How to start DIY
#21
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: How to start DIY
Bill, why are you being a total ------- by changing your online name again?
You figure we want to see more of your insanity?
Just go away, you have lost your mind and I for one am not interested in
reading posts by insane people.
Mike
L.W. (Bill) ------ III wrote:
You figure we want to see more of your insanity?
Just go away, you have lost your mind and I for one am not interested in
reading posts by insane people.
Mike
L.W. (Bill) ------ III wrote:
#22
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: How to start DIY
For those of us who have done oil changes and spark plug changes a
thousand times they are really simple, for someone who has done nothing
more complicated than putting gas in their Jeep they are something new
and they may have heard horror stories about "professionals" at places
like Jiffy Lube doing oil changes and ruining engines.
Just with an oil change... what filter do you use, how do you get the
old filter off, any tricks to putting the new one on, getting the drain
plug out, what do you do with the old, what do you drain it into...
If you've never done anything like this it can be intimidating and why
not ask the experts?
Everyone has to start somewhere, and oil changes are an excellent place
to start.
Jeff DeWitt
Jeff Strickland wrote:
> It's all hard if you have to ask.
>
>
> Fuel injector cleaning is pouring a can of injector cleaner into the gas
> tank, or having it pumped directly into the injector rail.
>
> Engine decarb is where you suck a cleaner through an unused vacuum port
> on the intake manifold. Transmission fluid works good here, but makes a
> huge cloud of smoke that your neighbors may not appreciate. Water seems
> to work as well, and creates fewer complaints.
>
> I'm not going to talk about an oil change. If you can't do this without
> asking, you should not be doing any of this.
>
> Tire rotation. See my comments on the oil change.
>
> Manual transmission service is a bit of a PIA. You need to remove a
> drain plug from the bottom of the transmission and a fill plug from the
> side. When the draining is done, put the drain plug back in and fill
> through thte fill hole until the fluid spills out, then put the fill
> hole plug back in.
>
> Spark plugs are right up there with rotating tires and changing oil --
> if you gotta ask ...
>
>
>
>
> "Sean" <guo.xiaoyong@gmail.com> wrote in message
> news:1191008070.447625.158040@50g2000hsm.googlegro ups.com...
>> I just owned my first car (95 jeep wrangler, 2.5L).
>> Which one of the following is easy to do?
>>
>> Fuel Inujection cleaning
>> Engine Decarb
>> oil change
>> tire rotation
>> manual tran service
>> spark plugs
>>
>
thousand times they are really simple, for someone who has done nothing
more complicated than putting gas in their Jeep they are something new
and they may have heard horror stories about "professionals" at places
like Jiffy Lube doing oil changes and ruining engines.
Just with an oil change... what filter do you use, how do you get the
old filter off, any tricks to putting the new one on, getting the drain
plug out, what do you do with the old, what do you drain it into...
If you've never done anything like this it can be intimidating and why
not ask the experts?
Everyone has to start somewhere, and oil changes are an excellent place
to start.
Jeff DeWitt
Jeff Strickland wrote:
> It's all hard if you have to ask.
>
>
> Fuel injector cleaning is pouring a can of injector cleaner into the gas
> tank, or having it pumped directly into the injector rail.
>
> Engine decarb is where you suck a cleaner through an unused vacuum port
> on the intake manifold. Transmission fluid works good here, but makes a
> huge cloud of smoke that your neighbors may not appreciate. Water seems
> to work as well, and creates fewer complaints.
>
> I'm not going to talk about an oil change. If you can't do this without
> asking, you should not be doing any of this.
>
> Tire rotation. See my comments on the oil change.
>
> Manual transmission service is a bit of a PIA. You need to remove a
> drain plug from the bottom of the transmission and a fill plug from the
> side. When the draining is done, put the drain plug back in and fill
> through thte fill hole until the fluid spills out, then put the fill
> hole plug back in.
>
> Spark plugs are right up there with rotating tires and changing oil --
> if you gotta ask ...
>
>
>
>
> "Sean" <guo.xiaoyong@gmail.com> wrote in message
> news:1191008070.447625.158040@50g2000hsm.googlegro ups.com...
>> I just owned my first car (95 jeep wrangler, 2.5L).
>> Which one of the following is easy to do?
>>
>> Fuel Inujection cleaning
>> Engine Decarb
>> oil change
>> tire rotation
>> manual tran service
>> spark plugs
>>
>
#23
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: How to start DIY
For those of us who have done oil changes and spark plug changes a
thousand times they are really simple, for someone who has done nothing
more complicated than putting gas in their Jeep they are something new
and they may have heard horror stories about "professionals" at places
like Jiffy Lube doing oil changes and ruining engines.
Just with an oil change... what filter do you use, how do you get the
old filter off, any tricks to putting the new one on, getting the drain
plug out, what do you do with the old, what do you drain it into...
If you've never done anything like this it can be intimidating and why
not ask the experts?
Everyone has to start somewhere, and oil changes are an excellent place
to start.
Jeff DeWitt
Jeff Strickland wrote:
> It's all hard if you have to ask.
>
>
> Fuel injector cleaning is pouring a can of injector cleaner into the gas
> tank, or having it pumped directly into the injector rail.
>
> Engine decarb is where you suck a cleaner through an unused vacuum port
> on the intake manifold. Transmission fluid works good here, but makes a
> huge cloud of smoke that your neighbors may not appreciate. Water seems
> to work as well, and creates fewer complaints.
>
> I'm not going to talk about an oil change. If you can't do this without
> asking, you should not be doing any of this.
>
> Tire rotation. See my comments on the oil change.
>
> Manual transmission service is a bit of a PIA. You need to remove a
> drain plug from the bottom of the transmission and a fill plug from the
> side. When the draining is done, put the drain plug back in and fill
> through thte fill hole until the fluid spills out, then put the fill
> hole plug back in.
