making something difficult look easy is the sign of a true pro. My new favorite quote and philosophy going forward, "if you've done it right and you're left with extra parts, just throw em' away".
Eric I have been watching your videos for the past 5 years before I even had a car. Now I have my own car and have the knowledge to confidently do repairs myself. From diagnosing a small EVAP leak from the gas cap to replacing brake pads / rotors and control arm bushings thanks to your videos. Keep it up man!
Eric makes it look so easy...I know, I used to have a job at Ford design. I was the guy who had to add sharp edges onto everything under the hood. You can thank me for all those mangled knuckles. It was just a job, I'm not proud of what I did. When I got promoted, they put me in charge of ensuring, that you couldn't just fix something. 2 hours of disassembly, to do a 10 minute fix. Again, It was just a job, I'm not proud of what I did. Now I work for a Chinese firm. I make sure, at least half of what we ship is broken or has pieces missing or is the wrong part. Again, It is just a job, I'm not proud of what I do.
"Get them from Nissan". I love the way you made mention of that as opposed to saying "get them from Dorman" which no one in their right mind that doesn't want to waist lots of time chasing their tail would do.
Man I love working on cars as a hobby but NOT as a job. With that said I would love the opportunity to work for Eric O. The wealth of knowledge and fun.
This was an easy peasy job !!! Loosen a few bolts, lift this, move that, and there they are !!!! Remove and replace !!!! Put it all back together, test it, then shut the hood - job well done !!!!! Now it's time to write up the bill and stick it to the customer for this simple easy job !!!!!! No shop supplies used except for the catch all diapers !!! That grueling back breaking exhausting labor charge gets you all the time !!!!! A few more of these jobs and Mrs. O. will have that diamond ring with a rock on it the size of a disco ball just a sparkling away with light reflection beams !!!!! What husbands do for their wife - love is grand !!!!!! Well done Eric, thanks for the tips and tricks !!! On to the next one !!!!!!!
New Sub. Watched hundreds of hours. Love them all. Your cheap. Ice cream money?? cookies?? When my guy works my truck the shop gets broasted chicken dinners and pizza. Thanks for the intro to Pine Hollow. All the brakes I have watched, no two have been the same. Never boring, always fun and informative. Dang, you make me believe "I could do it."
In my opinion dude you're going about it the right way and funnily enough it's the same way I've done that job in the past keep up the excellent work thanks for taking the time to make a video, I know you're really busy and these take time. So if nobody else says it I know I have thank you 😁
There,...THERE is the BEST comment I have seen. Nissan engines and solenoids will not tolerate the common lack of SIMPLE maintenance. I know, I own 4 of them.
At 17:00 he mentions that the oil only has about 1k on it, seems like it'd be a waste of good oil and unnecessary in this situation. Over 3k or so and I'd probably agree.
My daughters Sonata just had the P0014, and I just replaced that, I have been watching you for a while now, and have learned a lot of trouble shooting, thanks!
If I need mine replaced it could just be my sensor but mine isn't from lack of maintenance. I do have 420k on my car and jts acting funky now but idk what the problem is. I get my car dealer oil changed every 5k miles. My oil never really looks dirty.
Outstanding DIY video, thanks for taking the time and sharing it I was able to follow you step by step and it was dead on the money car runs like a champ.
Eric, I did this without removing any of that, you can access it from the back and run a long ratchet extension and to unplug it, just use a long screwdriver and push it away lol. You can also do it from under the car with a long extension and likewise with the connector, they are a pain to press but with a flat screwdriver it comes off.
Thank you. Was hoping for a comment about coming from underneath. Wanted to give credit where it's do. Can even test there other than haven to go to the computer cause it has no other connectors in between 👍
What year was your car? Mine's a 2008 and some things are different than the 2014. The power steering reservoir is where the windshield washer fluid reservoir is, so if I have to remove it to remove the engine mount, that will be a pain and messy. I think I might be able to get to one of the solenoids at the back of the engine from the top side, but I can't even see the others, because there is a big metal plate that is part of the engine mount covering the end of the engine. I'm going to try to find a video for the year of my car.
@@ILGuy2012not sure what car this was that I used the technique on but had to do it for a 2017 Nissan Rogue a couple months ago and I was able to remove the connector with two long screwdriver, one to press the tab and another to push away. Then unbolted the 10mm bolt from under the car at an angle and pushed away the solenoid with a screwdriver. To install, you need a second hand from the top to have someone hold the solenoid while the other pushes it from underneath.
