I worked 30 years in a bus garage. When I started we overhauled literally every single part of the bus. We rebuilt 30 amp relays, every part of the engine, brakes, radiator. nothing left our shop to be overhauled. by the time I retired 90% of the benches were empty and all the parts were scrap and replace or send back as cores.All the parts became sealed units with no way to repair or parts available.
To be fair...... An alternator that isn't working usually needs new bearings, and a voltage regulator, and maybe the pulley is worn..... So if four parts have to be replaced.... Just get a new alternator and send in the core.
@@sasquatchrosefartsthe alternator you get is rebuilt from parts stores! Just rebuilt chevy alternator cost me 15 dollars, rebuilt alternator on my dump truck for 22 dollars.
@@sasquatchrosefartsan alternator failure isn’t really what he is talking about. Yes, a wasted 100,000 mile alternator NEEDS to just be changed out. But the overwhelming culmination of down-chain electrical failures related to interlinked systems is unreasonable.
Another thing they did around here was "cash for clunkers." What that did was eliminate almost all the easy to work on cars, leaving only specific desirable cars to survive the crusher.
It took a ton of vehicles directly out of the used market stream. Had to destroy all power trains, eng, trans, diffs etc. They are all now proudly displayed as recycled steel in an abandoned Olympic city.
💯 percent truth!! The whole point was to force all of the non-computerized vehicles off the road AND destroy all of the used parts availability! Curious thing is, it hurt the poorer amongst us the worst, the very people these scoundrels claim to represent! Evil madness!
My brother was dropping a tank on a car to replace the fuel pump, and the gas shot out like a fire hose he said, burnt the shop to the ground, he had 3'rd degree burns on his right arm, but the gas hit the drop light, the bulb exploded, and ignited the gas. Hats off to you guys, he had said for years they are intentionally screwing the 'shade tree mechanics', I believe it.
I'm sorry that happened to him, but likely it was his mistake..there are safe ways to relieve pressure and an incandescent bulb working on fuel is a no go.
@@JamesCat-qx6sbYou do realize back in those days incandescent bulbs in drop lights were pretty much the only affordable thing around right. Accidents like these were the reason lights changed.
@@raymond4648 Early TBI systems used 9 to 12 psi. It was only with port fuel injection that higher pressures were used to prevent vapor lock when hot exhaust spits back out of the intake and hits the injector.
Tony as a retired new car dealer, this was always the manufacture plan. Don’t forget “special tools” we had to buy from the car maker. This made it even harder to work on a car without these tools.
I remember when this was done even on the Allen plug for the Renault 4 oil sump. Of course all us car Diyers ground down something to fit, but it left a sour taste.
I’m an independent Harley mechanic and there are specialty electrical diagnostic tools (breakout boxes) that make an electrical diagnosis much quicker and easier. The Harley manuals even give you the breakout box part numbers but then the dealers won’t sell those tools to anyone because they don’t want the average person to be able to fix their own bikes. Gone are the days of simplicity.
I have been telling buddys to keep these older cars around. iam a master mechanic of 35 years. run my own shop late model parts are horrible and hard to get. And now with the layoffs hard to get factory parts. you better know how to keep this old stuff going or your walking
I’m only 25 and the cars from the 90’s and early 2000s barely even resemble cars these days. I can’t even imagine how much worse it feels growing up in your generation. You guys REALLY had the best cars for the working class. I wish we could go back.
"Things are weird now and they're going to get weirder." This man does not lie! This is the first one of his videos I've seen, and he is 100% correct on both the mechanical front and how we're getting screwed by the corporate/global government.
@@trickyrick8621 just read ur immoral evil leaders that worship money, the end goal is most people gone and robots and brave new world and gataca as the future
Love his videos as well. As a collapse theorist (and practicing Survivalist), he's right: We are collapsing, heading towards a brick wall at 1000 miles an hour. However, on the other side of the die-off, we'll probably go back to the future: The 1870's future. Already operating in the mode Uncle Tony describes: I have two pickups, a 1995 Nissan, and a 1990 Dodge Cummins Diesel. I know every nut and bolt of these vehicles, and don't plan on buying anything newer.
As a mechanic of 34 years I completely agree. We have been getting screwed for years with cars e.g. no drain plugs on trans and diffs, fuel tanks scaring you , no access, special tools, restricted technical data I could go on and on. The technology is over complicated and less reliable now. In addition mechanics have poor pay, poor benefits, poor conditions and have to buy expensive tools, that's why there's a shortage of good mechanics.
I wish hobby groups would arise that could take a popular modern used car, gut all the electronics, and sell a single board computer that could run the engine only off a few sensors like exhaust O2, manifold pressure, and throttle position. Then you can ignore all the fault codes from all the other junk and get running.
It is in every aspect of our lives. A 90 day supply of doxycycline for a fish tank with a “yuck” problem costs $60.00. A 90 day supply RX for human version of doxycycline (exactly the same different color capsule) costs $4,400.00 without health insurance. With health insurance $60.00. See what capitalism is doing to all those with no insurance or really crappy insurance? It’s the same business model forcing the cattle into the chute, with their beef tag identities punched into their ears. Humans are a mere commodity for finance, they won’t hide it with propaganda for much longer, and then their true colors will be on full display for the world to see. It is too late to stop them now.
When a leaking tail light Lense in a pick up truck can cost you over $5000.00 to repair, something is dead wrong !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Auto makers have made it crystal clear, they don't want us working on our own cars, mechanics or otherwise. They want you to just buy a new car once yours is broken. Or take it to them so they can charge you a premium to "fix" it.
I think the end goal is for people to just lease a new car every 5 years. I know people who do that and it's nuts the money they spend. Monthly lease payments forever and ever, increasing every 5 years without end.
