Anonymous wrote:
how do you change the tires on a 1963 Dodge Dart?
in the 450sl how did they balance weight in rear of car?
What is purpose of STP and who developed it?
How many times it took to created WD40?
Anonymous wrote:Re: nitrogen in tires--my son put nitrogen in mine 2 years ago. Rotating is the only thing that has had to be done since, and I live where the difference between winter and summer can top 140 degrees.
Questions: why are universal symbols so hard to figure out? I wondered what the movie camera symbol meant (not a camera, it's the engine!) and the temp symbol always looks to me like a tiny sailboat on the waves. The tire symbol looks like a cross between calipers and a horseshoe.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most of my driving during the week is to take the kids to and from school. It's 10 minutes there. 10 minutes off while I take them in side, then 10 minutes back. Twice a day. Based on your previous post, this isn't great for the car as it's not running long enough. Any suggestions, other than driving circles around my block and annoying my neighbors? We do get longer drives done on the weekends. It's an Audi 2.0 4-cylinder TFSI (turbo) engine if that makes a diffrence.
So in that sort of driving profile, a few things are happening. None are good.
1) your exhaust system is accumulating water inside it, and staying moist, which will eventually corrode it. Yours is made of stainless steel, but the muffler internals and catylist housing is mild steel. That will eventually rust. When gasoline is burned, the biggest by product of that combustion is water vapor. Ideally, the exhaust system will get hot enough during a drive to ensure that all that water stays in a gaseous state all the way out the exhaust system. But before it gets that hot, the rear parts of the system are still cool, and the water vapor condenses there. Unless you get the exhaust hot enough to boil off that water, it’ll have moisture in it.
2) the battery isn’t being charged enough by so litttle driving. You’re in a constantly descending charge state that will eventually not be able to start the car. Think of it like this- this is just a hypothetical, but accurate- let’s say it takes 10:30 of running to replace the electrical charge used to start the car. But you only drive 10:00. So each time, the battery gets :30 too little charge. Over time, that cumulative effect will slowly drain the battery
3) your engine oil isn’t getting hot enough to boil off the contaminants from the gasoline being burned. Same deal as the water in the exhaust, except it’s petroleum contaminants instead of water. Hot oil boils them off and sends it into the PCV system to be burned and disposed off in the exhaust.
Pick one day a week and drive for thirty minutes to an hour, ideally at highway speeds. Also, really get on the throttle aggressively and run it very hard a few times on these weekly drives. Plus, your car is a lot of fun. Go enjoy the performance.
Thanks for the advice. We do get 30+ minute highway drives usually once or twice a week.
The car has stop-start technology. Will that make it even worse since the engine is running maybe 8 minutes of a 10-minute drive? Bunch of stoplights so the engine turns off then.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hi. I have 2011 Mercedes ml350 4matic suv that has just over 200000 miles. When I go up hills and or accelerate at slower speeds (less than 40mph), the car stutters and kind of hesitates. A friend riding with me said it seems like a transmission issue. I haven’t taken it to the shop yet but how much more would you invest in a car with that type of mileage? The car has been pretty good to me. However, last year I spent $1000 to get A/C repaired (cracked compressor) $270 lift gate repair and $300 for window motor. I really wanted to keep it for my nearly 17 year old DD but I wondering should I just move on? I would love to move up to a 2015/2016 GL but my current mechanic thinks those are trash and constantly trying to talk me into buying a Honda Pilot or something Korean. Any recommendations or general thoughts?
Also wondering what are the service recommendations when car hits 200000 miles?
TIA!
Congrats on getting your car to 200K. Well done. I’ll admit I don’t know much about MB’s, they’re not my area of expertise. Sounds like it could be the TPS, or possibly a failing shift solenoid or worn valve body. Fix it? I probably would, if I liked it as much as you seem like you do. It might run several thousand, but then again, new car payments over a year run more than that. Trade in potential is virtually nil because of the mileage, so at this point, I’d keep it. Why not?
Thank you for replying back so quickly! Thanks for the advice.
So do you have a general service recommendations for 200000 milers?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most of my driving during the week is to take the kids to and from school. It's 10 minutes there. 10 minutes off while I take them in side, then 10 minutes back. Twice a day. Based on your previous post, this isn't great for the car as it's not running long enough. Any suggestions, other than driving circles around my block and annoying my neighbors? We do get longer drives done on the weekends. It's an Audi 2.0 4-cylinder TFSI (turbo) engine if that makes a diffrence.
So in that sort of driving profile, a few things are happening. None are good.
1) your exhaust system is accumulating water inside it, and staying moist, which will eventually corrode it. Yours is made of stainless steel, but the muffler internals and catylist housing is mild steel. That will eventually rust. When gasoline is burned, the biggest by product of that combustion is water vapor. Ideally, the exhaust system will get hot enough during a drive to ensure that all that water stays in a gaseous state all the way out the exhaust system. But before it gets that hot, the rear parts of the system are still cool, and the water vapor condenses there. Unless you get the exhaust hot enough to boil off that water, it’ll have moisture in it.
