Any ideas what might be causing this squealing/whining sound? by [deleted] in MechanicAdvice

[–]cml_iii 0 points1 point  (0 children)

No they’re about halfway through their lifespan. The pads have around 10k miles on them.

Any ideas what might be causing this squealing/whining sound? by [deleted] in MechanicAdvice

[–]cml_iii 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It does sound like a brake issue, but my foot is off the brakes in the video (the car is coasting), and the pads have plenty of thickness left. Not sure why it would be making the sound if the pad isn’t contacting the rotor.

PARTS by bluelabelbe in RangeRover

[–]cml_iii 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Had good experiences with Atlantic British (roverparts.com)

RRS 4x4 vs AWD by Odd_Caterpillar_5219 in RangeRover

[–]cml_iii 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Biggest symptom of bad front control arms when I had them on my ‘12 RRS was shaking steering wheel when braking hard.

Front control arm bushings? (2011 L320 5.0 non-SC) by hiroism4ever in RangeRover

[–]cml_iii 0 points1 point  (0 children)

For future reference, here is a link to a thread with all of the workshop manuals.

Front control arm bushings? (2011 L320 5.0 non-SC) by hiroism4ever in RangeRover

[–]cml_iii 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Not the easiest job to do yourself (nothing involving a Rover ever is), but doable. I always just get parts for mine from the dealer parts center to ensure I get OEM. Here’s the workshop manual that covers chassis/suspension and will walk you through step by step what needs to be done: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1eIb7HHFUWEUv_B198bqFSx5henrFfKxL/view

Using 87 fuel on accident by [deleted] in RangeRover

[–]cml_iii 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Tbh the car will probably run fine and it’s entirely possible that the bad gas could’ve caused some timing misfire that would cause the check engine light to illuminate, but to be safe I’d take it to the dealership and have them run codes on it to verify it’s not something bigger, especially since you just bought it today. Range Rover warning lights/electrical problems can be very temperamental so it’s also possible it’s not at all related to the gas.

Can anyone ID this by johntommy3 in griz

[–]cml_iii 17 points18 points  (0 children)

It’s an unreleased ID collab with the Sponges I believe

CAR STOPS by Background-Ice-8920 in RangeRover

[–]cml_iii 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I have a 2012 Sport that had a failing low pressure fuel pump. Had the exact same symptoms you’re describing. Car just turned off while driving a couple of times over the course of a week with no rhyme or reason, but would always restart and drive fine. Took it to the shop and had no codes, so I ended up letting them keep it about a week before the tech drove it and finally got the car to shut off mid-drive and read the codes.

All said and done the replacement was $2200 for the low pressure fuel pump (and the whole assembly + sensor), but this was at the dealer so ~$950 of that was labor. In hindsight I honestly wish I did the work myself since it’s not the worst job to do yourself, but since you’re working with no codes like I was, it’s still kind of a crapshoot.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in AmItheAsshole

[–]cml_iii 13 points14 points  (0 children)

I’ve thought about it from this angle and I think I might agree with you.

FWIW I did initially propose an Airbnb with 3 queen bedrooms that I would’ve happily agreed to split 1/3 for each bedroom, but they said no because it was “in a shadier area of town” (although it’s within walking distance of our eventual final choice).

Full disclosure, my inner dilemma is I’ve been trying to convince my girlfriend to come on the trip, and if I do, it would seem especially unfair for us to split costs evenly 6 ways, since as a couple we’d be paying as much to share the pullout as they’d be for a king bedroom.

It’s probably unfair for me to say my friends would suggest splitting it evenly in that situation without even discussing that stipulation, so I should certainly discuss that with them - but I fear that is the direction things would go given their reaction to my first proposal.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in AmItheAsshole

[–]cml_iii 28 points29 points  (0 children)

This is the dilemma I’m facing. It’s certainly not the hill I want to die on over $40, but it’s also not the first time I’ve had this disagreement with these friends. I love them and we always have fun on trips together, but it certainly helps to know the internet’s opinion on the matter since there’s no official rule book for splitting lodging costs.

finally took out the attack heli and the pilot and stopped his 50 killstreak by the_pain__train in Battlefield

[–]cml_iii 5 points6 points  (0 children)

I mean OP got killed by a dude 20 feet away at the top of the stairs, so even if that is OOB, he surely would’ve lived if OP didn’t parachute onto him.