That auto focus started messing with me when the motor mount was coming out...thought I was having a stroke or something. Love me sum SMA videos Happy New Year!
Customer used to get 0300 all the time on a 2009 lancer ralliart that had an aftermarket short ram intake without a tune. Refused to believe that it was the intake until I bought a stock one from the scrapyard out of pocket. Ran just fine. He ended up paying for the stock intake, and a tune from another source. Because Foxtrot Uniform CARB.
Eric, we need to see some more interaction with your beautiful family. Not a whole episode, of course, but a few seconds every couple of vids. The "realness" of your vids are a huge part of their appeal. And, oh, by the way...didn't the last two solenoids need a spritz of oil on their O-rings, too? :)
Thanks for making another great video. I never can understand the dislikes? What could someone not like about his videos? There funny, Educational, no crappy music. Just great videos & camera work. That's why a 1/2 million subscribed & counting. BTW no phone or compressor running today? LOL
When I read your post it made me realize I installed a cheap one on my sis's 04 altima. It runs like it has a dead cyl. I'm looking for a quality one now.
Errr... that's not how this works. I'd rather blame 1. camera ALC that aims to keep audio levels fairly constant and 2. little omnidirectional electret mics in the camera not hearing like we do (response is shaped by HRTF, and humans have some extraordinarily powerful processing going on between the ears). We would be perceiving much less of the reverberant sound if we actually were in the space. Position alone is an important factor already. Besides, I would take a car mechanic's opinion on what is and isn't loud with a grain of salt... their hearing takes quite a beating. Microphones such as found in video cameras don't have such a thing as a "preferred pickup pitch" at all (that would sound terrible) - actually they tend to have a fairly even frequency response all things considered. Response might be going south below 100-200 Hz, and in the highs you often see some degree of boost, but the important midrange is generally covered well. You never know what the room is going to do, of course, and the average workshop has truly lousy acoustics with Eric's being no exception. Looks like you can actually buy various acoustic elements that would be useful for soundproofing a workshop, like ceiling baffles and adhesive foam elements, but I guess the cost of these does add up to a point where a lot of shop owners would shy away from them, even though a substantial reduction in ambient noise makes for a far more amenable working environment.
I argue with my Dad all the time about which components to replace when doing a job. He wants bare minimum part replacement AND I say replace components that function together. i.e. 1 coil out of 2 goes south. replace both. He says only 1 bad, I say both have 200k on them, buy both. lol
Thats a tricky one. With the low quality of new parts, its quite possible to get bad parts out of the box. Andrew Camarata viewpoint is only fix whats broken.
@@mph5896 I used to throw a bunch of parts at my vehicles when stuff broke as "preventative maintenance" but aftermarket parts really suck shit lately. I needed to replace a spring on my suburban so I rebuilt the front end with new "OEM" delco parts and they've all shit the bed in less than 10k miles.
@@mph5896 True! I've have my fair share of broken 'new' parts. I keep parts that still have a little life left in them in case I'm stuck out of town. i.e. belts, hoses, coils, plug wires.
@@mph5896 That's is tricky, look at all the work to just get to the parts. Replace only the bad one the 2 weeks later one of the others goes bad. All that work all over again Labor wise, could be cheaper to replace all 3 in the first place
Really enjoy you guys, I am getting ready to rebuild a 1991 Pathfinder my daughter bought new when she was 16. Now she wants it back new. She put 350,000 mi. on it so needs a rebuild. Keep up the good work, thanks again. KR
I own a 15 Altima. I'll admit I like my Rav4 much more, but Nissans are not quite as bad as the internet says. They are supremely comfortable (basically luxury car comfort), surprisingly fast and very fuel efficient. Comfort alone can matter to someone with a bad back or are very big. Ive owned Chevy, Fords, Chryslers... the Nissan is still wayyyy better than those, and actually fairly reliable considering how much they cost to own.
@@NoName-gv6nm You have been very lucky if that is really the case with your Nissan. Overall they are not reliable as they age compared to Toyota. They are considered to have below average reliability by most consumer ratings and mechanics that work on a multi line of vehicles. But it's your money.
