Simple tips

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Soldier777

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Found this a while ago thought I would share

1. Not Using The Parking Brake

It’s a little pedal near your left leg, or a lever on your right. Yes, that mysterious device that you’ve never used is actually valuable. When you park on an incline, or even on fairly steady ground, without using the parking brake, you’re putting all of the stress of the car on your transmission. The only thing inside that transmission holding your car steady is a little pin called a parking pawl. By using the parking brake, you lock up the non-drive wheels as well as the drive wheels and take the stress off of the transmission. It’ll add years of life to your cars transmission. Just remember to disengage it before you start driving again.
2. Not Coming To A Complete Stop Before Shifting

So you’re in a rush, and you pull out of a parking space and shift into drive while the car is still coasting backwards. You’ve just added months of wear to your transmission in seconds. Inside your transmission is a complex set of gears, when you shift without stopping like that, you’re asking those gears to work as your brakes, which puts an amazing amount of stress on such a small area. You can also damage your drive shafts, the things that send power to the wheels, by shifting that way. After a while, it’ll lead to sloppy suspension handling, and a worn out transmission.
3. Riding The Brakes Down A Hill

If you are driving on a hill that goes on for a while, you’ll want to avoid riding the brake the whole time. Alternate between braking and letting off the brake so you don’t heat up and wear out your brake pads. It’s a common mistake, because it feels like the safest way to maneuver down a hill, but if the hill is sufficiently long, you can end up almost totally wearing out your pads, since as they heat up, they wear faster.
4. Forgetting To Change The Oil

You need to change your oil every 5,000 miles at the most. That’s really all there is to it. I actually read a blog online that said you can wait until your oil light comes on to change your oil. I’ve worked in the automotive business… by the time your oil light comes on, the oil inside your engine has turned into jet black molasses and is of no use to your engine. In the short term, I suppose it’s not that important, but more frequent changes can actually double the life of your car and greatly increase its performance.
5. Pressure Washing The Engine

I can respect a person’s desire to want a clean engine. It gets grimy under there and a guy with a pressure washer is a dangerous thing for grime – you want to point it at anything even slightly dirty. But a grimy engine that runs right is better than a clean engine that doesn’t run at all. And if you spray a high powered jet of water around rubber seals and hoses and electrical bits, you’re bound to dislodge something important. A modern engine is a complex thing, all manner of sensors and wiring harnesses and components, and it’s no place for a jet of high pressure water. A regular garden hose is OK if you want to wash it down, just be careful with the high pressure business.
6. Starting Your Car The Wrong Way

It seems simple, but you can make a big difference by turning off your radio, wipers, climate control, all of those accessories, when you start the car. Most of the wear on the engine happens when you start the car, and by turning off those accessories, your engine doesn’t have to work as hard when starting.

Another thing people do is revving the engine in the winter. This actually doesn’t help “warm up” the car. Although it does technically make the engine hotter, it’s not the kind of “warming up” that you want. Revving your engine in the winter causes extreme temperature changes right away, which is actually the opposite of what you want. When you start the car, the oil hasn’t yet worked its way through the system, so the engine is working without lubricant. The right way to do it is just let the car sit and idle for about 30 seconds to a minute at the least.
7. Ignoring Your Car’s Sounds

Every sound your car makes means something, if you pay attention, your car can usually tell you exactly what needs fixing. Those squeaking brakes mean you need new pads, and if you ignore that sound, eventually you’ll hear scraping metal, which means you need new rotors, and if you ignore that, you’ll eventually hear the sound of your own scream as you lose your brakes completely and fly off a cliff in a spectacular fireball of death. It’s more common than you think. Listen to your car.
8. Letting The Interior Go

You’re in a rush again, and you eat most of your disgusting egg and cheese bagel, and toss the rest in the wrapper on the passenger seat. Lovely. You know who you are, your car is filthy, never been vacuumed, 15 air fresheners hang on the mirror, and yet, no air freshener made by mortal man can stop the sickening wind within your car. You need to clean it. If you don’t vacuum your carpets and clean out the garbage every so often, you’ll develop a smell that is impossible to destroy. I’ve worked in the auto salvage business, and I know that there exist smells that are so obscene, so inhuman, that no shampoo can vanquish them. The only way to stop them is to never let them develop. Clean your car, for the sake of all mankind.
9. Running Your Car Down To Empty

There’s actually a bit of a debate about this one. The old wisdom says if your car gets down to E, the sediment in your tank will get sucked into the system and foul your fuel injectors. Although some mechanics says thats not true. Either way, running down to E does pose other problems. You cut the life of the fuel pump considerably, since the fuel actually cools the pump.

