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The only thing that sucks is the temp gauge when ur doing in direct in wrong spot it should be near the vent tho I’m wondering if there would be a way to move it there
Great question - my understanding (and I'm not a mechanic) is we should follow the manufacturer's recommendation on the door panel, which in my case is 35 PSI. I usually don't stress if it's between 34-37, honestly. But I think the recommended pressure ensures the best fuel efficiency, handling, and safety. Others can chime in if they have an opinion.
Thank you soooooo much! I have never messed with a pedestal sink and I was trying to contort in every way possible to get the faucet and drain changed out. I was uttering VERY unrepeatable things at this sink. Watched your video and then did the job with no more cussing. You rock man. Thank you! 🤘🏻
😂 I totally get it! They can be tricky, but I’m glad the video helped you out and saved you some frustration (and maybe a few more colorful words). Thanks for watching. You rock too! 💪
You sound exactly like "Uncivil Law." Your vid autoplayed randomly (prob due to algorithm noticing I was looking at vids on frameless shower door repairs)...I thought "Why is Kurt (Uncivil Law) attempting to install a shower?"...lol. He seems like the kind of guy that couldn't assemble a 20-piece Lego dog house.
Just watched a movie that played fine. For only the next vhs tape to slow down, become slightly grainy/blurry, black out a bit, and then come back to clear again. Repeat, every 10 seconds. What can that be?
Thank you! Helped a lot. I have one where the joints are numbered with more than one joint having the same number two or three times so I wasn't sure where which one went. But looking at the video, I see that it doesn't really make a difference..so I'll start assembling now.
You said according to dealer oil life is good for 7, to 10,000 miles you really need to get educated on this you should always change your oil at least 5,000 personally that's to long every 3 k is better engines today are mostly VVT driven these solenoids are in communication with the computer of your vehicle to help keep all areas of the inside of the engine lubricated, oil breaks down as you know and dirty oil destroys these solenoids in return the engine starves for lubrication food for thought what's cheaper oil changes are putting a new engine in the engine oil is the blood that keeps the engine well lubricated and pumping anything over 3,000 miles between oil changes will only be costly in the long run. Best wishes.
10,000 miles with synthetic is generally fine: “Toyota recommends getting your 2015 Toyota Sienna oil & filter changed every 3,000-5,000 miles for conventional oil. Synthetic oil usually should be changed every 7,500 - 10,000 miles.” www.coggintoyota.com You can also educate yourself directly from Toyota here: support.toyota.com/s/article/What-are-the-oil-chan-7604?language=en_US
My grandparents were from China and they touted drinking hot plain water as part if traditionalChinesemedicine. They carried these thermoses everywhere. When they died their thermoses got lost when clearing out, but I recently bought a newer Stanley thermos and I continue the healthy tradition of drinking hot water.
Sorry but this is NOT the way to fix it. The spring has to be placed exactly in the OPPOSITE WAY, in order for it to be strong. This way you show makes the spring act in reverse, weak and fluffy. It doesn't has the power to retain the hair. I did this many times with the same awful and deceiving result! This needs a special machine to assemble it again, and I doubt we can do this at home (DIY). I talk from the daily experience of women who wear hair clips all day all the time haha but I thank you for the effort PS: I don't have the strength in the fingers as men have, so that's why I never could do this, but I DO know the spring must be placed opposite as showed in ALL ''hair clip fix'' videos.