Its not the automakers its the European auto alliance thinking its a top notch idea to deliver all these top down approach for every country who needs to achieve netzero. Though netzero is a sales pitch. The issue were facing is not pollution from our scantly dense compared to bigger populations carbon footprint. The ICE vehicles we have now are at the most carbon and pollution free vehicles but they as in EV European lobbyists brainwashing our legislators with "safe sales pitches" while our countrymen will never hear the likes of being able to teach their kids about automotive unless they risk killing they offspring or going bankrupt changing a part. This is what the Europeans wanted though. To have a logistics plan to completely defunc Ford and GM from the US to Australia auto market. Not because its going to scale global emissions but because its going to give more certaintly that the consumers will collectively be dumbed out of choice to never want to work on a car again. Look at these listless social media entrepreneurs all flashing the same electric cars yet the reality of that is any normal person buys one of them realizes the only saving money if something breaks out of warranty or it burns your house down at least the energy you saved in oil an gas can offset the savings you made right? Or the who infrastructure shortfalls of EV charging stations an having all these roman candles all in working ordee hopefully not just in the affluent rich suburbs. Its a nice idea on paper giving these people so much control but ultimately its at the consumers detriment and expense. It means nothing for global netzero emissions esp if the foundation we working with here is so that instead of securing a diverse energy future its basically push all our coal gas an oil to be exported for other countries by destroying our economies an minimizing the publics equity etc. The parts industry for sure are a nail in the coffin what do you ecpect when we let Europeans manage our countries though
My father had an auto repair shop for 40 years, from 1946 to 1986. He got out of the business when he saw this trend escalating. He retired and worked part time outside of the auto repair field. He had no regrets getting away from the business as he saw things continue to get worse.
He should have stayed in the industry and fought this sh8t show and not ran away with his tail betwen his l egs. Things would have been quite different if people did this in the past!
I bought a 1978 Chevy truck 2 years ago, because I wanted a simple replacement for worn out parts. Well it’s not simple when you can’t get parts for a rear full floating axle brake kit. My fix was to go Aftermarket and replace the drums with disc kit. Works great now. These are the kind of choices we will have to make and we all might start looking like Mad Max. See you in Thunder Dome!
Totally agree I have worked at the same Ford Dealer for 33 years and I say it everyday, they have a team of engineers finding ways to make these cars beyond hard to service. From simple oil changes to overhauling engines or transmissions. This profession has become a joke and I don’t advise anyone getting into this field.
Really when you think about it,today's ceos and auto stock portfolio is becoming more like a bunch of thugs that have a short life and nothing to offer in brains.
Engineers are the worst these days - not all of them but when you make a structurally sound product with a tiny plastic part or specific tooling that keeps it from working correctly drives me nuts as a mechanic - I’ve had to tool and shave down points of contact to make parts fit or salvage a bike - rebuilding the bearings without a full disassembly so the bb cups don’t snap from rust - it’s annoying when a customer brings a basic repair and I tel them you need to buy a new bike there’s no fixing it
preach it brother . turned 60 recently been in the profession tooooo long . some of the bs you have to do to repair the simplist problem bogged down by the whos paying inigma our dealership seams to struggle with getting that info up front. if it was my bussiness id wanna know how this project is getting funded. oem parts with a 300% mark up and now you wait weeks to even get the part.. hows your productivity?
My sons ...edit (girlfriend's mother)... was an engineer for one of the big 3. She quit a 6 figure job because she could design things that would be accessible and last for hundreds of thousands of miles but was told to design things to make it through warranty period only! And be inaccessible to the general mechanic.
There's also a reason why it's your son's girlfriend and not your son who worked for said company and it's not just because he is or isn't and engineer. They go out of their way not to hire male engineers even less so white engineers. Talent, ability? Those play second or third fiddle to what genitals you have and what your skin color is in today's cooperate America, doubly so for STEM jobs...
I worked in appliance repair in 1976 and the guy I was learning from tried to explain to me how the industry was moving toward planned obsolescence. The idea was to create an endless market for products that weren’t serviceable, thus allowing for more profits for established manufacturers.
I can (barely) remember when my mothers' refrigerator was converted to 60 cycles, from 25 Hz. That thing was still working when she passed away. A neighbours' fridge needed a door seal. The part was $85. She bought a new fridge. (it was old ). I worked in electronics. I can remember about 50 different tube types stored on the wall. And an appliance guy up the street, with burners of 2 sizes, 1 type of control for all burners, a few different oven elements. I marvelled at the simplicity. Now, the digital display on my stove is getting very dim, but I will likely wait and buy a new stove...
I was shown by a body shop owner back in the 80s how cars were purposely designed to collect and hold moisture/salt/debris so that they would rust out and gave to be replaced sooner. I think Japan has killed a lot of the planned obsolescence movement as Americans started noting in the 80s that a Toyota or Honda wasn’t the complete piece of shit death trap tgat American cars were designed to be. American nanufacturers took 25 years to catch up, but have already started going the other way in trying to profit off higher priced vehicles designed to shit the bed after the warranty expires again.
Appliances are pure overpriced junk today. I own a still working 1936 Frigidaire by GM refrigerator. Nothing built in the last 20 years will still be working every day.
@@drewthompson7457 A capacitor on the control board for the digital display is going bad... Unfortunately, the components on the control board are probably sealed inside a potting material, making sub component replacement impossible.
I’m 67 years old, and live in a state where an auto over 15 years old only needs to pass a safety inspection. No emissions testing needed. I own a 1965 Chevy Nova with an inline 230 six cylinder, three on the tree. It’s my personal FU to the car industry, the parts industry, and government regulators. Being a three on the tree, that makes it an effective anti theft device for about 50 percent of the population as well. I love the car. And get more thumbs up than ire from the community.
Here in North Carolina, they got rid of Emissions testing. They do safety only now. If your vehicle is over 30 years old, it don't need an inspection at all.
@@anteneupitra When they first appeared in ‘62 there were several engine options. Four, six, and eight cylinder models ranging from coupes to sedans to hardtops to wagons and even Super Sports. Cool cars in their day.
The 50% number would be too low with just a regular standard transmission..... 3 speed on the column? Definitely less than 20% and probably less than 10% can drive one.
The same thing happened to hearing aids and other electronic devices. I repaired them for 25 years and watched them get more expensive and less repairable. (1990 to 2015)
Same thing is happening to computers which I fix for a living. Parts that are coded by the manufacturer for instance. Stupid amounts of glue when little screws would do. Now we have systems-on-chip which is the end basically.
@@blissfuljoy6049They don’t have to be less serviceable to be more advanced. Apple, for example, puts it in their contracts with their part suppliers that they aren’t allowed to sell OEM parts to anyone but Apple. (Third party repair shops can’t buy replacements easily) They intentionally make things hard to repair, and that’s just one example.
