Youtube comments of The Underground Lair of the Squankum (@theundergroundlairofthesqu9261).
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@emanuelparedes9187 Ziploc bags with PostIt notes inside (folded in half to be unsticky), Sharpie or pen or pencil, and when the job's over, and nothing but empty bags remain, remove PostIts, baggies back to the baggie box. (Not the box they came in.)
Recently did a more involved job than usual, had to unplug a whole spur of wiring harness, and had a clipboard full of notes (fuel system, intake manifold, wiring harness) and a week or two later found out my notes for the wiring harness were NOT good enough. Slowed me down.
Oh, and nowadays, take a lot of pictures before disassembly! Failed to do that on a very funky throttle linkage, same job. Luckily, the internet saved me.
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@machtnichtsseimann Looks like the Hanes are a good place to start, just based on price! Worth a try. A few years ago I bought some Hanes white T shirts that were said to be wicking , and boy, they're the comfiest, most breathable, softest white T shirt for me to wear to bed in cold weather.
Based on that experience I bought a pair of red T shirts, Hanes X-temp, thinking they'd be good summer T shirts, and they're nowhere near as nice as those white shirts are. They feel thick and warm. Someday, in a couple of years, which enough washing, maybe, but the same could be said of regular ol' Hanes/ Fruit of the Loom T shirts.
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@CarsMeetsBikes For starters, it was in southern California, so that made it an easy thing for him to drop by for.
My list is not complete, but I've built a list of the cars Leno owns, and here's what he's got from the Mopar world:
1934 Chrysler Airflow
1939 Chrysler Royal (ex Johnny Carson)
1956 (Chrysler) Imperial (white, in-dash record player)
1957 (Chrysler) Imperial
1958 (Chrysler) Imperial convertible
1961 Chrysler 300G
Chrysler turbine car
1967 Chrysler Imperial Crown Coupe
2001 Chrysler tank engine car/Blastolene
1964 Dodge Polara 426 Max Wedge
1966 Dodge Coronet Hemi 426
1968 Dodge Dart GTS
1970 Dodge Challenger Hemi 426
Dodge Viper (black?)
1996 Dodge Viper GTS Coupe (blue)
2008/9? Dodge Challenger
2015 Dodge Challenger Hellcat
2023(?) Dodge Demon 170
Jay's got a lot of cars! Steam, electric, gas, piston, turbine, from all decades.
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I have always been fascinated by people saying, "Oh,. everybody knows this brand only uses these sized wrenches..." I never noticed! My VW from the 80's just taught me that it has 6,7,8, 9, 10,11,12,13,14,15,17,18,19,21,22mm... so I never thought about it. Any nut could be anything!
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Excellent video!
I'm a little confused around the 26:00 mark. The dimples have a lot of airflow and when the burns swirl through them, those corners get a lot of heat in them. Is this what drove the decision to use ceramic coating? Is the coating to help those corners/edges of the dimples survive the heat? And/or to just increase efficiency of the whole process, also, because the rest of the piston isn't absorbing as much heat, and that burned fuel goes towards pushing a piston and then, driving a turbo?
Also, when it comes to what the heat does for us, let's say this is a naturally aspirated engine, even without a turbo, before that exhaust valve opens, the heat being retained because of the ceramic coating on the piston means more heat to expand the air in the cylinder as the fuel burns, right?
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Just because you have a better idea and do it doesn't mean it's "overengineered." I've seen the same said about a third sun visor, small flap above the rear view mirror -- the eptihet "overengineered" was used by some car reviewer because, well, he hadn't seen one before. It's cheap, simple, and it's better. The cars that don't have one are weirdos in my book.
This unfolding shield, in my book is a good idea, and simple. I will admit that the German sometimes cook up some complex expensive stuff that they dreamed of being the coolest solution -- then it doesn't work out, perhaps because of inadequate field testing. The above two examples are not that.
Another example was the first generation of Porsche 911 having aluminum lug nuts. Some sniffed "overngineering" in that case, too, but it was a simple technology and it worked, and there was a good reason for doing it. Just because you're not used to it doesn't mean it's a problem.
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You kinda skipped a bit part there -- the process you describe, with a fine enough gradation, just becomes bore cutter, no?. Precise, straight and parallel bores made for better cannon, and the development of this kind of machine tool then led to quality cylinders for steam engines, thus powering all sorts of machines, includinging pumps to get water out of coal mines so they could dig more coal to run the steam engines to make more cannon, steam engines, textiles, etc etc.
Also, rifled barrels. Just a really stretched out internal screw thread.
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@williampope3531 Oh, sure. I've had a lot of cats dying on me in recent years. Some of them really don't like the car that much. One, named "Talky", meowed for 1 hr 15 mins all the way to the cardiologist and then on the ride back. He got dehydrated.
Yes, to the needle.