Nice vid, you alerted me to the fact there was more than one, which Alldata and Identifix did not, but I just lifted the vehicle up on a lift, removed the right front tire, remove the piece of plastic out of the way, and you can get to all 3 with no issues.
Merry Christmas to the Eric O family!!! Enjoy all your content. Seem to be doing more common issues lately that's easier for a novice like me to understand.
Only complaint about this vid. not enough SMA vids lately. I get it work/customers comes first then you tube. But I do miss Mr O knowledge and expertise when it comes to working on cars. Once again excellent video. Tks for explaining into detail the repair and for the tricks as well. Happy new year Mr O and family. 👍👍
TaintedMojo I just throw it up on the lift, get a bunch of extensions with a 1/4 ratchet and go in from the wheel well.. In/out 10mins.. The first time doing one will make you want to throw tools though
I'm a Nissan guy at heart. My first car was a 96 200SX SE 5 speed. That was back in 06. I've had 6 more of them since. But I also had an 04 Infiniti i35 and it would throw a code for a vvt solenoid, so I took them both off and thoroughly cleaned them and got new gaskets from Nissan. They were still good, but as soon as I was due for an oil change the light would come back on for it. And I'd change the oil and it was off again until the next oil change. Absolutely loved that car, then some asswipe at a gas station rammed into the passenger front corner and took off and never got him or his info, and the car just was never right after that to me. I drove it for awhile and then sold it. Had 240k on it then in early 2019 and it's still on the road here today and no idea how many miles are on it now. But anyone with an older Nissan or Infiniti, if you get vvt codes, pull them and clean them and put a new gasket on and change your oil. The solenoids come apart too so you can see the condition of them. Obviously if there's serious signs of wear change them.
My Friends Call Me John I work at a Nissan dealer.. Can confirm lol.. Nice thing is the warranty on them is pretty damn good.. And it's select years/models that are the most common for it.. If you own one, change the fluid regularity, run a good tranny cooler and you should be mint
Followed this video to a T and everything went smooth. Definitely recommend a short ratchet wrench for the 10mm bolts on the solenoid. Make sure motor mounts are aligned because aluminum isn't forgiving. Also here's prayers these dorman solenoids I put on work for the rest of my ownership!
Thank you Eric for the video. My grandson has the same engine in an Altima and the procedure for their replacement will be invaluable if the time comes. Hope you have a happy new year.
I usually do a double oil change on these cam timing solenoid issues first before replacing them...the customer is usually way overdue anways so the oil is pitch black and or low. Drain the oil/fill with conventional run for 20 mins/ drain oil replace filter/ fill with synthetic and it's happy trails
scowell Not much to show on these ones.. Basically has a spring and a plunger inside it, they wear out the bore and get jammed so they stop moving.. That and residue can make them stick.. Very seldom have I ever been able to just clean one and pop it back in.. They tend to work until they don't lol
Great video as always Dr. O., I saw an Elf run by at one point early on. Hopefully, Scotty Kilmer will watch your videos and learn how to do a great video without sounding like he is a pitchman for Flex Seal. Keep it up, wishing you and your family a great 2021.
Eric, I just wanted to take a minute and wish you and your family and everyone at s.m.a. a merry christmas and a happy , prosperous, and covid free new year. Been watching your channel now for about 4 or 5 years now , and you , Ivan , and Cuba's channel are the best. Stay covid safe.
First off Happy New Year! Need to make sure I remember to stop and get someone...will need a scape goat, excellent. Yep, my wife (without my knowledge) bought a 2015 model of this car. It's for our teen daughter. Already had to do some AC work on it. Nice to know we've got this to look forward to. Thanks for the vid.
Liked. Great video as always 👌. My car also required replacement of both intake and exhaust solenoids, it is much easier that this though, right under the beauty cover.
In a somewhat recent video I saw you using what appeared to be the Autel MK908 scan tool. We are looking for a few scan tools for our small shop and were wondering what you thought of this tool. Anyway, I will wait for your response off the air. LOL and keep the great videos coming please. We all enjoy them very much.
I've replaced the solenoid on my 2006 Toyota Corolla (210000km on the clock). I was replacing the alternator, and I removed some electrical connector plugs and pulled back the wiring harness to get access for the swap, and afterwards I went to put the plug back on the solenoid, and the connector on the solenoid snapped clean off! Rookie error! Should have known that the plastic would be brittle. Got a new one from the dealer and all good in the end but it cost more than $70.... :-) I will say, though, that changing the solenoid on the Corolla is much easier than on that Nissan!
