Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We hold onto old cars for this reason Op..so much easier to fix and maintain. Dh can do brakes, oil, bulbs, filters, etc, but on the newer cars half of that stuff is linked to electronic sensors or impossible to get to.
The thing that most frustrated me last night was dealing with rusty/stuck bolts! I kept thinking "arrrgh, if this was a newer car, all this stuff would be SO much easier to take off!"... yeah, that was the hardest part. It's a 2013 car, and it gets driven in the winter, so there's quite a few sticky bolts that needed yelling at to come loose.
Anonymous wrote:We hold onto old cars for this reason Op..so much easier to fix and maintain. Dh can do brakes, oil, bulbs, filters, etc, but on the newer cars half of that stuff is linked to electronic sensors or impossible to get to.
Anonymous wrote:That's awesome! Congrats! We do the time & effort vs cost comparison as well. I fell more comfortable with home repair, so do most of that stuff myself. Without having a garage, I don't like working on the cars. Our Toyota is easy to fix, but the Nissan is ridiculous. I fell like they intentionally make everything hard on they car.
Anonymous wrote:I hate doing this stuff. I will do household repairs now with YouTube videos, but am scared of doing stuff on the car in case I screw it up...
Anonymous wrote:DH did this too on my car. My car was really difficult to change the CV boot though, but I have a German car with a computer system that everyone whines about.
We save a ton on brakes and brake pads by doing them ourselves too.
Anonymous wrote:Good job! Yes, car repair is a racket and I'm also sick of the constant up-sell when I'm having work done. However, I personally don't have the guts to do more than just change a light bulb.
Anonymous wrote:Have you driven your car since?