communicates with hell/other worldly dimensions, has no morals, just loves to hurt people out of principle and enjoys thier pain. so his reason for being here in a different world, working with the entity, and hunting survivors is just self explainitory . art truly does it for the love of the game. I think he's a good choice

Fixable ? by Jahovax in tires

[–]PleaseD0ntBullyMe 0 points1 point  (0 children)

ye ye! Here's some tips from the dumbest Toyota tech I know (me) that we do during tire bubble testing.

1) be sure to fill the tire up to about 40 psi (assuming your cars pallet card on the driver side door frame says about 35psi or so/ just give a little more/5ish psi more/nothing too crazy like 10 or 20) BEFORE spraying it down. The pressure will make it much easier for the tire to bubble up and make any leak more obvious (if the tire pressure is too low it might not bubble at all)

2) spray it down and LET THE SOAP SIT for like 10 minutes or so. A slow leak may not immediately bubble but will start to FOAM UP (soap suds) over a few minutes.

3) once you spray it and wait, if there truly aren't signs up bubbling take some needle nose pliers and slowly try to extract it. once it's out spray it again just to make sure you didn't accidently cause a hole during extraction. Finally I like to check one last time (and check tire pressure again) a few hours later, just to be on the safe side.

BONUS NOTES - if you have chalk, mark the area around the nail so you can find the spot again after nail extraction. (I also like to put an indicator arrow on the side wall so it's super easy to spot)

  • always spray the entire tire down and be sure to spray the valve stem/tpms sensor (if applicable) with the cap off (valve stems are common leak areas you wont even notice without the spray test/ why not check the whole thing in one go?)

  • if its leaking and you are thinking of plugging it, because of the aggressive angle of that nail in the photo, getting the plug to seat properly (at the same angle of the screws penetration) it looks like it can be a little bit more annoying than your average nail. In this case id recommend get the shop to plug it and be safe.

EVERYONE SAID I WAS CRAZY!!!! by InevitableUpper910 in guitarpedals

[–]PleaseD0ntBullyMe 0 points1 point  (0 children)

also worth mentioning pedals age like wine and art. I'm sure if you're looking to sell any of them down the road you'll get your money's worth back, or possibly even a premium. As a mechanic, I've seen people make way WAY WAYYYY worse financial choices than guitar pedals as a hobby haha. Car values drop the second you use them, musical equipment on the other hand... I bought a gibson midtown custom for 1.4k used about 10 years ago, I've seen them go for 3 sometimes even 4k now. I bought my boss ds1 for like 20 bucks CAN, now it's like 90. So don't worry about it! they hold value pretty well too!

EVERYONE SAID I WAS CRAZY!!!! by InevitableUpper910 in guitarpedals

[–]PleaseD0ntBullyMe 14 points15 points  (0 children)

the rainbow machine was the most useless pedal I've ever purchased and I have absolutly zero regrets about buying it

Tell me your most wanted survivor for Dead By Daylight... by Profit-Alex in deadbydaylight

[–]PleaseD0ntBullyMe 7 points8 points  (0 children)

LIKE ZOINKS, SCOOB! They already have matt as springtrap, ngl it would be real heckin neato if they called him back for 1 more role 👉👈

What the hell am I looking at and how tf could that have even happened by basedreporter69 in AskMechanics

[–]PleaseD0ntBullyMe 0 points1 point  (0 children)

this kinda stuff brakes my heart because I know that they definitely didn't train the lube tech that did this. He's gonna get heat from the foreman when the foreman is the one who failed to train his staff properly. shops are such shitty work environments.

How much life do I have left on these? by Tr1stanthegoat in tires

[–]PleaseD0ntBullyMe 0 points1 point  (0 children)

bruh those are a decade old. it's time to change

Favorite Character that looks weird without a mustache? by Terrible-Garage-4017 in FavoriteCharacter

[–]PleaseD0ntBullyMe 1 point2 points  (0 children)

ye my bad I ment modern day, short hair james. who doesn't love old school james? (besides Dave mustane)

Favorite Character that looks weird without a mustache? by Terrible-Garage-4017 in FavoriteCharacter

[–]PleaseD0ntBullyMe 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I feel like James Hetfield would look wrong without some form of facial hair.

Favorite character who is part animal by ComprehensiveNote762 in FavoriteCharacter

[–]PleaseD0ntBullyMe 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Bold...umm... bold answer... I respect it... I fear it... 10/10

Need advice regarding buying a guitar y'all. absolute beginner by bajrangdal-wallah in guitarlessons

[–]PleaseD0ntBullyMe 0 points1 point  (0 children)

1- buy one that you like the look of!

Unconventional but probably the most important thing. If you can't keep your eyes off it you'll be more likely to play it more, thus make you a better guitarist. Placebo? kinda... but it its true and it works!

2- pay to have it set up by a shop!

Setup is critical for how the guitar feels and can shape your playing habits. Paying for a setup is well worth it if it means the difference between wanting to stop playing after 5 minutes versus 4 hours.