>
> Spark plugs are right up there with rotating tires and changing oil --
> if you gotta ask ...
>
>
>
>
> "Sean" <guo.xiaoyong@gmail.com> wrote in message
> news:1191008070.447625.158040@50g2000hsm.googlegro ups.com...
>> I just owned my first car (95 jeep wrangler, 2.5L).
>> Which one of the following is easy to do?
>>
>> Fuel Inujection cleaning
>> Engine Decarb
>> oil change
>> tire rotation
>> manual tran service
>> spark plugs
>>
>
thousand times they are really simple, for someone who has done nothing
more complicated than putting gas in their Jeep they are something new
and they may have heard horror stories about "professionals" at places
like Jiffy Lube doing oil changes and ruining engines.
Just with an oil change... what filter do you use, how do you get the
old filter off, any tricks to putting the new one on, getting the drain
plug out, what do you do with the old, what do you drain it into...
If you've never done anything like this it can be intimidating and why
not ask the experts?
Everyone has to start somewhere, and oil changes are an excellent place
to start.
Jeff DeWitt
Jeff Strickland wrote:
> It's all hard if you have to ask.
>
>
> Fuel injector cleaning is pouring a can of injector cleaner into the gas
> tank, or having it pumped directly into the injector rail.
>
> Engine decarb is where you suck a cleaner through an unused vacuum port
> on the intake manifold. Transmission fluid works good here, but makes a
> huge cloud of smoke that your neighbors may not appreciate. Water seems
> to work as well, and creates fewer complaints.
>
> I'm not going to talk about an oil change. If you can't do this without
> asking, you should not be doing any of this.
>
> Tire rotation. See my comments on the oil change.
>
> Manual transmission service is a bit of a PIA. You need to remove a
> drain plug from the bottom of the transmission and a fill plug from the
> side. When the draining is done, put the drain plug back in and fill
> through thte fill hole until the fluid spills out, then put the fill
> hole plug back in.
>
> Spark plugs are right up there with rotating tires and changing oil --
> if you gotta ask ...
>
>
>
>
> "Sean" <guo.xiaoyong@gmail.com> wrote in message
> news:1191008070.447625.158040@50g2000hsm.googlegro ups.com...
>> I just owned my first car (95 jeep wrangler, 2.5L).
>> Which one of the following is easy to do?
>>
>> Fuel Inujection cleaning
>> Engine Decarb
>> oil change
>> tire rotation
>> manual tran service
>> spark plugs
>>
>
#24
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: How to start DIY
For those of us who have done oil changes and spark plug changes a
thousand times they are really simple, for someone who has done nothing
more complicated than putting gas in their Jeep they are something new
and they may have heard horror stories about "professionals" at places
like Jiffy Lube doing oil changes and ruining engines.
Just with an oil change... what filter do you use, how do you get the
old filter off, any tricks to putting the new one on, getting the drain
plug out, what do you do with the old, what do you drain it into...
If you've never done anything like this it can be intimidating and why
not ask the experts?
Everyone has to start somewhere, and oil changes are an excellent place
to start.
Jeff DeWitt
Jeff Strickland wrote:
> It's all hard if you have to ask.
>
>
> Fuel injector cleaning is pouring a can of injector cleaner into the gas
> tank, or having it pumped directly into the injector rail.
>
> Engine decarb is where you suck a cleaner through an unused vacuum port
> on the intake manifold. Transmission fluid works good here, but makes a
> huge cloud of smoke that your neighbors may not appreciate. Water seems
> to work as well, and creates fewer complaints.
>
> I'm not going to talk about an oil change. If you can't do this without
> asking, you should not be doing any of this.
>
> Tire rotation. See my comments on the oil change.
>
> Manual transmission service is a bit of a PIA. You need to remove a
> drain plug from the bottom of the transmission and a fill plug from the
> side. When the draining is done, put the drain plug back in and fill
> through thte fill hole until the fluid spills out, then put the fill
> hole plug back in.
>
> Spark plugs are right up there with rotating tires and changing oil --
> if you gotta ask ...
>
>
>
>
> "Sean" <guo.xiaoyong@gmail.com> wrote in message
> news:1191008070.447625.158040@50g2000hsm.googlegro ups.com...
>> I just owned my first car (95 jeep wrangler, 2.5L).
>> Which one of the following is easy to do?
>>
>> Fuel Inujection cleaning
>> Engine Decarb
>> oil change
>> tire rotation
>> manual tran service
>> spark plugs
>>
>
thousand times they are really simple, for someone who has done nothing
more complicated than putting gas in their Jeep they are something new
and they may have heard horror stories about "professionals" at places
like Jiffy Lube doing oil changes and ruining engines.
Just with an oil change... what filter do you use, how do you get the
old filter off, any tricks to putting the new one on, getting the drain
plug out, what do you do with the old, what do you drain it into...
If you've never done anything like this it can be intimidating and why
not ask the experts?
Everyone has to start somewhere, and oil changes are an excellent place
to start.
Jeff DeWitt
Jeff Strickland wrote:
> It's all hard if you have to ask.
>
>
> Fuel injector cleaning is pouring a can of injector cleaner into the gas
> tank, or having it pumped directly into the injector rail.
>
> Engine decarb is where you suck a cleaner through an unused vacuum port
> on the intake manifold. Transmission fluid works good here, but makes a
> huge cloud of smoke that your neighbors may not appreciate. Water seems
> to work as well, and creates fewer complaints.
>
> I'm not going to talk about an oil change. If you can't do this without
> asking, you should not be doing any of this.
>
> Tire rotation. See my comments on the oil change.
>
> Manual transmission service is a bit of a PIA. You need to remove a
> drain plug from the bottom of the transmission and a fill plug from the
> side. When the draining is done, put the drain plug back in and fill
> through thte fill hole until the fluid spills out, then put the fill
> hole plug back in.