Whats the difference between a mechanic and a good mechanic? A mechanic has leftover parts but a good mechanic doesn't need them. Or something along those lines.
Eric...Merry Christmas 🎋🌃 for your family and you. Due respect for your What u have done for Viewers and customers Worldwide. I keep watching your Job from overseas.
Man down...so hard finding those parts and tools that drop. In the meantime I fixed my P0706 on my 2005 Passat Wagon as holidays project....if you can do it I can do it..all the best
No jeep hat, no jiggly bits, no brake clean, and no classic reach-arounds? This is an IMPOSTER!! LOL
You got Ugga duggas. And bofa dees nuts. I mean it sounds like Eric.
I was thinking the SAME thing!!!!
...just a blank hat.
But we did at least get a Boffa deez nuts lol
Uhhh... I was just about to agree with you... then the air compressor kicked in - nup... that’s an original EricO vid!
I can learn more from this channel in 10 minutes, than I can from Scotty' s in 10 hours .
Great job SIR
Scotty just pushing merchandise anymore. Hate to guess what he's worth.
Scotty loser...and all his followers
I HAVE A BLOW UP WAVEY 20 FOOT AT THE SHOP(WE NAMED IT SCOTTY)
making something difficult look easy is the sign of a true pro. My new favorite quote and philosophy going forward, "if you've done it right and you're left with extra parts, just throw em' away".
Eric I have been watching your videos for the past 5 years before I even had a car. Now I have my own car and have the knowledge to confidently do repairs myself. From diagnosing a small EVAP leak from the gas cap to replacing brake pads / rotors and control arm bushings thanks to your videos. Keep it up man!
Hope you and your family had a great Christmas. Love watching you diagnosed and repair problems. Thanks for sharing....
This was perfect and I was able to resolve my issue today. Took me 2 hours start to finish and took my time to keep track of all of the fasteners.
True story , I'm doing it as it we speak...it's like he was in the room instructing, you can tell they have good shop comrodary.
Eric makes it look so easy...I know, I used to have a job at Ford design. I was the guy who had to add sharp edges onto everything under the hood.
You can thank me for all those mangled knuckles. It was just a job, I'm not proud of what I did.
When I got promoted, they put me in charge of ensuring, that you couldn't just fix something.
2 hours of disassembly, to do a 10 minute fix. Again, It was just a job, I'm not proud of what I did.
Now I work for a Chinese firm. I make sure, at least half of what we ship is broken or has pieces missing or is the wrong part.
Again, It is just a job, I'm not proud of what I do.
"Get them from Nissan". I love the way you made mention of that as opposed to saying "get them from Dorman" which no one in their right mind that doesn't want to waist lots of time chasing their tail would do.
Nice to see more Nissan content, my wife has a '17 Rogue with the big 2.5 and I have a '19 Infiniti QX60.
That 2.5 motor mount is HUGE.
So, you're telling us your wife went rogue? Sorry to hear that. :)
Man I love working on cars as a hobby but NOT as a job. With that said I would love the opportunity to work for Eric O. The wealth of knowledge and fun.
Did anyone else have a 1 hour 55 minute Ad on here. WTH!!!! Glad to see you back.on Eric.
This was an easy peasy job !!! Loosen a few bolts, lift this, move that, and there they are !!!! Remove and replace !!!! Put it all back together, test it, then shut the hood - job well done !!!!! Now it's time to write up the bill and stick it to the customer for this simple easy job !!!!!! No shop supplies used except for the catch all diapers !!! That grueling back breaking exhausting labor charge gets you all the time !!!!! A few more of these jobs and Mrs. O. will have that diamond ring with a rock on it the size of a disco ball just a sparkling away with light reflection beams !!!!! What husbands do for their wife - love is grand !!!!!! Well done Eric, thanks for the tips and tricks !!! On to the next one !!!!!!!
Stop being weird
Best thing about December so far? SMA videos. Thanks for that. ^.^
Great vid! Just wrapped up the job on my girls car thanks to this and you just saved us soooo much!
New Sub. Watched hundreds of hours. Love them all. Your cheap. Ice cream money?? cookies?? When my guy works my truck the shop gets broasted chicken dinners and pizza. Thanks for the intro to Pine Hollow. All the brakes I have watched, no two have been the same. Never boring, always fun and informative. Dang, you make me believe "I could do it."