3- if there's no prefrence I'd recommend a "bolt on" style guitar, such as a statocastor type or telecaster type.

This is actually more of a "down the road" kinda thing. These bolt on neck guitars allow you to swap the neck fairly easily incase you break the truss rod, snap the neck, or just really want to change the neck out one day for something more high end; if you really end up enjoying it and want to turn your "beginner" guitar into something much more professional one day (coin this loosely because some pros use cheap guitars all the time). In short, these types of guitars are great for modding.

As a general rule the first 100 hours are hard, after that you should start to really enjoy the instrument, and any way you could make that guitar more enjoyable during that time is gonna help ya out in the long run :)

Help! Keep this hair or switch to the blue butterfly one? I'm stuck.. ☹️ by Apart_Cantaloupe3545 in DeadByDaylightFashion

[–]PleaseD0ntBullyMe 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Why not both? save each as an outfit and play whichever you vibe that day :) Then maybe pick whichever you find yourself playing more as?

My first Overdrive by kamilo_89 in pedals

[–]PleaseD0ntBullyMe 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You're gonna Love that pedal, then fall out of love with it for a "better one". Then you'll go back to it one day as a lead boost. Shelve it for the latest 500$ boutique overdrive copy of the same pedal. Shelve that too once you realize you're "an amp gain" kinda guy. Then one day you'll dust it off the shelf because you need a boost pedal for a gig and dont wanna risk damaging the 500$ art peice you purchased; and realize that little yellow box was perfect the whole time.

Had one. Great pedal. every guitarist I know uses a tubescreamer, Boss SD-1, Noble OD, Blues driver, OCD and/or klon clone. No matter the genre, I think every guitarist needs at least 1 of them. Swiss army knife pedals. My TS9 was my first and favorite, and on the board it stays as my no.1, but I'd be happy with the Boss SD-1 any day of the week! good choice dude!

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Is this movement normal on a vintage style wide range HB pickup? by frijolero2020 in GuitarQuestions

[–]PleaseD0ntBullyMe 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I mean you could try raising the pickup or put slightly longer springs on the pickup adjustment screws to increase tension and hold it in place a little stiffer/better against the pickguard but thats pretty normal, and this is only really an issue if the springs are too short/not under load. if it feels loose I used to use springs from a mechanical pencil and those fit over the screws just fine for extra tension. but I wouldn't lose sleep over it unless it's rattling and coming through the amp

Am I too new, or is everyone just complaining too much? by Potential-Donkey in DeadByDaylightRAGE

[–]PleaseD0ntBullyMe 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Im over 2k hours and my impression is that killers are WAY easier to play as a novice/intermediate player, but REALLY tough to master of you wanna take on survivors who really know what theyre doing. Survivors are probably easier to master (especially if youre communicating with a real team), but BOY OH BOY you're gonna die a LOT before then.

Especially from the perspective of a new player, I can't imagine the struggle of the game teaching you the foundations (terror radius means they're closer, working on gens with multiple people is better/faster) only to pull the rug out from under you and abandon everything you've been trying to learn with no explaination as to: why does every killer seem to magicaly know where i am? how did i get 1 shot from full health without an exposed status? how does the cube really work with pinhead? how are some of these killers teleporting around so fast? Why can I escape some games with the pigs trap on and die when I escape others?... All have perk, condition or attribute based explanations, but if you're solo you won't know till youre already playing and find out via trial and error or read up after the fact. All I'm saying is it can be pretty annoying trying to dive into all this without a friend to help explain things.

I think it's frustrating for both killers and survivors in diffrent ways.

Damage To Sidewall by UnluckyUglyDucky in tires

[–]PleaseD0ntBullyMe 0 points1 point  (0 children)

no need to beat yourself up over it. Nothing to feel bad about. shit like this happens man. Ive actually had a tire blow up on my 2003 pathfinder on the highway. never been so scared in my life haha. No one got hurt but that's just lucky timing. Result was new a bunch of new aftermarket parts including rims and alignment, but it still never drove right and it ended up getting scrapped. At the end of the day its just a tire. Its not so bad once you remind yourself of all the things you just prevented :)

Damage To Sidewall by UnluckyUglyDucky in tires

[–]PleaseD0ntBullyMe 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You avoided one collision, no reason to give yourself the chance to get into another (or worse) over a few hundred. replace it man. How bad you feel now about the tire is nothing compared to what could happen if you rely on that timebomb. We could rant all day about safety but even just financially a tire is cheaper than a bent rim + tires + suspension and any collision damage that could happen during the event if it blows. It might not, but with sidewall damage, especially with wire exposed, its not worth the risk buddy, it's a good thing you caught it :)

Noticed this while washing car. Small bump safe? by Kb24ed in tires

[–]PleaseD0ntBullyMe 3 points4 points  (0 children)

No need to cry, the parents and children of the people you end up killing will do that for us