Something you reminded me of that happened to me several years ago. I hurt the engine in my truck, and I was across town at a friends house. He had a coworker of his over that day that I was there. Those two worked at the Mercedes dealer in town; the coworker being a service tech. I proceeded to remove the engine from my truck in his driveway with hand tools. This tech, was completely blown away that I was able to take the engine out of a vehicle, fix it, and put it back in using just hand tools (and a hoist) in a driveway over a weekend. He had never seen or heard of such a thing because it's not possible on newer cars.
@@2DclanSnipingTeam Pull it and fix yourself or let the dealer rape you hard for that service should be a point that you should have made after that statement and without the first part.
@@painkillerjones6232do they take the engine out of the top with the car on the ground, using just an engine hoist? I thought new vehicles had the engines removed out of the bottom with the subframe and everything attached?
When I was locksmithing about 7 years ago our boss had to pay for a service so we could call in the vin on a car so they could give us a password to be able to talk to the car via a plug in diagnostics tool just to be able to program a new fob to a vehicle. It was absolutely insane. Oh and if the customers car battery was at 11.5 to 11.9 volts the computer wouldn’t let the new fob be programmed. It was always fun telling the customer that we couldn’t program their fob because their car battery was too low. At the end of it the customer would be out anywhere between $200 - $400. The older vehicles all you had to do was hit and hold buttons in the vehicle to program a new fob or jam a paper clip in the obd and be good to go and it only cost you like $20 - $40. They have definitely screwed us over in every way, Tony is spot on!
My 86 Camaro needed a fuel pump. I have the factory service manuals, and the procedure included dropping the entire rear end to remove the fuel tank. Instead of following that procedure, i cut a hole over the tank to access the top of the tank, cut the steel fuel lines, removed the assembly, changed the pump, put it back together, used neoprene fuel hose and clamps to hook the lines back together. Created a fiberglass cover and attached it using nut-serts and bolts. Later i did the same thing to my 2002 Yukon. I expect that with the convenient hatch, the pump will never fail again.🙂
99 Tahoe. He'll no I ain't dropping tank. Studied diagrams enough till got enough confidence to get the 4 inch grinder out. Bingo, right over the top of pump one piece cut out. After replaced the cut out made a nice hinged panel for future.. ir didn't hurt that the interior was already pulled as it had become my daily work truck loaded with tools. 2 front seat , open storage behind it.
"I have the factory service manuals" // Do you know that in USSR every single device had a service manual? Including TV-set, radio or cassete player? It was an obligation for a factory to provide a service manual. Despite of this fact there is still idiots who say USSR was the worst thing in the world!
@@alextrezvy6889 Yes, we used to have them on everything. Now not so much. If you want them you usually have to buy them. But, some manufacturers refuse to make the information available, Apple comes to mind, but there are others as well.
@@alextrezvy6889 Yeah right, that's why hockey players from the Soviet Union bought piles of electronics/clothes/jeans to take back, when they came to North America. Shelves over there would be empty of food and other necessities we take for granted. There was a Russian hockey player, who was drafted by the Vancouver Canucks in the 1980's i think it was. A Canadian player and his wife were over visiting, and the Russian couple were overjoyed---showed them all the meat they had scored that day--fridge/freezer full. The Canadians asked them "why would you buy all this meat". The Russians thought it was like the Soviet Union, the shelves would be bare for days. They were told that here the shelves will be just as full tomorrow. Only idiots think it was rosy in the USSR. Why do you think that when their athletes came over here, they were basically under lock and key, so they wouldn't defect? That's a FACT.
@@alextrezvy6889Back then almost all appliances in the US came with service manuals and diagrams. You don’t need to utterly change economic systems to mandate the inclusion of a service manual lol. That’s just a simple industry regulation Congress 100% has the authority to do. But at the moment it isn’t mandated. So it’s cheaper to not include one, so companies don’t. If all companies have to include them, then there is no competitive incentive to leave them out.
Two national governments exist, one to be maintained under the constitution with all its restrictions. The other to maintained by congress outside and independently of that instrument. Justice Marshall Harlan
@@roberthamilton1152the United States of America went bankrupt in the 1870s. Since the English bailout our country is a COMPANY and your birth certificate is collateral on loans to the company. Go to court. Notice how much it resembles the deck on a ship? Maritime Law
An old timer in manufacturing explained to me long ago that during the onset of the industrial revolution, most machinery was made "in the old country". There were no parts for it. What you did get with the machine was a set of blueprints & specifications. When something broke or wore out, you made the part as you had in your possession all the information to do so. It also reminds me of naval ships, they had on board stock of common parts, i.e. steel stock, pipe, fittings, dresser couplings, etc., you had a machine shop on board. If you didn't have what was needed, you made it. It may not be perfect but it got you back under way one way or another. If that's what we're headed back to it's fine with me.
But it's not where we're headed. They don't teach that sort of stuff anymore, since a long time now. It would be great, but finding someone young and willing to do that... Even me, I fully realize what's happening, but I clearly know I can't do stuff like that. I can get by with tools and repair stuff the best I can, that's about it
@@adamdion7574 There are machine shops open all over the place. I'm no machinist by any means, but I can cobble enough together to have a professional finish it up if I have to. You probably have more resources available than you think you do. I'd bet if you went to a car show and asked around you'd find a half dozen guys with at least a lathe.
Who is they? And why do you need them? I don't need anything from "them" . I am a Man and have a brain that thinks without being told what to think, or how to think. And yes, we will eventually end up back to what was as this current system is designed to implode.
Non greaseable works if designed correctly. My parents have a 2001 Toyota Camry with over 300K miles. Zero grease fitting, zero play in any of the suspension components. Back in the day, one could grease all suspension components at every oil change and still have a suspension that was totally shot at 120K miles. I do still buy greaseable u-joints for my older junk and grease them at every oil change. Kind of a pain but it keeps me busy and out of trouble.
When I first saw non greaseable fittings, I thought, well oil changes and lubes are easier, but, the customer will be paying for suspension parts instead, one day.
My 65 Ford had non-greasable tie rods. They advertised at the time that the components had a lifetime lubricant that did not need greasing. After 45 years they were worn out but they did make it that long. Car was a Falcon so it was considered disposable even then.
Further, some manufactures require special tools to instal parts, and these tools are only available to dealer workshops. My mother's Ford Mondeo was taken to an independent shop to have the transmission replaced. The rear main oil seal showed signs of leaking. Got the car back, and it was pissing engine oil after 100km, (60 miles), of use. Sent it back to the shop, and the poor bastards had to do the major strip-down, but called to say they couldn't obtain the installation tool from Ford. Fortunately, they spoke with an engine reconditioner, and found a work-around. Car is back, not leaking. So they did the entire job again, but stood by their work - no charge. Poor bastards. Excellent service.