>
> Spark plugs are right up there with rotating tires and changing oil --
> if you gotta ask ...
>
>
>
>
> "Sean" <guo.xiaoyong@gmail.com> wrote in message
> news:1191008070.447625.158040@50g2000hsm.googlegro ups.com...
>> I just owned my first car (95 jeep wrangler, 2.5L).
>> Which one of the following is easy to do?
>>
>> Fuel Inujection cleaning
>> Engine Decarb
>> oil change
>> tire rotation
>> manual tran service
>> spark plugs
>>
>
#25
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: How to start DIY
For those of us who have done oil changes and spark plug changes a
thousand times they are really simple, for someone who has done nothing
more complicated than putting gas in their Jeep they are something new
and they may have heard horror stories about "professionals" at places
like Jiffy Lube doing oil changes and ruining engines.
Just with an oil change... what filter do you use, how do you get the
old filter off, any tricks to putting the new one on, getting the drain
plug out, what do you do with the old, what do you drain it into...
If you've never done anything like this it can be intimidating and why
not ask the experts?
Everyone has to start somewhere, and oil changes are an excellent place
to start.
Jeff DeWitt
Jeff Strickland wrote:
> It's all hard if you have to ask.
>
>
> Fuel injector cleaning is pouring a can of injector cleaner into the gas
> tank, or having it pumped directly into the injector rail.
>
> Engine decarb is where you suck a cleaner through an unused vacuum port
> on the intake manifold. Transmission fluid works good here, but makes a
> huge cloud of smoke that your neighbors may not appreciate. Water seems
> to work as well, and creates fewer complaints.
>
> I'm not going to talk about an oil change. If you can't do this without
> asking, you should not be doing any of this.
>
> Tire rotation. See my comments on the oil change.
>
> Manual transmission service is a bit of a PIA. You need to remove a
> drain plug from the bottom of the transmission and a fill plug from the
> side. When the draining is done, put the drain plug back in and fill
> through thte fill hole until the fluid spills out, then put the fill
> hole plug back in.
>
> Spark plugs are right up there with rotating tires and changing oil --
> if you gotta ask ...
>
>
>
>
> "Sean" <guo.xiaoyong@gmail.com> wrote in message
> news:1191008070.447625.158040@50g2000hsm.googlegro ups.com...
>> I just owned my first car (95 jeep wrangler, 2.5L).
>> Which one of the following is easy to do?
>>
>> Fuel Inujection cleaning
>> Engine Decarb
>> oil change
>> tire rotation
>> manual tran service
>> spark plugs
>>
>
thousand times they are really simple, for someone who has done nothing
more complicated than putting gas in their Jeep they are something new
and they may have heard horror stories about "professionals" at places
like Jiffy Lube doing oil changes and ruining engines.
Just with an oil change... what filter do you use, how do you get the
old filter off, any tricks to putting the new one on, getting the drain
plug out, what do you do with the old, what do you drain it into...
If you've never done anything like this it can be intimidating and why
not ask the experts?
Everyone has to start somewhere, and oil changes are an excellent place
to start.
Jeff DeWitt
Jeff Strickland wrote:
> It's all hard if you have to ask.
>
>
> Fuel injector cleaning is pouring a can of injector cleaner into the gas
> tank, or having it pumped directly into the injector rail.
>
> Engine decarb is where you suck a cleaner through an unused vacuum port
> on the intake manifold. Transmission fluid works good here, but makes a
> huge cloud of smoke that your neighbors may not appreciate. Water seems
> to work as well, and creates fewer complaints.
>
> I'm not going to talk about an oil change. If you can't do this without
> asking, you should not be doing any of this.
>
> Tire rotation. See my comments on the oil change.
>
> Manual transmission service is a bit of a PIA. You need to remove a
> drain plug from the bottom of the transmission and a fill plug from the
> side. When the draining is done, put the drain plug back in and fill
> through thte fill hole until the fluid spills out, then put the fill
> hole plug back in.
>
> Spark plugs are right up there with rotating tires and changing oil --
> if you gotta ask ...
>
>
>
>
> "Sean" <guo.xiaoyong@gmail.com> wrote in message
> news:1191008070.447625.158040@50g2000hsm.googlegro ups.com...
>> I just owned my first car (95 jeep wrangler, 2.5L).
>> Which one of the following is easy to do?
>>
>> Fuel Inujection cleaning
>> Engine Decarb
>> oil change
>> tire rotation
>> manual tran service
>> spark plugs
>>
>
#26
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: How to start DIY
I guess the point I was trying to make is that if one is just getting
started doing this stuff, it is best to get a friend or relative to teach
the procedure. I am not suggesting that if one has not got the knowledge,
they should simply throw in the towel and never learn. I'm suggesting that
one can not ask for such a fundamental eductaion on a newsgroup.
I think that there is a certain hands-on quality that is missing from
usenet. The OP asked a question that is akin to the automotive equivelent
to, how do I make the bed? We can describe the steps, but the lesson is
better learned through hands-on experience. The projects are not hard, but
they are technical, and having the stuff shown is better than reading about
it.
I suppose that my, "if you gotta ask ..." comment is misconstrued. Sorry. I
guess that if you gotta ask, you should ask a friend or relative that can
come over and walk you through it.
As for which oil filter (or any other part, for that matter), that question
can only be answered by looking in the parts catalog. My daughters can come
home with the right filters for the car because they know how to read the
catalog.
"Jeff DeWitt" <JeffDeWitt@nc.rr.com> wrote in message
news:46ffcbeb$0$19578$4c368faf@roadrunner.com...
> For those of us who have done oil changes and spark plug changes a
> thousand times they are really simple, for someone who has done nothing
> more complicated than putting gas in their Jeep they are something new and
> they may have heard horror stories about "professionals" at places like
> Jiffy Lube doing oil changes and ruining engines.