2) the battery isn’t being charged enough by so litttle driving. You’re in a constantly descending charge state that will eventually not be able to start the car. Think of it like this- this is just a hypothetical, but accurate- let’s say it takes 10:30 of running to replace the electrical charge used to start the car. But you only drive 10:00. So each time, the battery gets :30 too little charge. Over time, that cumulative effect will slowly drain the battery
3) your engine oil isn’t getting hot enough to boil off the contaminants from the gasoline being burned. Same deal as the water in the exhaust, except it’s petroleum contaminants instead of water. Hot oil boils them off and sends it into the PCV system to be burned and disposed off in the exhaust.
Pick one day a week and drive for thirty minutes to an hour, ideally at highway speeds. Also, really get on the throttle aggressively and run it very hard a few times on these weekly drives. Plus, your car is a lot of fun. Go enjoy the performance.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What's the best way to buy a vehicle in good condition from the 80s?
From the 80’s? Probably at a classic car auction or a for sale ad on Hemming’s Motor News.
Pretty much the only cars still left from the 80’s are the “keepers”, that the owners specifically wanted to hold on to. That means they’ve been maintained, but also means they’ve lasted long enough that their value is starting to creep back up. Fox Body Mustangs, for example. You couldn’t give away a 1987 5.0 in the mid-2000’s. But now? One in decent shape will run more than it cost new in ‘87.
Thanks! I was looking for a 300-something Mercedes, maybe a wagon, unless you think that's a terrible idea. But I'll check out the mustang you mentioned.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hi. I have 2011 Mercedes ml350 4matic suv that has just over 200000 miles. When I go up hills and or accelerate at slower speeds (less than 40mph), the car stutters and kind of hesitates. A friend riding with me said it seems like a transmission issue. I haven’t taken it to the shop yet but how much more would you invest in a car with that type of mileage? The car has been pretty good to me. However, last year I spent $1000 to get A/C repaired (cracked compressor) $270 lift gate repair and $300 for window motor. I really wanted to keep it for my nearly 17 year old DD but I wondering should I just move on? I would love to move up to a 2015/2016 GL but my current mechanic thinks those are trash and constantly trying to talk me into buying a Honda Pilot or something Korean. Any recommendations or general thoughts?
Also wondering what are the service recommendations when car hits 200000 miles?
TIA!
Congrats on getting your car to 200K. Well done. I’ll admit I don’t know much about MB’s, they’re not my area of expertise. Sounds like it could be the TPS, or possibly a failing shift solenoid or worn valve body. Fix it? I probably would, if I liked it as much as you seem like you do. It might run several thousand, but then again, new car payments over a year run more than that. Trade in potential is virtually nil because of the mileage, so at this point, I’d keep it. Why not?
Anonymous wrote:This might be the most helpful thread to the most people on DCUM ever. Thank you!
Anonymous wrote:Hi. I have 2011 Mercedes ml350 4matic suv that has just over 200000 miles. When I go up hills and or accelerate at slower speeds (less than 40mph), the car stutters and kind of hesitates. A friend riding with me said it seems like a transmission issue. I haven’t taken it to the shop yet but how much more would you invest in a car with that type of mileage? The car has been pretty good to me. However, last year I spent $1000 to get A/C repaired (cracked compressor) $270 lift gate repair and $300 for window motor. I really wanted to keep it for my nearly 17 year old DD but I wondering should I just move on? I would love to move up to a 2015/2016 GL but my current mechanic thinks those are trash and constantly trying to talk me into buying a Honda Pilot or something Korean. Any recommendations or general thoughts?
Also wondering what are the service recommendations when car hits 200000 miles?
TIA!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You mentioned you go to Carlisle for the auction a lot. What are the pickings like there? I've traded in a few cars to dealers a few times, and my impressions was they keep the good ones for their own used car lot, and send all the bad stuff up to auction.
Yeah, that’s about right. The stuff at auction needs attention. Used dealers or wholesalers don’t wanna mess with a car they have to fix before selling. That’s a waste of money them. They don’t even staff a technician at most used dealers.
Which is why I buy at auctions. Because I can pay almost nothing for a car, literally like $50 more than scrap value sometimes, spend a few days fixing it, and turn at least a couple thousand dollars on it most of the time. The downside is I spend a lot of time waiting on UPS to drop parts off, and I have a lot of cars sitting on my property in various stages of repair, but my wife doesn’t mind. One of the benefits of having a big lot with a tall privacy fence.
Could you please provide some more info about the Carlisle auction lot, city location, name of company (Mannheim?) and how best to be able to purchase a car from there? I believe one needs to go via a person of company licensed to purchase at car auctions, correct? I do small repairs on car myself so thought I'd take the risk getting a car from an auction.
Anonymous wrote:Have you ever known a technician who intentionally damaged a car that was in the shop for work? If so, what was their motivation?