I've had my current vehicle under warranty most of its' life, but just recently my check engine light came on along with a couple of other lights so I thought I'd take it to the shop to have them check it out. Made the mistake of taking it to the actual dealer because the two lights indicated a wheel sensor and I thought they would know the most about how to deal with it.
So of course, I have it there for a few hours and they come up with a laundry list of things they would "suggest" I do. And I also paid a decent price for them to hook the reader up to the car and tell them what was wrong, which they didn't even do properly.
The most amazing thing was they wanted $110 to replace a CABIN AIR FILTER. Literally thirty seconds taking off my glove box and buying one for $16 on Amazon and they wanted $110 for it. They said my battery was nearing the end and quoted me $400 - battery costs $150 and takes another five minutes to change out. Sparkplug replacement quoted $800 and the plugs cost $200 and would take less than an hour to do. Mind blowing how much they inflate prices.
Made me realize how much you can actually easily do yourself to your vehicle. What are some easy things you do in terms of repairs? I'm thinking I may try to to change my brakes the next time they come up, and I'm definitely going to do the spark plugs myself. Also, do you just have jack stands or is there another type of lift you can use for car repairs?
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03-17-2024, 01:15 PM #1
DIY Car Maintenance Crew - who does it?
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03-17-2024, 01:17 PM #2
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03-17-2024, 01:17 PM #3
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03-17-2024, 01:21 PM #4
I changed my battery in my F150 so far but that’s it . Was going to buy those solid rubber ramps you drive in and do my own oil,but the price was ridiculous.
These new trucks look intimidating tbh , and I’m just using Great Canadian oli change right now , plus they do the filter .
But when it came to my 84 GMC , no one touched it period . It was my baby and I don’t trust people when they’re in a hurry. Besides that it was easy AF to work on . I pretty much took this truck apart and put it back together again
Make Misc great again
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03-17-2024, 01:26 PM #5
Me
I drove an old beater ass car around for a long time. Did all the repairs/maintenance myself. I drive a new car now, but plan to do as much as I can myself
- I recommend buying used OEM parts, instead of new aftermarket. In other words, go to one of those "pull a part" junkyards to get replacement instead of buying whatever is at autozone. Not only will it be cheaper but the used OEM will be higher quality, been burned buying absolute junk from autozone/similar parts
- They make oil plugs with a valve on them. This way you can do our oil change without even needing to turn a wrench. Can get ramps to drive on to get under instead of jacking the car up tooBest lifts:
Bench press: 315x4, 345x1
Squat: 465x1
Strict press: 185x8, 195x5, 215x1
Deadlift: 405x13 (conv tap'n'go with straps)
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03-17-2024, 01:29 PM #6
40 yrs
Obd fusion app and elm 327 will get you started on reading and clearing codes
Things like wheel speed sensors you'll need a laptop and applicable tech program with the required obd cable
Depends on make for the program
Jack stands ,two Jack's for suspension work
Unless it's a warranty item ,stay the f away from dealersLast edited by wasp9166; 03-17-2024 at 01:42 PM.
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03-17-2024, 01:54 PM #7
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03-17-2024, 02:01 PM #8
OP first thing you should get is a code reader.
There are 2 categories. There is the OBDII which is standardized for all cars but it only gives basic stuff. You can still clear check engine lights with one though.
Then different manufacturers have a proprietary CAN BUS that is for all kinds of extra settings and more in depth readings. Basically any sensor on your car you can pull data from it. Temperature, pressures, even things like re-circulation air flap, rpm of your compressor all kinds of chit. Now you can spend big bucks on a reader made for mechanics that reads almost all cars but that is like $800+ or you can usually get one for your own brand car that is like $100 that will read your CAN BUS and do all the OBDII stuff too.🌺 Lauren Brooks Kelly (snailsrus) - Jul 25, 1991 – Jan 29, 2022
Thread: RIP Snails : https://forum.bodybuilding.com/showthread.php?t=181070293&page=100
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03-17-2024, 02:28 PM #9
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03-17-2024, 02:33 PM #10
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03-17-2024, 02:34 PM #11
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03-17-2024, 02:38 PM #12
- Join Date: May 2006
- Location: Farmingville, New York, United States
- Age: 35
- Posts: 31,834
- Rep Power: 171998
I know how to do the really basic stuff. I’ll change my brake pads, filters, rotate my tires. Used to change my own oil, but ever since I became a father I’m extremely uncomfortable getting underneath a car on jack stands and just been taking it to the shop for that. For advanced stuff i’m not willing to fuk up my car following a YouTube video, would rather leave it to my shop to do that. Been going to them for nearly 20 years and they are beyond trustworthy
*Sit there and don't know what to do when people sing happy birthday to me crew*
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03-17-2024, 02:39 PM #13
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03-17-2024, 02:45 PM #14
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03-17-2024, 02:47 PM #15
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03-17-2024, 02:54 PM #16
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03-17-2024, 02:59 PM #17
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03-17-2024, 03:12 PM #18
- Join Date: May 2010
- Location: United States
- Age: 32
- Posts: 5,680
- Rep Power: 26219
Yeah but I drive a 90s Toyota. Up until a few years ago I had no idea how to really work on cars but I've learned everything I need to know on youtube. I buy nothing but OEM parts which is more expensive than almost any replacement part but I buy from a dealer online so its not too bad. The OEM parts lasted 25 years and 300K miles so its kind of retarded to use aftermarket chinese junk that usually doesn't fit or work right knowing that. Thankfully there is a large community of bros online that drive the old Toyota I have and anything I need to do to it has been done and documented online already. I've probably saved $10K in labor cost in the past few years just by installing my own parts and doing routine maintenance. I do have a mechanic I take it to if its a job I can't or don't want to do though.
