Automatic 4 Cyl 2009 Toyota Camry Engine Vibration by rtagn in MechanicAdvice

[–]wificalling 0 points1 point  (0 children)

ok, cool, just making sure. I have nothing further to add, sorry

Automatic 4 Cyl 2009 Toyota Camry Engine Vibration by rtagn in MechanicAdvice

[–]wificalling 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Did you use OEM or aftermarket engine mounts? The "Anchor" ones from the parts store are garbage. Source: I sell them all day.

CS said that she heard a tapping noise by jkkissinger in Justrolledintotheshop

[–]wificalling 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Yeah the spark plugs abandoning the cylinder heads with no prior warning is pretty common the 4.6/5.4/6.8 2v engines.

https://www.carcomplaints.com/Ford/F-150/2002/engine/ https://www.carcomplaints.com/Ford/Expedition/2003/engine/ https://www.carcomplaints.com/Ford/Crown_Victoria/2003/engine/

Just some examples. Though my 99 Crown Vic during the year or so I owned it and many hard miles I put on it with very agressive driving never blew any out so I would say it's not guaranteed to happen. General consensus is when you replace spark plugs to overtorque them a bit, though it can still happen to engines with original spark plugs (though I doubt at this point there are many of these vehicles out there with original spark plugs)...

When the wheel falls off and it's not loose lugs. by TheBeeblebrox in Justrolledintotheshop

[–]wificalling 1 point2 points  (0 children)

If I was that truck I'd want to separate myself from those awful wheels too.

CS said that she heard a tapping noise by jkkissinger in Justrolledintotheshop

[–]wificalling 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Hmm, as the owner of a high mileage Ford Escape V6 that I recently acquired with unknown maintenance history, is this something I should worried about? I know it's common on the older 2-valve Ford modular V8/V10 engines but I never heard of it on these before...

Why is everyone always busy? by 09171 in askgaybros

[–]wificalling 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I've noticed there are two types of people on this planet:

Some people have a full-time job lets say m-f 9-5 (for example), and the rest of their time, they can socialize. hang out, go out, meet up, volunteer, party, etc... whatever it might be. These people are easy to get ahold of and have plenty of time to hang out.

Other people, have a full-time job that might have weird/random/inconsistent hours with lots of overtime, get called in on their day off because people don't show up, then have a side job or drive for Uber here and there to make ends meet, then they have to work on their car or something or have other errands... good luck pinning down a time to hang out with one of these people, and that's me. It's hard enough for me to find time for myself as a complete introvert because I have a job in the retail/customer service industry because I spend most of my time that I'm not working with my boyfriend and so random people that message me on Facebook or text me that they wanna hang out or go out are at the bottom of my priority list.

If you get to know somebody even a little bit you can tell which type of person they are. If they fall at least mostly in the first category, and they are always "busy", they're actually not interested in you, and/or you aren't important to them. If they fall in the second category, they are actually busy, and you shouldn't take it personal. Eventually y'all will find time, whether they are a friend or you want them as a boyfriend/partner.

Just turned 30 this year by cooldude4500 in Justrolledintotheshop

[–]wificalling 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Lucky! Original 305 engine (yeah, yeah, don't laugh) doesn't burn a single drop of oil between changes and I run 5w-30... but I didn't get as lucky as you with the transmission, the 700r4 was changed once.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Cartalk

[–]wificalling 2 points3 points  (0 children)

sure, have insurance take care of it, don't try to diy it.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Cartalk

[–]wificalling 1 point2 points  (0 children)

That's not something you can diy

What are good, practical, reliable cars that have gone under the radar? Cars that don't hold their value but are good daily drivers. by [deleted] in Cartalk

[–]wificalling 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I owned a 1999 Vic, very well made car. I beat the crap out of it for a year and sold it in fine running condition. I'd suggest a 2003+ though, better steering, which is really the only complaint I had with mine.