I also went through this on a ford escort years ago. I did a clutch job and resurfaced the flywheel. While I was in there I replaced the rear main seal, but I failed to check for a wear ridge on the crank surface that the seal rides on. The seal would work fine at idle, but leaked like a stuck pig at higher engine RPMs. I had to pull the whole thing back apart and install a sleeve on the crank with a new seal, and that solved the problem. It is amazing that something that I have done hundreds of times in my career can be overlooked when one is in a hurry to get the customers vehicle back? I only work on my own these days, but when I pull a transmission out, I always check that crank surface (lightly) with a small 90 degree pick. If it hangs on a groove, I automatically sleeve the crank. I hope others learn from my mistake?
The last big truck (Peterbilt) had something like $17,000 worth of emissions equipment on it. The salesmen told me that the dealers loved it. He said "In the old days we had to up sell a $170.00 stereo and now you're forced to take a $17,000 up sell by EPA".
We hated it at the manufacturers. A bunch of garbage to package on the frames (while trying to keep it out of the way of the up-fitters), even more extra coolers, even more wiring and plumbing, FAR more warranty, way more weight, lower fuel economy, etc. It's all a nightmare scenario of basically doing everything wrong to your product that you possibly could. I don't think we harvested much in the way of money out of it either. Like you said, it has to go on _all_ of the trucks, and believe me, there is no cartel or friendship in the heavy truck game. If someone else could cut the price of their EPA garbage versus your Pete, they would have. Especially when you're talking about fleet sales... If brand X was $100/truck cheaper than brand Y, that would be a huge competitive advantage. Nobody was getting rich off of it. In fact, we were sweating it pretty hard. Maybe the actual salesmen like it because they're on a percentage commission so any cost increase to the truck was good news for them?
The right to repair act with the John Deere stuff has been overturned recently. They lost in court. But even at that I get why they did it. Protects themselves. Any idiot could “fix” or “tune” a tractor and bugger it up, remove it and go blame Deere for it and they foot the bill for some idiots hack work. Im a farmer myself and it sucked for sure but I get there side if it. Good to see it’s over turned now tho.
We run strictly all Deere stuff too. And currently having computer issues on a 8320r and the transmission module. Private mechanic having hard time fixing it but is what it is. Bloody tractor has 38 computer modules on it. People think cars are complicated electronic wise ? Lmao.
This all started when Gi;lette said "Give away the razor and sell the blades." And it is happening in all industries: Apple and John Deere both recently lost cases prohibiting the right to repair.
Tony - just to let you know, not all automotive manufacturers did things intentionally to make things harder to service. I worked as an engineer at GM Saturn in the 80's. ALL of our product development meetings included someone from both the service side, as well as UAW rep from the assembly side. We specifically worked to make things easier to service, even for a novice. I especially remember how we as engineers HATED to do auto trans fluid changes, and wondered why we just couldn't have a spin-on filter same as for the oil, as well as a drain plug, so you didn't have to do 30 bolts and drop the pan making a huge mess and requiring a pan gasket to boot. Auto writer idiots panned the motor as to having inadequate power and making too much noise. What they didn't know was that those motors were understressed on purpose, as well as having a mean time between failure of well over 500,000 miles. Yes...timing chains can be noisier than belts that have to be replaced at 60k miles, but they are bullet proof, and weren't as quiet and sewing-machine like as the Japanese motors. Same thing with the space frame construction, the same as race cars, as well as having totally rust-free polymer body panels. But once again, idiot auto "writers" panning them because of the large body panel gaps (as if that mattered) that were required to allow for expansion clearance due to temperature. I could go on and on. Rant over.
Back in the 1990's, I really appreciated GM products. Generally, there was good clearance around whatever you needed to service. The non-Saturn products had fat bolts on the transmission pans, where bolt heads on Ford and Chrysler products would snap off. Except for changing something simple, like an air-filter, Toyota's were a complete nightmare.
Here in Florida it is easy to do, no state inspections. I bought a 2004 Ford F150 with a blown engine. I put new motor mounts, an old 302, mechanical fuel pump, new fuel tank and lines. It is now my daily driver. I’m also working on an old 1953 Dodge army truck. No computers or EFI for me.
Florida here too !! Same brother . Got my 71 Grand Prix and lmfao overhead cam ranger that got plucked and sbc swapped . All mechanical. When they shut down vehicles with whatever crazy magnetic BS . It will be guys like us rebuilding and teaching how america was really suppose to be
That is one single election away from changing entirely. Florida is NOT a "free state" by ANY stretch of the imagination. The difference in Florida is those who own the government here are not quite in the same club as those who are part of the DC/London/Brussels Empire....but they engage in the EXACT same behaviors. Eventually they'll die off, get bought out, or simply decide the headache isn't worth it and capitulate, then we will get the rest of the oppression here too.
@@Poolguy8879 my 1995 chrysler lebaron. swapped out the auto 4 spd and put in the 5 spd manual from an old acclaim. at least it has an OD. minty when i bought it. aside from one head gasket - actually not that hard to replace - it still drives just right. reliable, comfy, no issues. i wouldn't drive chrysler now if you paid me...
You speak the truth Tony. Back in the day we bought and fixed everything with the money we earned and saved for the next thing we needed. Now the world is strung out on credit for things we want but don’t need. The manufacturers build everything so we can’t fix them. The whole thing’s a train heading for a cliff. Not a matter of if but when. In the end, the regular people with the knowledge and “know how” will be the most valuable people in the world.
I am a 46 year old woman who knows nothing about cars and yet it suggested one of your videos to me, and this is the 2nd one I have watched. Love hearing the truth and I wish I had even a sliver of your skills and knowledge. I did not use my life and time wisely for what is coming....
You've taken the first and most important step by becoming aware. Now learn as much as you can and try to find like minded people in your social circle...or create one if need be. Be confident, avoid the fear mongering and don't question that inner voice when it tells you something ain't right. Odds are, you'll do just fine. Good luck to you.
