bill walsh
Member
- Jul 16, 2007
- 987
- 2
moved totes and boxes to garage for moving to next new home
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
moved totes and boxes to garage for moving to next new home
No worries Dave, that makes 2 of us...we've got other vices
Sent from my SM-G991U using Tapatalk
Can I ask, why do you guys in the US buy oil in single quart bottles? I often see this in videos or posts where several quart bottles are emptied one-by-one into the filler neck. Is this not more time consuming and wasteful in terms of more plastic bottles?
Compared to that, we would be buying larger 5 or 6-liter (5.3 or 6.3 quart) bottles and decanting from one or two of those.
Anyway, just something I have wondered for a while.
My tyre placard says 32 psi all round, but the tyre shops regularly put them up to 38, too high for my liking.My wife's car got new tires and they over inflated them by 3 to 4 psi. It seems such as simple item to confirm correct pressure.
My wife's car got new tires and they over inflated them by 3 to 4 psi. It seems such as simple item to confirm correct pressure.
Possible they left them on the high side because people neglect their tires
They just never check pressure after mounted on car and on ground. They did want me to return to check wheel torque.
I think I mentioned in a previous post that I had to check the torque on all my wheels after my last service, I discovered at least 2 of the 6 on each wheel were way over tightened, and 1 or 2 felt like they were not tight enough, I guess maybe they just went around one after another, and didn't cross tighten them, if you know what I mean.Um...that's not very confidence inspiring...I've torqued a lot of wheels in my day...and I never thought "hmm...maybe I should recheck these after a few days" nor have I ever had any loose lugs next rotation...I did have to buy a 6 ft, 3/4-drive breaker bar to get the lug nuts off my SO's car after some dealer work...which are supposed to be torqued to 73.5 ft-lbs and I usually take off with an 18" 1/2-drive bar. (I bought the 6ft bar after the lugs laughed at my electric impact gun). Back to Bunky's experience--if "return to check wheel torque" was really a thing...there are about a million cars a week that AREN'T getting that done.
And while I'm rambling (caffeine not working yet), I think I did an experiment once, and there was no difference in tire pressure off the car vs. on the car "on the ground". I think I was doing a summer/winter changeover and I was checking the pressure on the bench and thought "oh, I should wait until these are on the car with all that weight because the pressure will be higher then"...except it wasn't, as I recall.
Made the wife a little something for our anniversary. (It’s probably about 40mm/1.5” tall or so).
They just never check pressure after mounted on car and on ground. They did want me to return to check wheel torque.
Tire dealers ALWAYS tell me to come back and get them retorqued WHEN I BUY NEW TIRES/WHEELS
They NEVER tell me to come back for a retorque after I have them rebalanced and swapped at changeover season, which I do every couple of years mainlky for the balancing
The dealer always rotates my tires when I am there for a service and they have NEVER told me to come back and get it checked
Having said that, I ALWAYS check it myself shortly after any type of tire service because a tire store in Arizona forgot to do a final tightening and it almost ruined a set of rims and did ruin a few studs and it didn't take long at all
After I got the new winter tires and wheels for the TX I checked them and they were torqued to over 125 ft/lbs
The spec was about 100
Odd that they wouldn't recommend after rotation since it's the same as getting new tires (i.e. the wheels need to come off the vehicle).
I'm sure you know, but the main reason to recheck after some time, ~100 miles, is to make sure lugs haven't loosened up due to heat cycling and general driving loads. More common on aluminum wheels.
I will say, in the, wait how old am I again(?), ~28 years I've been driving, when I recheck lug torque after some miles, I think I can count on one hand the number of times I found a lug less than original torque. And it was just one lug, not all lugs on one wheel. I'm sure it depends on how the vehicle is driven and temperatures.