>
> Just with an oil change... what filter do you use, how do you get the old
> filter off, any tricks to putting the new one on, getting the drain plug
> out, what do you do with the old, what do you drain it into...
>
> If you've never done anything like this it can be intimidating and why not
> ask the experts?
>
> Everyone has to start somewhere, and oil changes are an excellent place to
> start.
>
> Jeff DeWitt
>
> Jeff Strickland wrote:
>> It's all hard if you have to ask.
>>
>>
>> Fuel injector cleaning is pouring a can of injector cleaner into the gas
>> tank, or having it pumped directly into the injector rail.
>>
>> Engine decarb is where you suck a cleaner through an unused vacuum port
>> on the intake manifold. Transmission fluid works good here, but makes a
>> huge cloud of smoke that your neighbors may not appreciate. Water seems
>> to work as well, and creates fewer complaints.
>>
>> I'm not going to talk about an oil change. If you can't do this without
>> asking, you should not be doing any of this.
>>
>> Tire rotation. See my comments on the oil change.
>>
>> Manual transmission service is a bit of a PIA. You need to remove a drain
>> plug from the bottom of the transmission and a fill plug from the side.
>> When the draining is done, put the drain plug back in and fill through
>> thte fill hole until the fluid spills out, then put the fill hole plug
>> back in.
>>
>> Spark plugs are right up there with rotating tires and changing oil --
>> if you gotta ask ...
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> "Sean" <guo.xiaoyong@gmail.com> wrote in message
>> news:1191008070.447625.158040@50g2000hsm.googlegro ups.com...
>>> I just owned my first car (95 jeep wrangler, 2.5L).
>>> Which one of the following is easy to do?
>>>
>>> Fuel Inujection cleaning
>>> Engine Decarb
>>> oil change
>>> tire rotation
>>> manual tran service
>>> spark plugs
>>>
>>
started doing this stuff, it is best to get a friend or relative to teach
the procedure. I am not suggesting that if one has not got the knowledge,
they should simply throw in the towel and never learn. I'm suggesting that
one can not ask for such a fundamental eductaion on a newsgroup.
I think that there is a certain hands-on quality that is missing from
usenet. The OP asked a question that is akin to the automotive equivelent
to, how do I make the bed? We can describe the steps, but the lesson is
better learned through hands-on experience. The projects are not hard, but
they are technical, and having the stuff shown is better than reading about
it.
I suppose that my, "if you gotta ask ..." comment is misconstrued. Sorry. I
guess that if you gotta ask, you should ask a friend or relative that can
come over and walk you through it.
As for which oil filter (or any other part, for that matter), that question
can only be answered by looking in the parts catalog. My daughters can come
home with the right filters for the car because they know how to read the
catalog.
"Jeff DeWitt" <JeffDeWitt@nc.rr.com> wrote in message
news:46ffcbeb$0$19578$4c368faf@roadrunner.com...
> For those of us who have done oil changes and spark plug changes a
> thousand times they are really simple, for someone who has done nothing
> more complicated than putting gas in their Jeep they are something new and
> they may have heard horror stories about "professionals" at places like
> Jiffy Lube doing oil changes and ruining engines.
>
> Just with an oil change... what filter do you use, how do you get the old
> filter off, any tricks to putting the new one on, getting the drain plug
> out, what do you do with the old, what do you drain it into...
>
> If you've never done anything like this it can be intimidating and why not
> ask the experts?
>
> Everyone has to start somewhere, and oil changes are an excellent place to
> start.
>
> Jeff DeWitt
>
> Jeff Strickland wrote:
>> It's all hard if you have to ask.
>>
>>
>> Fuel injector cleaning is pouring a can of injector cleaner into the gas
>> tank, or having it pumped directly into the injector rail.
>>
>> Engine decarb is where you suck a cleaner through an unused vacuum port
>> on the intake manifold. Transmission fluid works good here, but makes a
>> huge cloud of smoke that your neighbors may not appreciate. Water seems
>> to work as well, and creates fewer complaints.
>>
>> I'm not going to talk about an oil change. If you can't do this without
>> asking, you should not be doing any of this.
>>
>> Tire rotation. See my comments on the oil change.
>>
>> Manual transmission service is a bit of a PIA. You need to remove a drain
>> plug from the bottom of the transmission and a fill plug from the side.
>> When the draining is done, put the drain plug back in and fill through
>> thte fill hole until the fluid spills out, then put the fill hole plug
>> back in.
>>
>> Spark plugs are right up there with rotating tires and changing oil --
>> if you gotta ask ...
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> "Sean" <guo.xiaoyong@gmail.com> wrote in message
>> news:1191008070.447625.158040@50g2000hsm.googlegro ups.com...
>>> I just owned my first car (95 jeep wrangler, 2.5L).
>>> Which one of the following is easy to do?
>>>
>>> Fuel Inujection cleaning
>>> Engine Decarb
>>> oil change
>>> tire rotation
>>> manual tran service
>>> spark plugs
>>>
>>
#27
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: How to start DIY
I guess the point I was trying to make is that if one is just getting
started doing this stuff, it is best to get a friend or relative to teach
the procedure. I am not suggesting that if one has not got the knowledge,
they should simply throw in the towel and never learn. I'm suggesting that
one can not ask for such a fundamental eductaion on a newsgroup.
I think that there is a certain hands-on quality that is missing from
usenet. The OP asked a question that is akin to the automotive equivelent
to, how do I make the bed? We can describe the steps, but the lesson is
better learned through hands-on experience. The projects are not hard, but
they are technical, and having the stuff shown is better than reading about
it.
I suppose that my, "if you gotta ask ..." comment is misconstrued. Sorry. I
guess that if you gotta ask, you should ask a friend or relative that can
come over and walk you through it.