Normally by the time the "last ride" has come, they're feeling awful. But if your pet is okay with car rides, then I'm not worried about distance to the vet. And yes, I feel you on not wanting some stranger doing it. Most recent cat death, our normal vet was out and we had a new hire. It felt strange.
And I really wouldn't want to go to the local 24 hour animal hospital, that place is a mill that churns employees and costs twice as much for anything, and luckily we haven't had go to there because of an overnight arrival at death's door.
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Please be sure to write letters to General Motors, Ford Motor Company, Toyota Motor Corporation, Honda Motor Company, Bayerische Motoren Werke AG, and Rolls-Royce Motor Cars.🙂 No need to write to Duesenberg Automobile & Motors Company, Inc., as they are defunct.
You're not the only person with this concern but what I don't understand is why I only heard of it about two years ago. For a few decades, I read several major car magazines cover to cover and don't remember that coming up. Electric motors seem to be on peoples' minds with it, though, because that's always brought up as a contrasting example.
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In the US, rotor or disc.
In theory, you want brand new machined metal and brand new pad to get to know each other, but I'm not the only one here to have done a "pad slap" here and there, I'm sure. I'm not sure, however, what's so 'orrible about used pads on new rotors. Bedding pads, as I understand it, is about breaking in the rotor surface/depositing the nice layer of brake pad on them. Of course, a used pad may not be square/level/evenly worn, too.
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Ray, time for a comment from the peanut gallery. Possible tools for installing that bolt on that Adel clamp on the power steering hose:
1) SK/Craftsman thumbwheel ratchet?
2) Astro/Titan/many other brands "gearless" micro rachets. Short little handles with a roller sprag clutch in them. Perceived as having infinite teeth, but no, in practice their backlash puts them in about the same ballpark as your Dual 80 ratchet. But these, in 1/4" or slightly longer 3/8" version, are my preferred weapon of choice when things get stupid cramped.
3) Have you seen the FACOM twist ratchets? They operate like a normal ratchet, or, you twist their handle and the drive square turns, no matter which way you twist, it turns the direction it's been set to. Maybe worth a try. I got one and found that it's not a one-handed deal, I had to put my other hand up in there to push the ratchet head/socket onto the bolt head/nut, and if I had enough room for both of these meathooks, I'd be using a more mundane tool!
_______
IV: In my demented imagination: a cordless ratchet like the ones you use, but slim head, flex head, chain drive,, and a radio. (How to make a chain drive work in a flex head, I don't know, I told you I'm demented.)
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Ford submitted specs for tire companies to bid on, and the price point Ford set scared off Goodyear, IIRC. Firestone met the price point by going with a cheap tire design and about to be submitted to a challenging situation. (Fun fact: the Bronco II before it had its own rollover problems and the Explorer was supposed to be progress because it had a few inches more of wheelbase, which does help with that.
It was the dawn of American consumers screaming, “I don’t know what center of gravity means but I wanna be up in the air in a trucky thing for fashion’s sake!” People weren’t rolling their Caprice Classics or Dodge Darts in the 70’s when their tires blew, and I’m sure there were some low rent and neglected tires in those days, too. Center of gravity, people.
American’s refusal to check their tire pressure with a gauge, because it’s so hard to kneel or some damned reason I could never figure out. More carpet, roof, and glass, that era of SUV carried more weight on the rear tires than a similar pickup truck. Add full passenger load and cargo on a long trip on an interstate on a hot day and, well, in theory, the customers are supposed to (after reading the glovebox manual that they didn’t throw out, right?) add air pressure to the tires for such situations.
Ford and Firestone did screw up, but it always irked me how much the consumers’ role in all this was just ignored. Big mean corporations! Now everybody drives around in slightly less tippy SUV’s but with stability control and tire pressure sensors, so that’s nice. But CG is still CG, you silly geese.
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I started wearing these in the early 80's when L.L. Bean used to sell them. Eventually I stopped wearing them because my feets, by global and Waller standards, too big. Then they started making them in even larger sizes and I returned. Alas, they became a fashion item instead of a military supply/surplus thing and prices crept up, it seems.
Great traction - soft rubber! And great tread. (Other than picking up rocks which you become aware of and cope with with ease, rocks come out just as easily as they get jammed into the gaps in the soft rubber.) Best shoe for walking around on a shingled roof.
Flexible sole, very nimble. Chuck Taylors with traction.
Great in the heat. Go without socks in the summer, very comfy.
Get them wet, big deal, as long as its summer time and you don't care about wet cotton shoes.
Light weight.
Cheap. The bottom may get thin but you'll also get holes in the cotton by that point. I tend to wear mine in the shop, so I'm not getting much sand through holes in the fabric. Eventually just give up and buy another pair.
Their strengths are also their weaknesses, but they are a disposable kinda thing. I now wear a knock-off of Palladium (Farm Blue) to get even more room inside for my feet in a certain big size.
Even the shoe laces can die prematurely. I say toss them immediately and get smaller diameter round laces, which slide better in the eyelets.
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