An interesting note: Most cars can drive another 60 miles+ after they hit Empty, automakers call this extra gas the “buffer zone”. US cars have the largest “buffer zone” of any vehicles. German drivers, for instance, like to know exactly how much gas in is the car, so their “buffer zone” between the gauge’s E and the actual empty tank is much smaller.
 

NewbieVet

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very interesting!!!!! Thanks for sharing! I also heard you should always turn off your a/c before starting the truck and roll down the windows so the internal temp matches the external temp...
 

Explor2Exped

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Great post man! I like the parking brake one since my house is in an incline.

Ughhh I hate the parking brake one.

I have such a bad memory that whenever I do use I usually forget to pop it off, drive around with it on until I notice and hear a problem then freak out. hah...

A lot of great tips though.
 

SOLISIMO

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The parking brake one, do you put the parking brake on before you put the car in park or does it matter?
 

Remo

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When I park, I put it into P, keep my foot on the brake and put on the parking brake firmly at the same time. This makes it so it doesn't roll that inch or two after you take the foot off the break. When it rolls like that, thats when all the pressure gets put on that pin. Keep the pressure on the brakes, instead--they are cheaper to replace.

Also, if parking on flat ground, I put the truck into neutral and ease off the brakes so it settles into a low spot on the pavement or grass. Then there will be no force on the transmission (and you won't even need the parking brake).
 

Remo

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And for the record, I always come to a complete stop before shifting.

And I always turn everything off (wipers, radio, lights, A/C, heat, etc) when shutting off or turning on the truck (thanks OCD!, lol).

I'm glad to know I'm doing things correctly. It's good to hear that every once and a while--I certainly don't hear it enough from the girlfriend! LOL
 

tallsville

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good info. guess i should use the ebrake. but it so fun scary the gf when the car creeps that extra inch. but of course im an ass and wait until we are getting out before i let go of brake. so it creeps as she is getting out.
 
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Soldier777

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I am the same I put it park and while still holding the brake I hit the ebrake. I started turning everything off before starting about 4 months ago and I thought the starter was going out... since that 4 months never had 1 problem.
 

Stock99EB

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good info. guess i should use the ebrake. but it so fun scary the gf when the car creeps that extra inch. but of course im an ass and wait until we are getting out before i let go of brake. so it creeps as she is getting out.

Hope this isn't copywrited/copywritten cuz I'm steal'in it....good one Talls!
 

SOLISIMO

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My concern with the ebrake is that the odds are 100% that when my wife drives the car shes gonna forget and have a trail of smoke comming from the tires
 

panda24619

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i always do the e brake. even thought mine dosent work for SHIT! i can cruise. press down on it and not slow down. haha it dose hold if im on an incline. but again i have a habit of just driving onto the curb. putting my front tire down. the rear tire down, if it went up also. then turning the wheel. letting go of the brake. let it slide on to the curb and press the brake, put it into park and press down the e brake. my mom used to drive with it on all the time. i just need to go an adjust it.
 
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Word of caution on the ebrake for those in the rust belt areas. Check your cables for signs of heavy rust and or fraying BEFORE you use the ebrake. It could seize up and not release if the ebrake has never been used before.
 

2000eb

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two things.... my ebrake doesnt work shortly after i bought the truck i used it once and then the started makin noise i pulled off rear rotors and the pad had fallen off metal backin so i pulled pad out etc. havent gotten around to replacing plus the pedal return spring doesnt work anyway. and my dad is horrible on replacing **** he waits till it goes out and calls me my brother or AAA. he always says it will last longer. but then he tell me my truck is falling apart and i need to replace it cause i fix every sound. i drove his truck around the block the other day and told him really? it needs alignment bad shifts really hard brakes dont work till pedal is all the way down and then it still wont lock the tires. i said i would never be able to put my family in that and feel safe let alone myself
 
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