@@UncleTonysGarage Thank you so much for responding to my comment (totally unexpected). I appreciate that advice and it honestly makes me feel better. 🙏
There’s still time to learn how to fix things. Most times it’s not that hard- the next time something small and cheap takes a shit, take it apart. Probably only need a Phillips screwdriver. Figure out how it’s supposed to work, and why it doesn’t. Look the item up online, see if parts are available. Sometimes you may have to just shoot in the dark and order 2 or 3 diff parts. Put it back together, You’ll fix it. I fix stuff all the time and have never done it before. Washer, dryer, oven, vehicles, etc. People always say to me, how do you know how to do so many things? I DON’T! Half the time I have experience to lean on, the other half I just use reason and common sense to figure it out. If it’s broke, you’re out absolutely nothing by just taking it apart, seeing how it works, and putting it back together.
@@UncleTonysGaragethere is a tangent you are missing...... Good abs systems do significantly help the average driver. Once you have a car with wheel speed sensors, you might as well run harnesses for computer ignition and fuel injection. I agree that it's sad there wasn't more respect for carburetors, as new materials like silicone could massively improve a carb. But they didn't know silicone would be developed to this level as a diaphram. The industry changes according to materials. But at least small engine makers are developing carbs based on new materials.
I love how you’re trying to say it without actually saying it and have RUclips censor you. Just by what you’re saying tells me you know exactly what’s going on and why. We need more people like you to help wake people up. As the Patriot Nurse would say, “Beans, Bullets, and Band-AIDS.”
I’m 27 and been working as a tech at a toyota dealer now for about 6 years. I’m used to all the stuff you talked about and it’s “normal” for me and is “normal” for all the people who don’t know any better. I agree, we should go back to the old days. There’s a reason both my vehicles are early 2000’s vehicles because they are extremely easy to work on compared to these new 2023 vehicles coming out.
Yes, even Toyota and Honda, which are probably the best have way to much gadgetry now. Recently rented a new Corolla. It was actually very luxurious for an entry-level car. But the electronics were mind spinning. I can see why any new car that becomes flooded, it is instantly written off.
One thing that made me realize that was the tap to my radiator core. Wanted to buy a new one because old one was leaking (1961 plymouth) couldn't Dinsmore anything decent. Then found out I could just wrench it open..put 2 new o-rubbers in there and been fine for the last 4 years. I'm 29 was also a shock for me how easy it could be
@@lukek1949I have a 2016 Corolla and it's a great car. My 2004 Toyota tundra is also a great truck with the 2uz 4.7 V8. If it needs a starter I have to remove the entire intake and injector rail. An $800 job at the shop, for a starter. The timing belt and water pump was $1000 but that's every 100,000 miles. Hopefully I won't be having to change that starter anytime soon.
As an independent shop worker, my gripe is "special tools". Need a special socket for this and a special tool for that doodad. Never ending spending spree.
Another example of craziness: on a 2021 volvo you cant replace a damn speaker with one from the same model parts car. Only the dealership has the tools to "register" it on the computer system. Its supposed to be two freaking wires, now its like an internet cable!
they might be lying tho i mean speakers are speakers maybe you’re not doing it right. did you strip it to see if it’s just two wires? bc you can’t usually always change speakers to aftermarket
Planned Obsolescence - You can thank Edward Bernays who came up with this practice and sold it to the big 3 auto makers. This business model is now the standard among most major manufacturers of virtually any type of appliance or machinery.
And people are still gonna buy them junks. We consumers are incentivizing it sadly whether intentionally or not. And the government don'r care too so good luck to all of tou folks there in US
@@IOverlordI mean, what’s the alternative? Where do you buy a good appliance these days? Who even makes them? We recently bought a $750 portable AC. Read the manuals, followed every instruction to the letter. It fried its own circuit board-a thing it genuinely doesn’t need, it’s just an AC, it could be all mechanical-in 7.5 days. The company wanted us to go through a replacement process they estimated would take 3-4 weeks and included cutting the power cord. That’s $100 a day for the life we got out of a brand new appliance. Luckily, it was within the retailer’s return window, but that’s still utterly insane to me.
This is one of your best videos Tony, and I agree 100% that people need to do their research. Back some years ago I stopped by a family operated garage where I live that's been on business for 35 years now, and one of the brothers was replacing the spark plugs in a car that he had been working on for like 3 hours, and in order to replace a couple of the back plugs he had to actually jack up the engine in order to get to them, and I remember saying something like "the people that design this stuff don't think about the poor mechanic that has to work on it", and he said no, they were thinking of me specifically when they designed this because they want to put people like me out of business. I've learned things over the last few years thru my own research that have opened my eyes to so much. I've said it a million times, it has never been more apparent that the people have lost control of their government. A lot of the reasons why are obvious, but a lot of the reasons aren't, and that's why it's so important to do your research. It was never intended for the people to fear their own government, but for the government to have a healthy fear of the people, but that horse left the barn a long time ago and I'll leave it at that.
OH , They ARE Thinking about You !!! And ME & Anybody else that has the Ability to FIX vehicles !!! I'm NOT a mechanic , however , I am pretty good at diagnosing my problems with automobiles & decent at doing the work myself !! However my ability ENDS with cars built IN 2000 !!!! The computers & computerized systems in the MODERN car have made it IMPOSSIBLE for any SHADETREE mechanic to do ANYTHING !!! LUCKILY for me , I drive a 1990 Chevy truck with a 350 CID engine , which I am still able to do some work on !!! AS an example : I had some problems with the Antilock brake system & was able to remove it !!!!!! WONDERFUL - - - - - THEY have FIGURED OUT how to FORCE consumers to return to the DEALERS for ANY work with their PROPRIETARY KNOWLEDGE of their systems ........
Short answer… we the people became complacent and failed to hold our government accountable when we had the chance. Now it’s grown too large and is too entrenched to be reformed peacefully. And nobody wants to do the unthinkable until they’re pushed to their absolute breaking point. And when that eventually happens, things will get VERY ugly.
Enjoy your conversations. As a mechanic in a shop since 1984 couldn't agree more. Still a old school car guy, love old AMC Jeep products. In 1990 started in the Heavy Duty Diesel truck and equipment field. What's going on with cars is also going on in Heavy Duty field. I laugh at how much plastic, computers, and finicky everything is. The old straight forward all steel, non computer equipment was so robust and non stop able! Keep fluids in them and keep going. Now everytime I turn around a big new piece of new equipment is shut down over computers, sensors, emmisons etc. Sad day America can't even continue a day of building in construction without shut downs over sensors, computer updates etc. Telling crew can't work today till dealer comes out with laptop and diagnostic equipment. We are not building things better! Bottom line is throw away world and being controlled.