My favourite car diagnostic channels are this one and Diagnose Dan.
Very different in style, but both excellent.
Appreciate the video and the comments. Replaced the 3 as suggested and problem appears to be fixed.
In my opinion dude you're going about it the right way and funnily enough it's the same way I've done that job in the past keep up the excellent work thanks for taking the time to make a video, I know you're really busy and these take time. So if nobody else says it I know I have thank you 😁
When i worked as a tech at a GM dealership. We always changed the oil when doing cam solenoid replacements.
There,...THERE is the BEST comment I have seen. Nissan engines and solenoids will not tolerate the common lack of SIMPLE maintenance. I know, I own 4 of them.
At 17:00 he mentions that the oil only has about 1k on it, seems like it'd be a waste of good oil and unnecessary in this situation. Over 3k or so and I'd probably agree.
My daughters Sonata just had the P0014, and I just replaced that, I have been watching you for a while now, and have learned a lot of trouble shooting, thanks!
Trumplicans for SMA. Have a good New Year
Clean oil and quality oil filter with frequent changes does wonders for a engine.
Most people seem to think 1 oil change per year is fine. I change my oil when I get bored.
If I need mine replaced it could just be my sensor but mine isn't from lack of maintenance. I do have 420k on my car and jts acting funky now but idk what the problem is. I get my car dealer oil changed every 5k miles. My oil never really looks dirty.
Outstanding DIY video, thanks for taking the time and sharing it I was able to follow you step by step and it was dead on the money car runs like a champ.
Eric O notification boom I'm in.
Eric, I did this without removing any of that, you can access it from the back and run a long ratchet extension and to unplug it, just use a long screwdriver and push it away lol. You can also do it from under the car with a long extension and likewise with the connector, they are a pain to press but with a flat screwdriver it comes off.
Thank you. Was hoping for a comment about coming from underneath. Wanted to give credit where it's do. Can even test there other than haven to go to the computer cause it has no other connectors in between 👍
What year was your car? Mine's a 2008 and some things are different than the 2014. The power steering reservoir is where the windshield washer fluid reservoir is, so if I have to remove it to remove the engine mount, that will be a pain and messy. I think I might be able to get to one of the solenoids at the back of the engine from the top side, but I can't even see the others, because there is a big metal plate that is part of the engine mount covering the end of the engine. I'm going to try to find a video for the year of my car.
@@ILGuy2012not sure what car this was that I used the technique on but had to do it for a 2017 Nissan Rogue a couple months ago and I was able to remove the connector with two long screwdriver, one to press the tab and another to push away. Then unbolted the 10mm bolt from under the car at an angle and pushed away the solenoid with a screwdriver. To install, you need a second hand from the top to have someone hold the solenoid while the other pushes it from underneath.
@@scientist100 OK, thanks.
Wow..This is why Eric O is the Man..I was gonna say "makes the big bucks"..but he'd say..cheaper than dealer!
That auto focus started messing with me when the motor mount was coming out...thought I was having a stroke or something.
Love me sum SMA videos
Happy New Year!
Need to hear "heres your problem lady" good video Mr. O.
¡Gracias! Me sirvió el video
First!!! Hope you had a wonderful Christmas, Eric!!!
AAAHHHH! SMA withdrawal. I need a video! new brakes, dead battery, no radio; I don't care.
Your knowledge never ceases to amaze me
Customer used to get 0300 all the time on a 2009 lancer ralliart that had an aftermarket short ram intake without a tune. Refused to believe that it was the intake until I bought a stock one from the scrapyard out of pocket. Ran just fine. He ended up paying for the stock intake, and a tune from another source. Because Foxtrot Uniform CARB.
Damn that is a slick shortcut for pulling those solonoids, otherwise that Job will take a lot longer kudos.
That's a lot of work if you don't know what to do. Great video for someone to follow if they don't have a good mechanic to take it to. Well done.
Eric, we need to see some more interaction with your beautiful family. Not a whole episode, of course, but a few seconds every couple of vids. The "realness" of your vids are a huge part of their appeal.
And, oh, by the way...didn't the last two solenoids need a spritz of oil on their O-rings, too? :)
Eric Happy New Year to you and your family! Thank You for everything!
