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4960 messages, Last post on Nov 25, 2009 at 8:23 AM
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Replying to: sterjess (Sep 11, 2005 6:37 pm) Best thing you can do first off is screw in a regular oil pressure gauge and see how much pressure you have. Don't mess around with idiot lights at this point. If your gauge shows unacceptable oil pressure there is probably an assembly issue somewhere, yes. You might drop the pan if you can and check the oil pump pickup tube and screen. |
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I have a 1995 Cadillac and when the air temperature is cold outside, it will not shift into reverse or forward until it has warmed up for several minutes. One mechanic told me I needed to rebuild the transmission, but another retired mechanic feels that all it needs is to have the transmission filter replaced. Has anyone out there had similar problems with the cadillacs? And how was it resolved?
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Replying to: jackiew (Sep 12, 2005 10:44 am) |
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Replying to: tim5660 (Sep 12, 2005 7:15 am) |
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Replying to: crankshaft (Sep 12, 2005 4:58 pm) |
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So my check engine light came on then went away after I stopped and restarted the care but noticed a loud squeek coming out of the distributor. 2 days later the car died on me at night. After doing research on the net, I figured it might be a tune-up issue so I begin doing a tune up when I break the ignitor in the distributor. As I go to remove the ignitor I stripped the screw head so I fork up $75 to have a guy come check it out. Upon removing the entire disturbutor he tells me that it's FROZEN because he couldn't turn the rotor manually and that I would need an entire new Distributor. Then and there I became weary of what he said because when the rotor was in (before I broke the ignitor) it would rotate when I started the care. So my question(s) is: -Is it true that if you can't rotate the rotor manually when the distrutor is out, it is damaged and needs replacement with an entirely new one? -How reliable is an after market distributor in your opinion? Any help and/or advice greatly appreciated.
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Replying to: jbruce (Feb 07, 2005 7:59 am) |
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Replying to: 210delray (Aug 29, 2005 8:03 pm) I would trust the manual for the amount of oil to add. If you are using the recommended filter. One smaller might mean less oil is needed - a larger one might show the underfill you are seeing. The engineers that designed the motor should have given the spec for the manual. You might not even have a correct dipstick in the motor. Cadillac Northstars almost all give a half quart low reading when the recommended 7 1/2 quarts are used. All the dipsticks seem to be wrong. If you put more oil into a Northstar to the 'full' mark on the dipstick, it just pulls it through the PCV system and burns it. |
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Replying to: toyocor (Aug 30, 2005 8:02 am) No. Probably never need to have these services done. |
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Replying to: rhicon (Sep 01, 2005 4:33 pm) The noise may be the 'wear sensors' which make a noise when the brake pads are worn out. Have your brakes fixed. It will probably need new rotors and pads. |
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