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Project Cars--You Get to Vote on "Hold 'em or Fold 'em"

19377 messages, Last post on Dec 01, 2009 at 6:24 PM
You are in the Classic Cars Forum. Your Host is mr_shiftright
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Replying to: explorerx4 (Nov 06, 2009 4:07 pm)
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Replying to: oregonboy (Nov 06, 2009 6:51 pm)
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Replying to: Mr_Shiftright (Nov 07, 2009 8:57 am)
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Replying to: boomchek (Nov 07, 2009 9:52 am)
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Replying to: Mr_Shiftright (Nov 07, 2009 10:04 am) |
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Replying to: boomchek (Nov 07, 2009 10:22 am)
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Replying to: Mr_Shiftright (Nov 07, 2009 10:47 am) I used to see that all the time at my shop. Sir or madam you spent 30,000 dollars on this car don't you want to protect your investment by putting the right oil in it and changing it at least every 5,000 or so miles? When Ford and Honda went to 5w20 spec oil we didn't carry it in bulk initially because we weren't sure they would keep up with using that oil. We had it in bottles and since it was a little more expensive then regular bottled oil we charged 4 or 5 dollars more for an oil change with 5w20. We had people all the time that didn't want to put the 5w20 in because a 25 dollar oil change became 30 dollars. We had people that didn't want to change the oil in the interval recommended because it took too long to get an oil change. Seriously you can't spend 10 minutes if you come by during non-peak times? If you really don't have the time then spend twice as much for full synthetic and more then double your drain interval. No, no, no that was too much money. Sheesh drove me crazy.
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Replying to: british_rover (Nov 07, 2009 11:11 am) |
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Replying to: oregonboy (Nov 06, 2009 6:51 pm) probably quite few engines left that could be salvaged. |
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My '79 New Yorker has been giving me fits for awhile now, refusing to start, smelling like it's flooding out, and, ultimately, killing the battery. I guess it's been about a month and a half since I successfully started it; I do remember using the NYer to jump start the tractor the last time I cut the grass. Yesterday I put the LeMans's battery in, and it still wouldn't fire up. I don't know what made me think to do this, but I pulled the distributor cap off, pulled the rotor, blew on it, and rubbed my finger on the contact point. Put it back together, and it fired right up! So was it maybe just some moisture in there? The cap and rotor are new. Well, less-than-a-year-old, new. I've never had this problem with my other '79 though, the 5th Ave, which is identical. And if it is just moisture, what's the best way to deal with it? I don't like the idea of having to "pleasure" my car every time I want it to fire up!
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