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03-17-2024, 03:13 PM #19
I do all my own maintenance and mods, for the most part.
Software Eng Crew
-Alabama Crimson Tide-
*** Alabama 205 Crew ***
*** New Jersey 732 Crew ***
*** MWC ***
CTS-V - BTR stg2 cam, ported heads, Magnuson 2650, bolt ons ; ~1000whp
C6 Z06 - Heads ; Pfadt & Akrapovič full exhaust ; LG G2 coilovers & swaybars, corner balanced. Other misc HPDE minded mods ; 490/450 on mustang dyno.
Past Vehicles: Bolt on Focus RS ; Built/Turbo 03 Mach 1 ; ATS-V manual sedan
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03-17-2024, 03:45 PM #20
A lot of BS ITT; no one is quoting you $800 to change spark plugs on your chitbox, not even Ferrari
Nor $400 for a battery install; I know the book times for these things
If you do not have professional training via schooling or dealership work experience, do not touch your own car; don't even unplug anything under the engine bay because it can cause more faults
I bet I've fixed over 1,000+ botched "DIY" jobs from miscers that thought Jewtube would show them how to do simple repairs, like brake jobs(which are extremely easy to fuk up if untrained)
If your vehicle is a post 2019 you can forget about touching it altogether; you need OEM software to even do a brake job on most makes these days*Tolerance is the lube that slides the dildo of dysfunction into the ass of civilized society*
*We didn't deserve snailsrus*
As always: not medical advice but medical opinion crew
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03-17-2024, 03:52 PM #21
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03-17-2024, 04:04 PM #22
No one ITT owns torque wrenches or even knows what they are
Ok Boomer
So "stupid easy" that I've had countless men put pads on backwards or blow seals because they thought they knew what they were doing like it's still 1976
You used silicone-only on the guide pins right? Checked the integrity of the piston seals/wheel cylinders, brake hoses aren't swollen right? Pad retainers installed correctly right?
Of course you did, and I'm sure everything is torqued to spec too
You have to be an engineer to truly understand and diagnose modern vehicle faults; I know because I did it for nearly a decade while in college
Get back to your putting up fences or laying asphalt*Tolerance is the lube that slides the dildo of dysfunction into the ass of civilized society*
*We didn't deserve snailsrus*
As always: not medical advice but medical opinion crew
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03-17-2024, 04:36 PM #23
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03-17-2024, 04:44 PM #24
On my jeep I do everything myself, except when the ebrake went bad. I didn't want to screw that up. Right now I'm dealing with probably a wheel speed sensor issue as the ABS, 4wd, traction control dash lights are lit up and cruise control stopped working. Will be trying to fix that this week.
On my acura it's all dealer until the warranty expires. Then I'll take over those tasks myselftake care misc, it's been fun
my cat https://forum.bodybuilding.com/showthread.php?t=183726533
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03-17-2024, 04:45 PM #25
Bitching like a woman instead of delivering level headed input on the subject
I wouldn't want you anywhere near my vehicle just based on how you act
Everything in a vehicle has an expiration date
Unless your caliper is leaking ,the seal integrity is fine
When a caliper is hanging up,you have no way of knowing if it's the piston or an inner hose collapse
You replace the caliper and hose together, never one or the other
As I said ,I've been doing my own maintenence for 40 yrs
And busted my back in construction for 30
And never spent a day in a classroom for either
The tech programs are easily attained if you know how
What,you think the monkeys at the dealer like you are a secret society ??
You have be an engineer to figure out modern vehicles ?
Strange ,I'm a dumb tradie and fixed everything that ever came up on my bmw with my own laptop
I never spent a day in college ,yet I could do college calculus sleeping
See,I didn't want to waste money on a piece of paper that allowed me to walk around and bark like an entitled kunt
A disguise if you will
I think you should take your screaming bitch ass out of this thread and get back to paying your loan
Noone is listening to you regardless of what you think you know
Cuz you're a bitch ,maybe try the kitchen knife thread
I posted there too
I went to college to learn how to use knives
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03-17-2024, 04:50 PM #26
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03-17-2024, 04:52 PM #27
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03-17-2024, 04:53 PM #28
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03-17-2024, 04:55 PM #29
- Join Date: Jan 2012
- Location: Tennessee, United States
- Posts: 6,324
- Rep Power: 23463
I have a ton of tools and love working on cars but I live in an apartment and doing that stuff in a parking lot sucks. Want my own garage when I buy a house. Working on cars is fun and relaxing to me - not so much on a daily though...don't want that pressure of having to get it done before work, etc.
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03-17-2024, 04:57 PM #30
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