That why the only vehicles I own living in Comiefornia are all smog exempt, 3 Cummins 6bt trucks, and a 58 ranchero 406 FE 2x4, 4sp!! All smog exempt. This state sure hates them.
What's funny is that people don't understand that all this is happening as a result of capitalism and it's many intrinsic conflicts. Welcome to the future of capitalism. America, land of the fee, home of the slave.
The irony is that the pretext for these overcomplicated, throw-away vehicles (along with other throw-away goods like dishwashers, etc), is to "save the environment ".
My dad worked from sun up to sun down from his garage for over thirty years. Than came the "modern" fuel injection and front wheel drive. Customers did not want to compensate him for the cost of replacement parts that could not be rebuilt and his labor to install theses parts. He retired and enjoyed a long and happy retirement, no more drama to put up with.
I drive a 1974 LTD. Greasable everything, a big 9" rear end with bearings and seals that maybe cost $20. Rear wheel drive is the way to go. Hand and leg room for days, everywhere. Even under the hood.
I worked at a shop in high school, the one that I always remember was when a Lumina Z34 rolled in and my boss chuckling and saying, "hope it doesn't need an alternator." It did. and I learned about what you are talking about.
This is becoming true with heavy construction equipment too. Mechanics need access to the manufacturer’s database to reset engine trouble codes that the average mechanic does not have access to.
I work on boom lifts all the time as a commercial painter and several times in the last few years I've either been stuck up in the air against a building or in a bad spot and had to be rescued by another lift because some safety code had been tripped and it will not allow you to lower it or even be operated from the ground control. The technician comes out and spends half a day working and pushing buttons and making phone calls just to reset it.
Not a truck but my old polaris quad had a single bushing missing from the front diff. I went to multiple dealerships from multiple cities to try and buy just the one bushing because they insisted that I "had no option" but to buy the entire 1,300 dollar kit instead of just selling me the one part. I paid a local shop 25 dollars to buy stock material and cut two of them. Had it fixed in half an hour.
I was a weekend racer/gearhead turned dealership technician in an attempt to be a better mechanic. I gave it over a decade and every year the cars would be more complicated and every quarter, *the flat rate times would be amended down.* I walked away when the dealer I was at started asking me "so how do you want to pay for this?" when things would inevitably break during repairs. I ended up getting handed a divorce, lost my son (nearly lost my mind) and was barely making ot paycheck to paycheck, so I just figured I wasn't good enough to do it anymore. I built a dang race car out of my old daily driver, but the everyday struggle beat the passion for cars out of me. I went to Tesla as a last-ditch ahot at stayimg around the automotive industry and the mgmt was so wome, more than half the damg job became office politics and other techs back-stabbing.
There's a guy who's been trying to wake up the American brain-dead forever and he says it like this. "You're failure to understand evil doesn't make those who do, wrong"
Something I’ve noticed multiple times recently is that unless they can plug a modern computer into it for diagnostics they won’t work on it. Had this happen recently with a vehicle from 2002 and 1976. Modern techs are not given the skills to properly diagnose without the use of a computer or scan tool. That blows my mind!
So true! I had a 1998 GMC Safari van that had a broken vacuum hose to the cab heater. They kept my van for three days and never called me. When I went to check why the repair delay, the mechanic said it had no place to plug in a scan tool to find what was wrong so he said he hated my van and didn’t want to work on it, ( I had told him what the problem was when I brought it in). I asked for my keys back, went to another garage down the street known to work on my type and age of vehicle. Within two hours my vehicle was fixed and after three years is still working perfectly.
Air -gas-spark......look at me I'm a mechanic! Experience has taught that guy he wants the easy work. He knows how bad a job can snowball digging around looking for problems. He wants the plug-N-pay work.
I had an Explorer years ago that would kill the cruise control every time you turned on the headlights. Turned out to be a tail light bulb where the brake filament fell to the tail lamp filament, so when you turned on the headlights the cruise module would think you were stepping on the brakes. That was a head scratcher for a little bit
Reminds me of a guy that had a 1970s ford with the ignition box on the fender. He couldn't ever figure out why it would randomly die it was only about 10 years old or less. After changing numerous ignition peices they realized that whenever he was driving beside a big rig with a powerful CB it was enough that when they would tone in on the mic near him that it would interfere with the ignition box and cause it to shut off. Really bizarre but true😂
@ReidHenderson Someone fooled w/ the electrical system or it had another owner induced issue. That was the 70s. No vehicles were great then anyhow. Ford was better than 90% of em then ..& now!
Before I hear you out Tony my thoughts were the first deliberate attempt to fowl up home maintenance guys was GM’s introduction of the Vega. None replaceable air filters and none rebuildable engines. To me that was the first mass introduction of malware.
your observations are very insightful I know a mechanic (a good mechanic) who was changing an in tank pump….. he accidentally set the car (and his garage) on fire
As a mechanic, you are singing my song brother. My first realization of this was my '88 Taurus, the heater core went bad (imagine that) and the manual I had said in the opening salvo of how to replace it was " remove dash" . I have very much seen the light since then, these thing's are intentional to discourage the DIY-er.
Years ago, I had a 78 LTD. The heater core went in it. It was bolted to the firewall. It was a pain to lean over the engine with a cold wind blowing on me to change it out. But I preferred that by far to removing the dash. About 10 years ago, I sold it as the transmission went out. (I'm not that serious of a mechanic.) But it gave me 10 years of sturdy use and I did not fear an accident with an idiot in an SUV.
As a guy who grew up in the 90s and early 00s, I loved working on my mid-80s truck. I could practically rebuild the thing with the tools inside the toolbox in the bed. When I finally bought a newer vehicle, I quickly discovered how much money I would have to spend on "special tools" to work on my own vehicle. I've always wished they would make cars simple again and enjoyable to work on.
@@noseboop4354 Imagine a go-kart engine with EGR valves, catalytic converters, 02 sensors and evap systems. Ugghh. They already have small diesel lawn tractors with full emissions systems in place. Imagine not being able to mow your lawn because it's derated due to an emissions system malfunction...
And I love working on 80's and older trucks. So simple and so much space. I Cummins swapped my '83 Chevy, it was surprisingly easy and I used basic tools. Well, I DID have to use a welder at one point to weld some braces for the radiator core support, after I cut a lot of it out for the intercooler. But to put a modern diesel engine and drivetrain into a 1983 truck that never had that option, that ain't bad. I can't imagine the nightmare to do that on a new truck.
