By not?
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No real update dubi. However, the starting has changed where it's about 50/50 start first try/multiple tries to start. So, I'm thinking cam sensor.
My issue is do I want to replace it myself, or go get a second opinion. Or just tannerite the sucker and call it a day. Decisions, decisions.
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We paid Agmechanic to replace the timing belt and water pump on our 05 Tundra.
We dropped it off and went scuba diving for a week, then picked it up when we got back!
quote:Amen. Those things were like working on a lawnmower.
Makes a guy miss his VW Bug.
quote:quote:.
We paid Agmechanic to replace the timing belt and water pump on our 05 Tundra.
We dropped it off and went scuba diving for a week, then picked it up when we got back!
Fixing that connector was the hardest part
quote:Having owned multiple brands/vehicles, the truth of this sentiment varies based on manufacturer. As ironic as this statement is, being in this thread, Toyota/Lexus are by far the easiest to work on. This project was not fun, but I blame a heavy dose of that on operator error.
Consumers and repairs/maintenance do not even enter the equation. The factory designs these things for maximum production while assembling the vehicle and only provides a cursory thought to repairs or maintenance.
quote:this. so much this.
always pay for timing belt service - but DIY everything else
quote:I give up. Trying to post in image in a thread where I've failed compounds the massive fail. Meta fail.quote:this. so much this.
always pay for timing belt service - but DIY everything else
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There is an old joke that 100 years ago an engineer's wife ran off with a mechanic and engineers have held a grudge ever since.
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You can pretty much disassemble a LS motor with a 8mm, 10mm, 13mm, & 15mm. Only fasteners I can think of that aren't in the above is the crank bolt & knock sensors.
quote:I havent used an SAE socket on anything american built after around 1995.
American vehicles piss me off more than any of them. At least with Japanese, Korean or European I know I'm using a metric socket set. With American vehicles, you need standard and metric, and both at the same time for the same bolts that hold the same bracket on.
quote:Not every engine... there seems to be three sets of "standard" metric sizes used (different hex bolt head sizes for the same threads):quote:
You can pretty much disassemble a LS motor with a 8mm, 10mm, 13mm, & 15mm. Only fasteners I can think of that aren't in the above is the crank bolt & knock sensors.
Silvy, you can dissasemble most any car engine on the planet with those sizes. I would wear out those size in 1/4 inch drive every 6 months. Snap-On man kept them in stock for me
quote:This is why....
You haven't worked on a Jeep, brah