Nicely done as usual Eric.You make everything look easy for sure.
Thanks 👍
Jimthecarguy i like very much your channel Sir! Happy new year to both of you!!
@@armandonika Thank you and Happy New Year to you also
Golden nugget of advise there for every diyer “ if you’ve more than one bolt left, throw the rest away”..so it’s your fault!!!
“Contact” is for hand propping;
Use “Clear” for electric, cartridge,inertia,type (ICE) engine starts.
Thanks for making another great video. I never can understand the dislikes? What could someone not like about his videos? There funny, Educational, no crappy music. Just great videos & camera work. That's why a 1/2 million subscribed & counting. BTW no phone or compressor running today? LOL
Glad you used the Nissan actuators.. I've seen aftermarket from multiple brands that either don't work, or fail very quickly
When I read your post it made me realize I installed a cheap one on my sis's 04 altima. It runs like it has a dead cyl. I'm looking for a quality one now.
I trust you and your family had a fantastic Christmas. I hope 2021 brings you many blessings.
A big DITTO on that good buddy!
The heater seems loud because it is outputting a frequency which is right around or at the microphone's peak pickup pitch. It's not bad though
Errr... that's not how this works. I'd rather blame
1. camera ALC that aims to keep audio levels fairly constant and
2. little omnidirectional electret mics in the camera not hearing like we do (response is shaped by HRTF, and humans have some extraordinarily powerful processing going on between the ears). We would be perceiving much less of the reverberant sound if we actually were in the space. Position alone is an important factor already.
Besides, I would take a car mechanic's opinion on what is and isn't loud with a grain of salt... their hearing takes quite a beating.
Microphones such as found in video cameras don't have such a thing as a "preferred pickup pitch" at all (that would sound terrible) - actually they tend to have a fairly even frequency response all things considered. Response might be going south below 100-200 Hz, and in the highs you often see some degree of boost, but the important midrange is generally covered well. You never know what the room is going to do, of course, and the average workshop has truly lousy acoustics with Eric's being no exception.
Looks like you can actually buy various acoustic elements that would be useful for soundproofing a workshop, like ceiling baffles and adhesive foam elements, but I guess the cost of these does add up to a point where a lot of shop owners would shy away from them, even though a substantial reduction in ambient noise makes for a far more amenable working environment.
I argue with my Dad all the time about which components to replace when doing a job. He wants bare minimum part replacement AND I say replace components that function together. i.e. 1 coil out of 2 goes south. replace both. He says only 1 bad, I say both have 200k on them, buy both. lol
Thats a tricky one. With the low quality of new parts, its quite possible to get bad parts out of the box.
Andrew Camarata viewpoint is only fix whats broken.
@@mph5896 I used to throw a bunch of parts at my vehicles when stuff broke as "preventative maintenance" but aftermarket parts really suck shit lately. I needed to replace a spring on my suburban so I rebuilt the front end with new "OEM" delco parts and they've all shit the bed in less than 10k miles.
@@mph5896 True! I've have my fair share of broken 'new' parts. I keep parts that still have a little life left in them in case I'm stuck out of town. i.e. belts, hoses, coils, plug wires.
As long as you are putting OEM parts in, I agree. If you only have aftermarket, better to rinkydink only one.
@@mph5896
That's is tricky, look at all the work to just get to the parts. Replace only the bad one the 2 weeks later one of the others goes bad. All that work all over again Labor wise, could be cheaper to replace all 3 in the first place
Thanks!
Ha ha ha, love the director's cut card. Christmas present?
Yeah that was great! You need to sell those, Eric!
That was a cool touch Eric.
16 min and 3.2k views. Hats off to you Eric. With the directors clapboard the videos are better👍
Really enjoy you guys, I am getting ready to rebuild a 1991 Pathfinder my daughter bought new when she was 16. Now she wants it back new. She put 350,000 mi. on it so needs a rebuild. Keep up the good work, thanks again. KR
This guys a real mechanic , not a line mechanic with an air wrench. I enjoy your videos . As for modern Nissans , don't buy them.
I own a 15 Altima. I'll admit I like my Rav4 much more, but Nissans are not quite as bad as the internet says. They are supremely comfortable (basically luxury car comfort), surprisingly fast and very fuel efficient. Comfort alone can matter to someone with a bad back or are very big. Ive owned Chevy, Fords, Chryslers... the Nissan is still wayyyy better than those, and actually fairly reliable considering how much they cost to own.