As for which oil filter (or any other part, for that matter), that question
can only be answered by looking in the parts catalog. My daughters can come
home with the right filters for the car because they know how to read the
catalog.
"Jeff DeWitt" <JeffDeWitt@nc.rr.com> wrote in message
news:46ffcbeb$0$19578$4c368faf@roadrunner.com...
> For those of us who have done oil changes and spark plug changes a
> thousand times they are really simple, for someone who has done nothing
> more complicated than putting gas in their Jeep they are something new and
> they may have heard horror stories about "professionals" at places like
> Jiffy Lube doing oil changes and ruining engines.
>
> Just with an oil change... what filter do you use, how do you get the old
> filter off, any tricks to putting the new one on, getting the drain plug
> out, what do you do with the old, what do you drain it into...
>
> If you've never done anything like this it can be intimidating and why not
> ask the experts?
>
> Everyone has to start somewhere, and oil changes are an excellent place to
> start.
>
> Jeff DeWitt
>
> Jeff Strickland wrote:
>> It's all hard if you have to ask.
>>
>>
>> Fuel injector cleaning is pouring a can of injector cleaner into the gas
>> tank, or having it pumped directly into the injector rail.
>>
>> Engine decarb is where you suck a cleaner through an unused vacuum port
>> on the intake manifold. Transmission fluid works good here, but makes a
>> huge cloud of smoke that your neighbors may not appreciate. Water seems
>> to work as well, and creates fewer complaints.
>>
>> I'm not going to talk about an oil change. If you can't do this without
>> asking, you should not be doing any of this.
>>
>> Tire rotation. See my comments on the oil change.
>>
>> Manual transmission service is a bit of a PIA. You need to remove a drain
>> plug from the bottom of the transmission and a fill plug from the side.
>> When the draining is done, put the drain plug back in and fill through
>> thte fill hole until the fluid spills out, then put the fill hole plug
>> back in.
>>
>> Spark plugs are right up there with rotating tires and changing oil --
>> if you gotta ask ...
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> "Sean" <guo.xiaoyong@gmail.com> wrote in message
>> news:1191008070.447625.158040@50g2000hsm.googlegro ups.com...
>>> I just owned my first car (95 jeep wrangler, 2.5L).
>>> Which one of the following is easy to do?
>>>
>>> Fuel Inujection cleaning
>>> Engine Decarb
>>> oil change
>>> tire rotation
>>> manual tran service
>>> spark plugs
>>>
>>
started doing this stuff, it is best to get a friend or relative to teach
the procedure. I am not suggesting that if one has not got the knowledge,
they should simply throw in the towel and never learn. I'm suggesting that
one can not ask for such a fundamental eductaion on a newsgroup.
I think that there is a certain hands-on quality that is missing from
usenet. The OP asked a question that is akin to the automotive equivelent
to, how do I make the bed? We can describe the steps, but the lesson is
better learned through hands-on experience. The projects are not hard, but
they are technical, and having the stuff shown is better than reading about
it.
I suppose that my, "if you gotta ask ..." comment is misconstrued. Sorry. I
guess that if you gotta ask, you should ask a friend or relative that can
come over and walk you through it.
As for which oil filter (or any other part, for that matter), that question
can only be answered by looking in the parts catalog. My daughters can come
home with the right filters for the car because they know how to read the
catalog.
"Jeff DeWitt" <JeffDeWitt@nc.rr.com> wrote in message
news:46ffcbeb$0$19578$4c368faf@roadrunner.com...
> For those of us who have done oil changes and spark plug changes a
> thousand times they are really simple, for someone who has done nothing
> more complicated than putting gas in their Jeep they are something new and
> they may have heard horror stories about "professionals" at places like
> Jiffy Lube doing oil changes and ruining engines.
>
> Just with an oil change... what filter do you use, how do you get the old
> filter off, any tricks to putting the new one on, getting the drain plug
> out, what do you do with the old, what do you drain it into...
>
> If you've never done anything like this it can be intimidating and why not
> ask the experts?
>
> Everyone has to start somewhere, and oil changes are an excellent place to
> start.
>
> Jeff DeWitt
>
> Jeff Strickland wrote:
>> It's all hard if you have to ask.
>>
>>
>> Fuel injector cleaning is pouring a can of injector cleaner into the gas
>> tank, or having it pumped directly into the injector rail.
>>
>> Engine decarb is where you suck a cleaner through an unused vacuum port
>> on the intake manifold. Transmission fluid works good here, but makes a
>> huge cloud of smoke that your neighbors may not appreciate. Water seems
>> to work as well, and creates fewer complaints.
>>
>> I'm not going to talk about an oil change. If you can't do this without
>> asking, you should not be doing any of this.
>>
>> Tire rotation. See my comments on the oil change.
>>
>> Manual transmission service is a bit of a PIA. You need to remove a drain
>> plug from the bottom of the transmission and a fill plug from the side.
>> When the draining is done, put the drain plug back in and fill through
>> thte fill hole until the fluid spills out, then put the fill hole plug
>> back in.
>>
>> Spark plugs are right up there with rotating tires and changing oil --
>> if you gotta ask ...
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> "Sean" <guo.xiaoyong@gmail.com> wrote in message
>> news:1191008070.447625.158040@50g2000hsm.googlegro ups.com...
>>> I just owned my first car (95 jeep wrangler, 2.5L).
>>> Which one of the following is easy to do?
>>>
>>> Fuel Inujection cleaning
>>> Engine Decarb
>>> oil change
>>> tire rotation
>>> manual tran service
>>> spark plugs
>>>
>>
#28
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: How to start DIY
I guess the point I was trying to make is that if one is just getting
started doing this stuff, it is best to get a friend or relative to teach
the procedure. I am not suggesting that if one has not got the knowledge,
they should simply throw in the towel and never learn. I'm suggesting that
one can not ask for such a fundamental eductaion on a newsgroup.