The same thing happens in Information Technology IT. Operating Systems upgrades that force you to replace fully working computers, phones and ipads. For no good reason other than driving revenue
Yes! Worked with a guy who had hearing aids. He said periodically he'd go into the shop and get the volume turned up a bit because the way they are made they have to connect them to a computer and use a special app to make any changes. So he said he went in to have another tweak and they told him they couldn't help him. The company was no longer supporting those hearing aids and the shop no longer had access to the app to make the changes. So he had no choice but to replace his several thousand dollar hearing aids with new ones even though, technically, the ones he had were in perfect working order.
I once read a Newsweek article on vehicle manufacturers doing things like making the muffler system route up into the frame and around just so it's harder to replace yourself. This has been going on for 30 years already.
@@myprivatewarmost of the good stuff is likely been scrapped and melted down to become some liberal monument in a blue city, no thanks to the _"cash for clunkers"_ program. Anything else will likely be bidded way above the price range of the average classic car enthusiast, due to supposed scarcity/rarity of the item. Which is unfortunate.😑
I remember as a kid, there were all kinds of mom and pop mechanics. Older cars were much simpler, but they did need more frequent maintenance. And the kicker was, no special tools were generally required! Then, as the years rolled on, the mom-and-pops started disappearing. Now it’s the dealer and large chains mostly. Really sad, actually.
Big corp will continue to eat all the guppies and leave us with a few big fat fish that will be inconvenient to get to, have worthless service and are absolutely good for nothing but taking your money.
I still work on mine. 98 Z71 Silverado and 2008 Cobalt. Lots more complicated than when I started in the family gas station in the 70s. Nice that spark plugs last 100k miles and cars last 200k miles or more if you do a reasonable amount of maintenance. Did several fuel pumps. That can be a challenge the first time. Google and RUclips make it so much easier to get a heads up on new unfamiliar repairs. Helps a lot if you already know the basics.
As a mechanical engineer and personal mechanic it’s called “planned obsolescence “. I’m keeping my 20 year old cars n truck by my own design since I can work on them
I'm 53 and started driving a 1976 Mercury Monarch straight 6 250ci I got for $500. It got me thru tech college, out of the house, and a year into working when I gave it to my brother still going. It had a cylinder that ran the plug black ever since we acquired it but it wouldn't quit. My wife & I now have a 2011 Sorento & 2009 Rio both with 165k mi and no issues. We're not in a hurry to purchase newer vehicles. EFI was a great advancement for cold climate driving up North, but we know people with newer vehicles that have oil consumption issues. I agree new vehicles aren't made to last, but other than just a few examples, it mainly started happening around 2012 when 0W oil & GDI became the norm. It was mostly the pre 2012 vehicles that were easily servicable and lasted, back when you could buy a new vehicle below dealer invoice and the customer mattered. Now you can't buy your kid a video game system without someone scalping the price up on the reseller sites, or a house that hasn't been flipped a couple times. The millenials are conditioned to be blind consumers and it's sad.
I’ve been a tech mostly In dealerships for 35 years. Your are spot on man!!! I’m so glad I’m on the downswing of my career because it just keeps getting worse with cars every single year !!!!
@@blissfuljoy6049 well depending on how well you keep up with maintenance. Obviously the better you take care of something the longer it will last. You need to keep up with the oil changes religiously these days . Honestly your best bet is to lease a vehicle instead of buying it. Pay the extra money for the extra miles. Usually by the end of the lease you’ll start having issues. We just got a 2024 honda in with 168 miles on it and has issues showing 🤷♂️ but usually 30 thousand miles is when you will start to see issues start .
I was seeing this starting to happen a couple decades ago myself. At one time I owned a 1984 S10 Blazer that had a 5 speed manual that used a hydraulic clutch. The slave cylinder for the clutch release was bolted to the outside of the bell housing on the drivers side, accessible for repair or replacement with the air bleeding procedure outlined in the Haynes manual. Years later, I had a 1998 Chevy K1500 truck, also with a 5 speed and hydraulic clutch. The slave cylinder went out on it and I found out that now it is mounted within the bell housing. Of course when it fails, it leaks, it leaks fluid on the clutch disk. So now, its a total clutch job to the tune of $1200 (prices then). Again, NO reason for GM to redesign this system unless it was to promote more customer pay jobs for repair centers. This was back in 2000 or so, so yes, this has been brewing for quite a while now.
I have a 2004 saturn vue with the GM 4 cylinder and 5 speed manual. It's been sitting in my driveway for a long time because the slave cylinder went out, and just like you described, it's inside the bell housing and has doused the clutch in fluid. It's such a pain in the ass to fix for such a cheap car I haven't even considered doing it yet. I also have a 4 cylinder 5 speed manual 1993 mazda b2600i (the last year they were made in Japan), and when the slave cylinder went out on that it was a 15-20 minute job to fix since it is mounted outside the bell housing, easily accessible. Sometimes the future just sucks.
@@seanneal552 the whole point of this video was how manufacturers/engineers make things harder on purpose to the detriment of the professional/DIY mechanics later on. I would say replacing a critical single small part in 15 minutes on an older car is a lot different than having to drop the entire sub-frame and engine/transmission to replace the exact same part on a more modern car. Also the design of the inside bell housing slave cylinder inherently means it will roast your clutch as soon as it starts leaking.
As a tech training with Ford I can tell you the electronics and the pricing of these new vehicles is WAY out of hand. You can't even replace a battery in a new Ford yourself. They have a battery monitor sensor that requires to be reset by having a laptop plugged in with Fords software. People look at me funny when I tell them I'm rebuilding a 25 year truck to drive everyday. I like being able to save money on being able to maintain my own vehicle, after all that's what led me down the path of mechanic work. Really a shame what things have come to.
I trained as a mechanic from '89 for much the same reason plus I enjoyed the hands-on work and just fixing things. Then I went into mechanical engineering design. But the only thing my vehicles have ever gone into a shop for is those jobs where I simply don't have the equipment or it's not worth my time. It was the best decision I ever made - vehicles are the second most expensive thing most people will ever own - it's madness not to mitigate that cost by doing maintenance yourself. I honestly pity people that can't maintain their vehicles themselves - it costs a small fortune to pay someone else to do it! I'm driving a mid-nineties car that I've had for 15 years and I really don't want anything newer - there's nothing that newer vehicles have that I want enough to put up with the headaches that come with it.