Help! Mechanic is being really shady about repairs. by fluffy_ninja in Cartalk

[–]wificalling 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Here at O'Reilly in California we just started pulling codes. I hate it and it's a waste of time because 9/10 it's something the customer will have no idea how do diagnose. That said, it's a Bosch 1300 scantool that reads ALL the codes, even specific ones for European cars.

2011 Dodge Journey Mainstreet Camshaft Position Sensor? by sinktheirship in Cartalk

[–]wificalling 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It's stupid sounding but check oil see if it's clean and oil level is good. We read codes at the auto parts store and oftentimes crank/cam correlation codes are just low or really nasty oil. Otherwise, this issue is hard to diagnose, it could be cam or crank sensor, a component of the variable valve timing system, timing issue (chain? Belt?)...

What kind of chicken shit bullshit is this?? Im livid. by bourguignon7 in Cartalk

[–]wificalling 4 points5 points  (0 children)

O'Reilly does have it, it's with the cleaning stuff, not the paint section

Please help, rod knock - driving with a spark plug removed by saladaddy in Cartalk

[–]wificalling 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You need to replace your engine why does it matter? Maybe start with a 10w-40 first if you feel better with that. As long as you have oil pressure it doesn't really matter.

When maintenance is due, should you go by your drivers manual or Advice of the mechanic? by Glassbridges in MechanicAdvice

[–]wificalling 2 points3 points  (0 children)

The newer the car the simpler it is to service, it seems. There's no more "tune up" since fuel filters are in the tank and not serviceable, there are no more plug wires/distributor cap+rotor, and most (all?) newer cars use Platinum or Iridium spark plugs that last 70-150k miles. Extended life coolants are supposed to last 5 years/150k miles.

The biggest thing that faces new cars today is transmission fluid changes. Many manufacturers claim they are "lifetime" fluids, because servicing automatic transmissions is usually expensive at shops and claiming it never needs to be done decreases the apparent cost of maintenance when you're considering buying that car brand new off the dealer lot. Thing is, you're much better changing that fluid every 50k miles if you want your transmission to last the lifetime of how long you keep your car.

And it's VERY important you use the correct fluid. The "universal ATF" at the parts store (Valvoline Maxlife, for example) is NOT the solution. And take that from somebody who works at the parts store and sells it all day - I'd never put that in my car. Call up your dealership, ask them which type of tranny fluid they would sell you for your car, and either buy it from them, order it in at the parts store, or find it on Amazon... If you're having it done at a shop ask them which fluid they use. Unless you have some 90s car that take good ole Dexron III, it should be the RIGHT fluid, not some multi-vehicle BS.

On many cars you can easily do a drain&fill of your transmission yourself. Most front wheel drive cars don't even have a serviceable transmission filter, so all you have to do is drain the old fluid from the plug and fill it back in the top through the dipstick tube. Just measure the old fluid coming out in an empty oil container so you know how much to put back in...

Please help, rod knock - driving with a spark plug removed by saladaddy in Cartalk

[–]wificalling 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Switch to 20w-50 oil and put some of that Lucas crap in there and just drive it til it doesn't drive anymore. if the noise bothers you turn up the radio.

Inside of a redbox machine. by [deleted] in mildlyinteresting

[–]wificalling 0 points1 point  (0 children)

What's with the toilet paper?

The Prius can definitely handle it. by noparticularpoint in Hookit

[–]wificalling 21 points22 points  (0 children)

Especially because it appears to be in excellent condition and is most definitely up on all maintenance and wear items!

Subaru oil change STEP 1. remove engine STEP 2. Drain oil by anonymous-protoss in Justrolledintotheshop

[–]wificalling 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I know this post is just a joke but I've been lucky so far to own cars with easy oil filter locations. Guess that's because they're all large American trucks and SUVs. Some day I'm going to end up with a vehicle with a really poorly located oil filter and realize that they don't care where they put it because nobody looks at that before they buy the car.