@@NoName-gv6nm You have been very lucky if that is really the case with your Nissan. Overall they are not reliable as they age compared to Toyota. They are considered to have below average reliability by most consumer ratings and mechanics that work on a multi line of vehicles. But it's your money.
@@marcmarini6365 I'd say they're about average in reliability from my experience. But that's just me.
Well look who has returned lol the prodigal son indeed. Welcome back Eric O and I hope you had a very blessed Christmas with your family.
‘Bout time you put out a ‘classic 2.5’ video. Been waitin’ awhile.
Can’t wait on the “classic 1.3 Suzuki” vid! 🤣🤣🤣
Thanks for the video my man! Appreciate it. Mine is insane, literally decides day-to-day how it will run....
Nice vid, you alerted me to the fact there was more than one, which Alldata and Identifix did not, but I just lifted the vehicle up on a lift, removed the right front tire, remove the piece of plastic out of the way, and you can get to all 3 with no issues.
Merry Christmas to the Eric O family!!! Enjoy all your content. Seem to be doing more common issues lately that's easier for a novice like me to understand.
I finally got some nickel plated T pins for troubleshooting and what a difference, thank you for the idea.
Nicely done sir. Thanks Dr. O!
Only complaint about this vid. not enough SMA vids lately. I get it work/customers comes first then you tube. But I do miss Mr O knowledge and expertise when it comes to working on cars.
Once again excellent video. Tks for explaining into detail the repair and for the tricks as well. Happy new year Mr O and family. 👍👍
i hope you and family have a wonderful new year,keep these vid's comeing love them
For a part that’s relatively simple to replace, Nissan sure made it an unholy pain in the ass to get to.
TaintedMojo I just throw it up on the lift, get a bunch of extensions with a 1/4 ratchet and go in from the wheel well.. In/out 10mins.. The first time doing one will make you want to throw tools though
Someone should have the engineers that design these things make the repair once.
@@Mauivegan67 lol hell the altima you have to literally take the whole front bumper off
I'm a Nissan guy at heart. My first car was a 96 200SX SE 5 speed. That was back in 06. I've had 6 more of them since. But I also had an 04 Infiniti i35 and it would throw a code for a vvt solenoid, so I took them both off and thoroughly cleaned them and got new gaskets from Nissan. They were still good, but as soon as I was due for an oil change the light would come back on for it. And I'd change the oil and it was off again until the next oil change. Absolutely loved that car, then some asswipe at a gas station rammed into the passenger front corner and took off and never got him or his info, and the car just was never right after that to me. I drove it for awhile and then sold it. Had 240k on it then in early 2019 and it's still on the road here today and no idea how many miles are on it now. But anyone with an older Nissan or Infiniti, if you get vvt codes, pull them and clean them and put a new gasket on and change your oil. The solenoids come apart too so you can see the condition of them. Obviously if there's serious signs of wear change them.
Nissan owners, never fear, your CVT will go out before you ever need to replace your engine lol
🤣 its funny because its true
True! CVT, Lol Give me a 5 speed Auto any day. ...Except the Honda/Acura disposable Trans. ;)
doesn't Briggs and stratton use CVT's for their riders ?....lol
My Friends Call Me John I work at a Nissan dealer.. Can confirm lol.. Nice thing is the warranty on them is pretty damn good.. And it's select years/models that are the most common for it.. If you own one, change the fluid regularity, run a good tranny cooler and you should be mint
Absolute truth
Welcome back. Hope your New Year is safe, happy and prosperous. Always enjoy your videos.
I think this is the most I've seen you use hand tools. Great video as always.
Dr O, a new vid from you is a holiday treat. Hope you had a great Christmas and have a Happy New Year.
Followed this video to a T and everything went smooth. Definitely recommend a short ratchet wrench for the 10mm bolts on the solenoid. Make sure motor mounts are aligned because aluminum isn't forgiving. Also here's prayers these dorman solenoids I put on work for the rest of my ownership!
Great as always!
Merry Christmas, Happy holidays, and Happy New Year!!
Great video! Keep up the fantastic work. Towing video with your brother is still my favorite.
Hope to see an MR2 come into the shop in the future!
Thank you for sharing Eric O. !