I think that there is a certain hands-on quality that is missing from
usenet. The OP asked a question that is akin to the automotive equivelent
to, how do I make the bed? We can describe the steps, but the lesson is
better learned through hands-on experience. The projects are not hard, but
they are technical, and having the stuff shown is better than reading about
it.
I suppose that my, "if you gotta ask ..." comment is misconstrued. Sorry. I
guess that if you gotta ask, you should ask a friend or relative that can
come over and walk you through it.
As for which oil filter (or any other part, for that matter), that question
can only be answered by looking in the parts catalog. My daughters can come
home with the right filters for the car because they know how to read the
catalog.
"Jeff DeWitt" <JeffDeWitt@nc.rr.com> wrote in message
news:46ffcbeb$0$19578$4c368faf@roadrunner.com...
> For those of us who have done oil changes and spark plug changes a
> thousand times they are really simple, for someone who has done nothing
> more complicated than putting gas in their Jeep they are something new and
> they may have heard horror stories about "professionals" at places like
> Jiffy Lube doing oil changes and ruining engines.
>
> Just with an oil change... what filter do you use, how do you get the old
> filter off, any tricks to putting the new one on, getting the drain plug
> out, what do you do with the old, what do you drain it into...
>
> If you've never done anything like this it can be intimidating and why not
> ask the experts?
>
> Everyone has to start somewhere, and oil changes are an excellent place to
> start.
>
> Jeff DeWitt
>
> Jeff Strickland wrote:
>> It's all hard if you have to ask.
>>
>>
>> Fuel injector cleaning is pouring a can of injector cleaner into the gas
>> tank, or having it pumped directly into the injector rail.
>>
>> Engine decarb is where you suck a cleaner through an unused vacuum port
>> on the intake manifold. Transmission fluid works good here, but makes a
>> huge cloud of smoke that your neighbors may not appreciate. Water seems
>> to work as well, and creates fewer complaints.
>>
>> I'm not going to talk about an oil change. If you can't do this without
>> asking, you should not be doing any of this.
>>
>> Tire rotation. See my comments on the oil change.
>>
>> Manual transmission service is a bit of a PIA. You need to remove a drain
>> plug from the bottom of the transmission and a fill plug from the side.
>> When the draining is done, put the drain plug back in and fill through
>> thte fill hole until the fluid spills out, then put the fill hole plug
>> back in.
>>
>> Spark plugs are right up there with rotating tires and changing oil --
>> if you gotta ask ...
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> "Sean" <guo.xiaoyong@gmail.com> wrote in message
>> news:1191008070.447625.158040@50g2000hsm.googlegro ups.com...
>>> I just owned my first car (95 jeep wrangler, 2.5L).
>>> Which one of the following is easy to do?
>>>
>>> Fuel Inujection cleaning
>>> Engine Decarb
>>> oil change
>>> tire rotation
>>> manual tran service
>>> spark plugs
>>>
>>
started doing this stuff, it is best to get a friend or relative to teach
the procedure. I am not suggesting that if one has not got the knowledge,
they should simply throw in the towel and never learn. I'm suggesting that
one can not ask for such a fundamental eductaion on a newsgroup.
I think that there is a certain hands-on quality that is missing from
usenet. The OP asked a question that is akin to the automotive equivelent
to, how do I make the bed? We can describe the steps, but the lesson is
better learned through hands-on experience. The projects are not hard, but
they are technical, and having the stuff shown is better than reading about
it.
I suppose that my, "if you gotta ask ..." comment is misconstrued. Sorry. I
guess that if you gotta ask, you should ask a friend or relative that can
come over and walk you through it.
As for which oil filter (or any other part, for that matter), that question
can only be answered by looking in the parts catalog. My daughters can come
home with the right filters for the car because they know how to read the
catalog.
"Jeff DeWitt" <JeffDeWitt@nc.rr.com> wrote in message
news:46ffcbeb$0$19578$4c368faf@roadrunner.com...
> For those of us who have done oil changes and spark plug changes a
> thousand times they are really simple, for someone who has done nothing
> more complicated than putting gas in their Jeep they are something new and
> they may have heard horror stories about "professionals" at places like
> Jiffy Lube doing oil changes and ruining engines.
>
> Just with an oil change... what filter do you use, how do you get the old
> filter off, any tricks to putting the new one on, getting the drain plug
> out, what do you do with the old, what do you drain it into...
>
> If you've never done anything like this it can be intimidating and why not
> ask the experts?
>
> Everyone has to start somewhere, and oil changes are an excellent place to
> start.
>
> Jeff DeWitt
>
> Jeff Strickland wrote:
>> It's all hard if you have to ask.
>>
>>
>> Fuel injector cleaning is pouring a can of injector cleaner into the gas
>> tank, or having it pumped directly into the injector rail.
>>
>> Engine decarb is where you suck a cleaner through an unused vacuum port
>> on the intake manifold. Transmission fluid works good here, but makes a
>> huge cloud of smoke that your neighbors may not appreciate. Water seems
>> to work as well, and creates fewer complaints.
>>
>> I'm not going to talk about an oil change. If you can't do this without
>> asking, you should not be doing any of this.
>>
>> Tire rotation. See my comments on the oil change.
>>
>> Manual transmission service is a bit of a PIA. You need to remove a drain
>> plug from the bottom of the transmission and a fill plug from the side.
>> When the draining is done, put the drain plug back in and fill through
>> thte fill hole until the fluid spills out, then put the fill hole plug
>> back in.
>>
>> Spark plugs are right up there with rotating tires and changing oil --
>> if you gotta ask ...
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> "Sean" <guo.xiaoyong@gmail.com> wrote in message
>> news:1191008070.447625.158040@50g2000hsm.googlegro ups.com...
>>> I just owned my first car (95 jeep wrangler, 2.5L).
