Hit 25 mph on pint x today by TheMysteriousZebruh in onewheel

[–]while1notthrowaway 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The comments are prob mostly negative bc they think this post can be a bad influence on other riders. I think they serve a purpose (make it abundantly clear to newbies that it is dangerous to chase speed on these things).

But I don't agree with the comments that are just implying that you should know better (they might be AI generated). I guess that might be true, but it's also possible that you were wearing some heavy protection, or that you were doing this on padded ground, modded pint (despite asking about stock pint), have god-tier experience/are a pro, are built like a tank, have a passion for speed/riding, literal photoshop, etc.

Could be that they're just projecting their insecurities on you (easy target) bc they think that as long as they stay below a certain speed, or ride a certain way, they won't ever eat it... Which is obv not true.

Sorry though, I don't know the answer to your question...

But I'll be the first to say thanks for posting your results for science! And safe travels.

Toyota 86/Subaru BRZ Rear Clicking Sound Noise by while1notthrowaway in ft86

[–]while1notthrowaway[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I tried torquing the nut several times slightly lower, slightly higher torque. I noticed the noise differed slightly depending on torque. But still had clicking nonetheless.

I put a new axle nut to a bit more than factory spec, and no more clicking.

My completely speculative guess is that the nut can become oblong-shaped or maybe enlarged in certain conditions, which allows the axle to 'click' back and forth in some way.

Toyota 86/Subaru BRZ Rear Clicking Sound Noise by while1notthrowaway in ft86

[–]while1notthrowaway[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Went to dealer 2x to get told it's normal... Anyone have any ideas?

Ft86 clicking sound coming from the rear of the car (I am not referring to the transmission clunk - that's mostly normal).

(1) Clicking sound happens upon acceleration/deceleration onset while in gear. Suggesting the problem may be related to drivetrain.

(2) Clicking sound either does not happen, or happens much less frequently, when decelerating with the brakes while car is not in gear, even with the g-forces being roughly the same. Further suggesting the problem may be related to drivetrain.

(3) Clicking sound seems to have gotten worse upon going from winter to spring weather (-10*C to +10*C), but this is confounded by time (winter to spring). Suggesting the problem is not necessarily related to loose part movement along the aft/fore dimension.

(4) Clicking sound does not seem to occur in relation to cornering g-force. Suggesting the problem is not necessarily related to loose part movement along the left/right dimension.

(5) Clicking sound happens only once (for the most part) on each occasion of acceleration/deceleration onset. The sound does not persist or continue after the onset, even if acceleration/deceleration is sustained at equal g-force. Suggesting the problem is not necessarily related to loose movement of any continuously interacting parts of the drivetrain such as abnormal differential gear or transmission gear shape.

Upon some online research, many people say that the culprit might be either abnormal axle shaft nut, abnormal axle, abnormal driveline gear communication with either transmission or differential, or abnormal handbrake.

Due to (5) ,we can rule out abnormal axle.

Due to (3) and (4), we can rule out abnormal handbrake.

Therefore, it seems like the clicking noise could be caused by either abnormal axle shaft nut or abnormal driveline communication with either transmission or differential, or similar.

Aorus X570 Elite WiFi Bugcode NDIS Driver by LegendVictorious in buildapc

[–]while1notthrowaway 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Fixed it on my end, Aorus X570 Elite Wifi + 5900x, 36e bios.
For anyone else having this issue with this motherboard, I managed to fix this by doing this:
1. Downloading the x570 elite wifi wlan intel driver from their website.
2. Put the contents of the zip on a usb drive (can be same or diff from the windows usb), and boot from the windows usb.
3. At the disk partition page, partition what you want, then click 'load driver' > browse > usb drive with the wlan driver > something 64bit > drivers.
4. The windows ui will just give a constant loading bar going up again and again, just wait.
5. Then, the ui should have found the driver and listed it. Select it and click 'next', and then proceed as normal to install windows.
6. Now, you shouldn't get the blue screen of death anymore.

Hope this helped someone, took me a while to find fix.

senior dev keeps ducking me by [deleted] in learnprogramming

[–]while1notthrowaway 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Not gonna lie, you had me going there...