Not quite DIY - but more the joys of owning an older vehicle with a dubious service history.
My old 1984 Nissan Silvia which I had 5 years ago was a lovely car. It handled well and was for the most part a very nice car.
However, at the time of purchase the turbo behaved a bit oddly (it had been shagged silly by the previous owner running way too high boost off the mill) - but I didn't know any better and thought nothing much of it. A month or two later, after having been over tramping up the Copland track just south of Fox Glacier, the seals in the turbo gave up. As a result I was dragging a huge cloud of thick nasty smoke every time the car was engine braking.
It chewed through about 6 liters of oil during what felt like a very long trip back to Chch. Getting the turbo replaced (and upgraded of course since the labour cost is the same) cost a fair amount of dollars, at least I left it to the professionals though.
Later, visiting friends in Milford Sound over New years the car developed a water leak - somewhere, very difficult to get to. As a result the trip from Milford Sound to Te Anau became a relay from lake to lake just to keep it topped up. When the water level got too low it got really bad as steam formed in the cooling system and we'd have to wait for the car to cool down enough to purge the system and fill it again with water. The trick was to keep the water topped up at all times so no steam bubbles could form. It went through close to 20 liters of water during that trip - at least it was an easy fix once we got to the garage and the car was ready to go the next morning.
The DIY I did on that car was limited to trying to touch up some of the slightly faded trimwork. I spent hours and hours on masking and such and I never was happy with it at all. The rust repair that I did came out ok. But it certainly taught me that paying someone who knows what they are doing to do something beats trying to figure out how to do something while you are doing it, every time. At least if the result is important to you.
I loved that car and I still miss it!

Originally Posted by
martybabe
That's a really big problem in the UK. Talking cages for a bit, I worked for the AA in old England town and it was not uncommon to pick up 3 or 4 wrong fuel jobs in a day. $400 and 2 hours later they were on their way.That's assuming they hadn't run the engine.
At least the resulting diesel/petrol mix that is pumped out, and can't be used for much, is very good for starting bonfires. DAMHIK.
It is preferential to refrain from the utilisation of grandiose verbiage in the circumstance that your intellectualisation can be expressed using comparatively simplistic lexicological entities. (...such as the word fuck.)
Remember your humanity, and forget the rest. - Joseph Rotblat
Bookmarks