>>> Which one of the following is easy to do?
>>>
>>> Fuel Inujection cleaning
>>> Engine Decarb
>>> oil change
>>> tire rotation
>>> manual tran service
>>> spark plugs
>>>
>>
#29
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: How to start DIY
I guess the point I was trying to make is that if one is just getting
started doing this stuff, it is best to get a friend or relative to teach
the procedure. I am not suggesting that if one has not got the knowledge,
they should simply throw in the towel and never learn. I'm suggesting that
one can not ask for such a fundamental eductaion on a newsgroup.
I think that there is a certain hands-on quality that is missing from
usenet. The OP asked a question that is akin to the automotive equivelent
to, how do I make the bed? We can describe the steps, but the lesson is
better learned through hands-on experience. The projects are not hard, but
they are technical, and having the stuff shown is better than reading about
it.
I suppose that my, "if you gotta ask ..." comment is misconstrued. Sorry. I
guess that if you gotta ask, you should ask a friend or relative that can
come over and walk you through it.
As for which oil filter (or any other part, for that matter), that question
can only be answered by looking in the parts catalog. My daughters can come
home with the right filters for the car because they know how to read the
catalog.
"Jeff DeWitt" <JeffDeWitt@nc.rr.com> wrote in message
news:46ffcbeb$0$19578$4c368faf@roadrunner.com...
> For those of us who have done oil changes and spark plug changes a
> thousand times they are really simple, for someone who has done nothing
> more complicated than putting gas in their Jeep they are something new and
> they may have heard horror stories about "professionals" at places like
> Jiffy Lube doing oil changes and ruining engines.
>
> Just with an oil change... what filter do you use, how do you get the old
> filter off, any tricks to putting the new one on, getting the drain plug
> out, what do you do with the old, what do you drain it into...
>
> If you've never done anything like this it can be intimidating and why not
> ask the experts?
>
> Everyone has to start somewhere, and oil changes are an excellent place to
> start.
>
> Jeff DeWitt
>
> Jeff Strickland wrote:
>> It's all hard if you have to ask.
>>
>>
>> Fuel injector cleaning is pouring a can of injector cleaner into the gas
>> tank, or having it pumped directly into the injector rail.
>>
>> Engine decarb is where you suck a cleaner through an unused vacuum port
>> on the intake manifold. Transmission fluid works good here, but makes a
>> huge cloud of smoke that your neighbors may not appreciate. Water seems
>> to work as well, and creates fewer complaints.
>>
>> I'm not going to talk about an oil change. If you can't do this without
>> asking, you should not be doing any of this.
>>
>> Tire rotation. See my comments on the oil change.
>>
>> Manual transmission service is a bit of a PIA. You need to remove a drain
>> plug from the bottom of the transmission and a fill plug from the side.
>> When the draining is done, put the drain plug back in and fill through
>> thte fill hole until the fluid spills out, then put the fill hole plug
>> back in.
>>
>> Spark plugs are right up there with rotating tires and changing oil --
>> if you gotta ask ...
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> "Sean" <guo.xiaoyong@gmail.com> wrote in message
>> news:1191008070.447625.158040@50g2000hsm.googlegro ups.com...
>>> I just owned my first car (95 jeep wrangler, 2.5L).
>>> Which one of the following is easy to do?
>>>
>>> Fuel Inujection cleaning
>>> Engine Decarb
>>> oil change
>>> tire rotation
>>> manual tran service
>>> spark plugs
>>>
>>
started doing this stuff, it is best to get a friend or relative to teach
the procedure. I am not suggesting that if one has not got the knowledge,
they should simply throw in the towel and never learn. I'm suggesting that
one can not ask for such a fundamental eductaion on a newsgroup.
I think that there is a certain hands-on quality that is missing from
usenet. The OP asked a question that is akin to the automotive equivelent
to, how do I make the bed? We can describe the steps, but the lesson is
better learned through hands-on experience. The projects are not hard, but
they are technical, and having the stuff shown is better than reading about
it.
I suppose that my, "if you gotta ask ..." comment is misconstrued. Sorry. I
guess that if you gotta ask, you should ask a friend or relative that can
come over and walk you through it.
As for which oil filter (or any other part, for that matter), that question
can only be answered by looking in the parts catalog. My daughters can come
home with the right filters for the car because they know how to read the
catalog.
"Jeff DeWitt" <JeffDeWitt@nc.rr.com> wrote in message
news:46ffcbeb$0$19578$4c368faf@roadrunner.com...
> For those of us who have done oil changes and spark plug changes a
> thousand times they are really simple, for someone who has done nothing
> more complicated than putting gas in their Jeep they are something new and
> they may have heard horror stories about "professionals" at places like
> Jiffy Lube doing oil changes and ruining engines.
>
> Just with an oil change... what filter do you use, how do you get the old
> filter off, any tricks to putting the new one on, getting the drain plug
> out, what do you do with the old, what do you drain it into...
>
> If you've never done anything like this it can be intimidating and why not
> ask the experts?
>
> Everyone has to start somewhere, and oil changes are an excellent place to
> start.
>
> Jeff DeWitt
>
> Jeff Strickland wrote:
>> It's all hard if you have to ask.
>>
>>
>> Fuel injector cleaning is pouring a can of injector cleaner into the gas
>> tank, or having it pumped directly into the injector rail.
>>
>> Engine decarb is where you suck a cleaner through an unused vacuum port
>> on the intake manifold. Transmission fluid works good here, but makes a
>> huge cloud of smoke that your neighbors may not appreciate. Water seems
>> to work as well, and creates fewer complaints.
>>
>> I'm not going to talk about an oil change. If you can't do this without
>> asking, you should not be doing any of this.
>>
>> Tire rotation. See my comments on the oil change.
>>
>> Manual transmission service is a bit of a PIA. You need to remove a drain
>> plug from the bottom of the transmission and a fill plug from the side.
