Car D.I.Y.

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Bristolian

Über Member
Location
Bristol, UK
The Royal Airfix Modellers! ;)

Rough Engineering Made Easy ^_^
 

Pinno718

Über Member
Location
Way out West
Hi Pinno718 and thanks for the comment :thumbsup:

If could be binding but the front wheels, which were removed a week after the rears last year, came undone without any undue effort. Personally I always apply copper grease when putting the bolts back in and also on the face of the hub. I also use a torque wrench which my tame mechanic calibrates for me every year.

Impact dizzies are great for undoing things but I wouldn't use one for tightening anything - I generally use a battery powered drill to spin bolts in so their a bit more than finger tight then finish the job with an open ended/ring spanner (for non-critical nuts/bolts) or a torque wrench. 29 years in the military (many of which were in the REME) taught me some tricks ^_^

It taught you to avoid replacing tank tracks ^_^
 

Bristolian

Über Member
Location
Bristol, UK
Your mob were always good for magically producing a brew from seemingly nowhere.

Oh yeah, double boiling vessels in every vehicle, never allowed to boil dry :thumbsup: ^_^

We were also known for having a never ending supply of beer - it was standard barter booty for major repairs in the field. IIRC, a Chieftain pack lift (engine change) would cost the crew a case of 24 - hic! :eek:
 

CXRAndy

Guru
Location
Lincs
Just had a letter from Citroën. They just have a recall on their airbags and need replacing. It covers our little C3. Worth doing a Google search to see if other models are affected
 

CXRAndy

Guru
Location
Lincs
My Citroen C3 has been booked in to do the airbags, I also cheekily asked for their best price for wet cambelt change- which came back very competitively priced, so I'm getting that done too whilst its there
 

Fastpedaller

Über Member
I was relieved when our Evri delivery of a replacement headlight levelling switch for our Ford arrived. I quickly fitted it and then became very deflated because it didn't cure the fault :sad:. There is a 'peg' which is turned between 0 and 4 to ensure oncoming vehicle drivers aren't dazzled - setting it at 4 if there are passengers in the rear seats lowers the beam. I was confident it was the switch because when I removed it to examine the part number, I heard the movement motors move briefly. Wiggling the connector and wire couldn't replicate the situation again. As the new switch didn't cure it, I took most of the front bumper fixings off to move the bumper enough to extract the headlight and get to its connector. Multi-meter on the connector proved the circuit was working as required. With the motor/actuator prised apar,t it was possible to manually wind the moving parts to one extreme, and the motor would wind it one way but not the other. So new headlight levelling motors are the next purchase! Oh-the joys of modern motor repairs without the assistance of Haynes manuals of old. Still I count myself lucky it wasn't a wiring loom fault!
 

gbb

Squire
Location
Peterborough
I was relieved when our Evri delivery of a replacement headlight levelling switch for our Ford arrived. I quickly fitted it and then became very deflated because it didn't cure the fault :sad:. There is a 'peg' which is turned between 0 and 4 to ensure oncoming vehicle drivers aren't dazzled - setting it at 4 if there are passengers in the rear seats lowers the beam. I was confident it was the switch because when I removed it to examine the part number, I heard the movement motors move briefly. Wiggling the connector and wire couldn't replicate the situation again. As the new switch didn't cure it, I took most of the front bumper fixings off to move the bumper enough to extract the headlight and get to its connector. Multi-meter on the connector proved the circuit was working as required. With the motor/actuator prised apar,t it was possible to manually wind the moving parts to one extreme, and the motor would wind it one way but not the other. So new headlight levelling motors are the next purchase! Oh-the joys of modern motor repairs without the assistance of Haynes manuals of old. Still I count myself lucky it wasn't a wiring loom fault!

Is that switch mounted at the rear of the car ? My Mazdas system Is a small 'tie rod' type link between the body and the suspension, I assume connected to a switch, it was all under the rear of the car (no issues with mine, I had to disconnect the link when replacing rear springs)
 

Fastpedaller

Über Member
Is that switch mounted at the rear of the car ? My Mazdas system Is a small 'tie rod' type link between the body and the suspension, I assume connected to a switch, it was all under the rear of the car (no issues with mine, I had to disconnect the link when replacing rear springs)

Your is (I think) an automatic system - Mine is a dash-mounted driver-operated rheostat that's part of the combined lighting switch. My Wife has never had the courage or desire to move it when she has a full complement of passengers :rolleyes:. She probably wonders why oncoming drivers flash their lights!
 
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