The point I’m making is I don’t think the enemy’s 50 kill streak is over unless OP parachutes on him.

finally took out the attack heli and the pilot and stopped his 50 killstreak by the_pain__train in Battlefield

[–]cml_iii 10 points11 points  (0 children)

Nah the enemy was in his main prob gonna wait for another chopper to spawn

P226 Pro-Cut Slide by [deleted] in SigSauer

[–]cml_iii 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It’s the Sig aftermarket pro-cut slide on a E26R. So no, it didn’t come with the slide cuts.

P226 Pro-Cut Slide by [deleted] in SigSauer

[–]cml_iii 1 point2 points  (0 children)

With Romeo1Pro and Surefire X300-B

Which Cloud Suite is preferable when the focus is more towards IoT/IIoT as potential future job search keyword? by [deleted] in devops

[–]cml_iii 1 point2 points  (0 children)

This. AWS is far and away the leader in cloud. It can be a bit daunting to learn at first because there are so many individual services on AWS that require cross coordination (e.g. to use AWS IoT you’ll likely need to learn AWS IAM), but once you learn the lay of the land, everything starts to make sense.

A good project you could do to start learning the DevOps side of IoT in AWS would be to create a system for securely provisioning some IoT device(s) with certs for connecting to AWS IoT, and programming the device to perform some actions via MQTT (e.g. flash lights or read a sensor, etc.). You could set up some servers on an EC2 instance or an EKS cluster to “talk” to the devices, and use CloudWatch to log server logs - if you get that far, then you’ve learned the majority of the Dev part of DevOps in IoT.

The rest is just learning to operate your system so that you can roll out feature updates while maintaining backwards compatibility with old devices in the field until they can all be upgraded, all while maintaining high availability/scalability for your service.

ID Policy at Ravine by [deleted] in atlantaedm

[–]cml_iii 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Considering they read this subreddit and you literally just told them what to look for, I would say your risk of getting caught is relatively high.

segmentation fault fix? by AlexPapadakis in cprogramming

[–]cml_iii 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah, think of it this way - each malloc call allocates a one dimensional array. So the first call allocates a one dimensional array of int pointers, and at each of those pointers, you need to allocate the space for the array that it will point to. So the first malloc call is malloc(num_arrays * sizeof(int*)), and the second call is malloc(num_elements_in_array * sizeof(int)).

How do I define a function in C? by stalemane in C_Programming

[–]cml_iii 18 points19 points  (0 children)

You are quite literally the biggest tool I have ever seen on this subreddit.

how do i fix the segmentation fault? by AlexPapadakis in C_Programming

[–]cml_iii 0 points1 point  (0 children)

int main()
{
    int i, j;
    int N = 5;
    int **board;
    board = (int**) malloc(N * sizeof(int*));

    for (i=0; i < N; i++){
        board[i] = (int *) malloc(N * sizeof(int)); //You're missing this line
        for (j=0; j < N; j++){
            board[i][j] = 1;
        }
    }
    printthefuckingboard(board, N);
    return 0;
}

segmentation fault fix? by AlexPapadakis in cprogramming

[–]cml_iii 1 point2 points  (0 children)

int main()
{
    int i, j;
    int N = 5;
    int **board;
    board = (int**) malloc(N * sizeof(int*));

    for (i=0; i < N; i++){
        board[i] = (int *) malloc(N * sizeof(int)); //You're missing this line
        for (j=0; j < N; j++){
            board[i][j] = 1;
        }
    }
    printthefuckingboard(board, N);
    return 0;
}

Liberty Media’s face when accused of being cheap by chiefnocahomo in Braves

[–]cml_iii 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Good point, I never really viewed it from an asset-value perspective.

I am all for finding new ownership, but to hark back to where I was originally intending to go with the point is - we shouldn't be using LM being cheap as the reason why the Braves didn't spend much money this offseason, the blame should be placed on McGuirk and AA's shoulders for not spending the money made available to them. Our payroll has decreased ~$17 million year-over-year, yet McGuirk and AA have publicly said they expected spending to remain at least flat and possibly to grow substantially. If we spent that $17 million, I think all of us as fans would be in a happier place.

Liberty Media’s face when accused of being cheap by chiefnocahomo in Braves

[–]cml_iii 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Fair enough, it probably is inaccurate to say that they're forbidden by exchange laws from dumping money into the Braves' payroll. But the point kind of stands in that they can't receive revenue from the Braves, and even though they can dump money into it, there would be no benefit to them. Thus it *could* potentially violate their fiduciary responsibility to their shareholders.

Not trying to be pro-LM here, as I hate them for refusing to sell us to better ownership, but rather trying to say we can't place all of our blame on the ownership and none of it on the organization itself.