>> When the draining is done, put the drain plug back in and fill through
>> thte fill hole until the fluid spills out, then put the fill hole plug
>> back in.
>>
>> Spark plugs are right up there with rotating tires and changing oil --
>> if you gotta ask ...
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> "Sean" <guo.xiaoyong@gmail.com> wrote in message
>> news:1191008070.447625.158040@50g2000hsm.googlegro ups.com...
>>> I just owned my first car (95 jeep wrangler, 2.5L).
>>> Which one of the following is easy to do?
>>>
>>> Fuel Inujection cleaning
>>> Engine Decarb
>>> oil change
>>> tire rotation
>>> manual tran service
>>> spark plugs
>>>
>>
#30
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: How to start DIY
Ok, I'm with you for oil changes (amazing the people who don't prime the oil
filter or put oil on the seal !), but tyre rotation ???? If you can't change
a wheel, you have no place being on the road. Knowing where to put oil /
water and change a tyre is part of the driving test here.
Dave Milne
"Jeff DeWitt" <JeffDeWitt@nc.rr.com> wrote in message
news:46ffcbeb$0$19578$4c368faf@roadrunner.com...
> For those of us who have done oil changes and spark plug changes a
> thousand times they are really simple, for someone who has done nothing
> more complicated than putting gas in their Jeep they are something new
> and they may have heard horror stories about "professionals" at places
> like Jiffy Lube doing oil changes and ruining engines.
>
> Just with an oil change... what filter do you use, how do you get the
> old filter off, any tricks to putting the new one on, getting the drain
> plug out, what do you do with the old, what do you drain it into...
>
> If you've never done anything like this it can be intimidating and why
> not ask the experts?
>
> Everyone has to start somewhere, and oil changes are an excellent place
> to start.
>
> Jeff DeWitt
>
> Jeff Strickland wrote:
> > It's all hard if you have to ask.
> >
> >
> > Fuel injector cleaning is pouring a can of injector cleaner into the gas
> > tank, or having it pumped directly into the injector rail.
> >
> > Engine decarb is where you suck a cleaner through an unused vacuum port
> > on the intake manifold. Transmission fluid works good here, but makes a
> > huge cloud of smoke that your neighbors may not appreciate. Water seems
> > to work as well, and creates fewer complaints.
> >
> > I'm not going to talk about an oil change. If you can't do this without
> > asking, you should not be doing any of this.
> >
> > Tire rotation. See my comments on the oil change.
> >
> > Manual transmission service is a bit of a PIA. You need to remove a
> > drain plug from the bottom of the transmission and a fill plug from the
> > side. When the draining is done, put the drain plug back in and fill
> > through thte fill hole until the fluid spills out, then put the fill
> > hole plug back in.
> >
> > Spark plugs are right up there with rotating tires and changing oil --
> > if you gotta ask ...
> >
> >
> >
> >
> > "Sean" <guo.xiaoyong@gmail.com> wrote in message
> > news:1191008070.447625.158040@50g2000hsm.googlegro ups.com...
> >> I just owned my first car (95 jeep wrangler, 2.5L).
> >> Which one of the following is easy to do?
> >>
> >> Fuel Inujection cleaning
> >> Engine Decarb
> >> oil change
> >> tire rotation
> >> manual tran service
> >> spark plugs
> >>
> >
filter or put oil on the seal !), but tyre rotation ???? If you can't change
a wheel, you have no place being on the road. Knowing where to put oil /
water and change a tyre is part of the driving test here.
Dave Milne
"Jeff DeWitt" <JeffDeWitt@nc.rr.com> wrote in message
news:46ffcbeb$0$19578$4c368faf@roadrunner.com...
> For those of us who have done oil changes and spark plug changes a
> thousand times they are really simple, for someone who has done nothing
> more complicated than putting gas in their Jeep they are something new
> and they may have heard horror stories about "professionals" at places
> like Jiffy Lube doing oil changes and ruining engines.
>
> Just with an oil change... what filter do you use, how do you get the
> old filter off, any tricks to putting the new one on, getting the drain
> plug out, what do you do with the old, what do you drain it into...
>
> If you've never done anything like this it can be intimidating and why
> not ask the experts?
>
> Everyone has to start somewhere, and oil changes are an excellent place
> to start.
>
> Jeff DeWitt
>
> Jeff Strickland wrote:
> > It's all hard if you have to ask.
> >
> >
> > Fuel injector cleaning is pouring a can of injector cleaner into the gas
> > tank, or having it pumped directly into the injector rail.
> >
> > Engine decarb is where you suck a cleaner through an unused vacuum port
> > on the intake manifold. Transmission fluid works good here, but makes a
> > huge cloud of smoke that your neighbors may not appreciate. Water seems
> > to work as well, and creates fewer complaints.
> >
> > I'm not going to talk about an oil change. If you can't do this without
> > asking, you should not be doing any of this.
> >
> > Tire rotation. See my comments on the oil change.
> >
> > Manual transmission service is a bit of a PIA. You need to remove a
> > drain plug from the bottom of the transmission and a fill plug from the
> > side. When the draining is done, put the drain plug back in and fill
> > through thte fill hole until the fluid spills out, then put the fill
> > hole plug back in.
> >
> > Spark plugs are right up there with rotating tires and changing oil --
> > if you gotta ask ...
> >
> >
> >
> >
> > "Sean" <guo.xiaoyong@gmail.com> wrote in message
> > news:1191008070.447625.158040@50g2000hsm.googlegro ups.com...
> >> I just owned my first car (95 jeep wrangler, 2.5L).
> >> Which one of the following is easy to do?
> >>
> >> Fuel Inujection cleaning
> >> Engine Decarb
> >> oil change
> >> tire rotation
> >> manual tran service
> >> spark plugs
> >>
> >