Wow finally. I thought maybe Eric had retired🤣
Good video it really made the process of changing the parts very clear.
liking the vid even before watching, keep up the work !
Thank you Eric for the video. My grandson has the same engine in an Altima and the procedure for their replacement will be invaluable if the time comes. Hope you have a happy new year.
Seriously, just change the oil as recommended, they last 250k and on.
Glad I could help
Thanks for sharing Eric. You and family Happy New Year 😊🇺🇸
Great video as always Eric O @SouthMainAutoRepairLLC
I usually do a double oil change on these cam timing solenoid issues first before replacing them...the customer is usually way overdue anways so the oil is pitch black and or low. Drain the oil/fill with conventional run for 20 mins/ drain oil replace filter/ fill with synthetic and it's happy trails
His videos are like asmr videos they are so relaxing
Love me some SMA! Thanks Mr.O
Missing the 'solenoid on the bench' content! Make it fail for us please!
scowell Not much to show on these ones.. Basically has a spring and a plunger inside it, they wear out the bore and get jammed so they stop moving.. That and residue can make them stick.. Very seldom have I ever been able to just clean one and pop it back in.. They tend to work until they don't lol
Nice job Eric, man I hate working in those tight places.
Great video as always Dr. O., I saw an Elf run by at one point early on. Hopefully, Scotty Kilmer will watch your videos and learn how to do a great video without sounding like he is a pitchman for Flex Seal. Keep it up, wishing you and your family a great 2021.
Eric, I just wanted to take a minute and wish you and your family and everyone at s.m.a. a merry christmas and a happy , prosperous, and covid free new year. Been watching your channel now for about 4 or 5 years now , and you , Ivan , and Cuba's channel are the best. Stay covid safe.
First off Happy New Year! Need to make sure I remember to stop and get someone...will need a scape goat, excellent. Yep, my wife (without my knowledge) bought a 2015 model of this car. It's for our teen daughter. Already had to do some AC work on it. Nice to know we've got this to look forward to. Thanks for the vid.
Liked. Great video as always 👌.
My car also required replacement of both intake and exhaust solenoids, it is much easier that this though, right under the beauty cover.
In a somewhat recent video I saw you using what appeared to be the Autel MK908 scan tool. We are looking for a few scan tools for our small shop and were wondering what you thought of this tool. Anyway, I will wait for your response off the air. LOL and keep the great videos coming please. We all enjoy them very much.
I've replaced the solenoid on my 2006 Toyota Corolla (210000km on the clock). I was replacing the alternator, and I removed some electrical connector plugs and pulled back the wiring harness to get access for the swap, and afterwards I went to put the plug back on the solenoid, and the connector on the solenoid snapped clean off! Rookie error! Should have known that the plastic would be brittle. Got a new one from the dealer and all good in the end but it cost more than $70.... :-) I will say, though, that changing the solenoid on the Corolla is much easier than on that Nissan!
Hope you had a good Christmas and have a good new year thanks for the videos through the years
Miss Marie's road kill special Collin lives to cruise another day!
Thanks for another years worth of info & videos. Hope you and family had a great Christmas, be safe. Regards from Galway, Ireland ;)
My friends altima had the same issue. He just took it back to Nissan under advise from me and had it replaced under powertrain warranty.
Whats the difference between a mechanic and a good mechanic?
A mechanic has leftover parts but a good mechanic doesn't need them.
Or something along those lines.
Who else has seen the movie 'Used Cars' with Kurt Russell?
How high are these prices?????? they're too fricking high!!!!!! Lol!! Happy New Year from Texas!
My all time favorite movie!
Just bought it on a recommendation... I've been told it's hilarious.
Miles of cars!
@@bloodybones63 a mile of cars lol
Eric...Merry Christmas 🎋🌃 for your family and you.
Due respect for your
What u have done for
Viewers and customers
Worldwide.
I keep watching your
Job from overseas.
Man down...so hard finding those parts and tools that drop. In the meantime I fixed my P0706 on my 2005 Passat Wagon as holidays project....if you can do it I can do it..all the best
Always enjoy your posts - thanks for doing it!
Glad you enjoy it!
Thanks, Eric, for sharing another video with us. Belated Merry Christmas, and Happy New Year to you and yours.
Nice of you to spare us a few minutes.
Enjoyed the clapperboard take action
Keep on keeping on