@@TonyRuleMy 2017 Honda was sold as the simplest car in many ways and I do all the work on it but just because a wheel turns when the ignition is on, and I am rolling the car by hand, the computer throws a permanent error for wheelspeed sensors and I have to pay 150 or more dollars to the dealer to reset it taking 5 minutes. Similar with airbag seat calibration when changing one of the seats. And then the car stereo has no media playback (no CD, no cassette) and is nearly impossible to upgrade. Yes its been frustrating but some things have been advanced and worked well.
I was so fortunate when I lived in Portland my neighbor was an excellent mechanic. He worked 12 hours at the garage when he got home he never had a drop or oil on his cloths or on his hands. A matter of fact I never seen him without his coveralls on and was always clean. Always fixed my car and did an excellent job. I think auto mechanics are undervalued.
Hey Tony, we think alike on the out to get you message. I first encountered this about 1973 when I was going to college at Ferris State college in Michigan. The industry had previously replaced the road draft tube with the PCV valve. Then about that time they added EGR and air pumps, which a lot of people just disabled. Anyway, in one of the School labs, we hooked up one of the students 63 Chevy on the dyno and tested the output at the tailpipe. Then after just adjusting timing, fuel mixture, etc. we met the current emission requirements. So I thought if a bunch of students can do this, this is just a way for them to make more money and capture the service work at the same time. I worked at GM dealership for a while after school and started seeing what you saw. I’m sure a lot of guys are nodding their heads in agreement when listening to you.
My 1969 Grand Prix with a 428 4bbl and dual exhausts made emissions too. It was just slightly cleaner with far less CO than my folks' brand new 1988 Bonneville that was labeled "Borderline-needs inspection" and they had to pay over $100 for a garage to hook up a computer and do the timing and everything, and then it barely passed.
I remember a 72 Pontiac Lemans with a Pontiac 350 2 barrel I used to drive pass emissions extremely well and the readouts were surprising against a vehicle with pollution equipment like a TCS switch, catalytic converter, slower mechanical timing, too lean of carburetor settings. The car from the previous owners disabled the TCS switch and redone the timing a little more advanced. Not to mention it actually got good gas mileage city and highway with a decent amount of torque. Knew a guy who put a "dummy" EGR valve on an intake not designed for one on his 76 390 powered Ford Truck to get around emissions. It worked great.
My GM/Delco teachers and engineers told me 40 years ago about the changes that were coming and the mandates put on them by the federal government. Now it's all coming true.
They make it impossible for competition to enter the market and offer simpler, more effective, less expensive alternatives. The mandates are not there for anyone's benefit but those companies already in the marketplace, and typically they exist to flush out the lesser players, force them to merge (aka centralization), and ultimately submit to total government control....you know like when GM and Chrysler fell into bankrptcy because gas prices were at 4.50 for a few months. @@rolandthethompsongunner64
Funny thing is I cut myself an access panel in the bed of my 00 Chevy Silverado to replace the fuel pump rather than dropping the tank, cut it on 3 sides and folded it up, replaced the pump folded it back down and fastened it back with truss head screws. It worked like a champ, such an easy solution the engineers should have built an access panel into the bed.
Lol, I did the same on my Cadillac CTS...by the book says u have to lower the (dual) exhaust from the headers back, so u can then disconnect the driveshaft in order to lower the whole rear subframe assembly rear diff. & all just to get to a few bolts that are otherwise inaccessible in order to lower the tank🤦♂️ The freaking thing was still running fine too; it had just developed a small leak @ the very top where the lines connect to tha pump I couldn't figure out for the longest why my garage always smelled like gas fumes after driving this car...It wasn't until I really got down underneath it one day & looked @ it closely that I found where gas had been leaking down the side of the tank and I checked a few GM forums & read where it was a fairly common issue for this model...
@@riders.oregon4474most of us dont have 4 people to help. Last fuel pump i had to change was in a truck stop parking lot 150 miles from home fortunatelyi had a flatbed, and there was enoughroom to get the pump out withoutdropping the tank..
Yeah I did that on some of our trucks at work. Had some smashed up beds laying around so I cut panels and just riveted them over the holes. Corrosion rust and nastiness was the norm so using nut serts would have been difficult to take apart Riviots just drill out but at home I would use nutserts
As an auto technician for 40 years, and working on dirt bikes, mini bikes, lawnmowers, and old school cars since the 70s.. I've been watching everything you just confirmed. People won't listen to me when I tell them to buy an old school points distributor and make sure it has a manual pump.. But it's definitely coming. The push for electric cars is so crazy and the fact we already had electric cars and they failed LOL. People are blind
AMEN, Uncle Tony! I redid my 89 Firebird as a computerless road monster because I could and I wanted to! Since I tore out the EFI and put in a carb, I cut a door above the tank to get at the pump AND put in a drain on the bottom of the tank. BITE ME, designers!
I said, more or less, this in another comment, but I'll repeat it here: The average public gives _way_ to much credit to "the designers". It's not the designers that cost reduced your car into not having a a fuel pump access door or who set US global politics during the 1970s that made gasoline theft extremely common (thus eliminating drain plugs forever and making anti-siphon features the norm). I'll also add that the lack of fuel pump access doors is almost _always_ on American cars. Import cars of the era nearly always had them.
@@TheBrokenLife , well said and yes, I was being lazy in shaking my fist at the "designers". I am reminded of the old joke that it all began when an engineer caught his wife in bed with a mechanic and ever since, retribution. I will add that I have come to loathe new cars and motorcycles. Not only are they overly complicated (for an old wrench monkey like me) but lack the style and soul of the older vehicles. Yes, I hear my grandfather now saying the same of the machines I enjoy. Such is life, I suppose, but I honestly doubt that in 20-30 years many of ANY new cars of today will be kicking around.
@@morgangallowglass8668 No engineer would actually be mad about that. He simply had a defective wife and will remove her. Most engineers I've known don't recommend replacement in this circumstance. 😆 I can find something to like about just about any car and plenty of mine have had a little too much "soul". Most days just having an appliance to go A-to-B is good enough. That said, I've been hearing the doom and gloom on the horizon about future classics for decades. The truth is that there will always be examples of the car grandma never drove that suddenly emerge on the market (my daily driver being one of them... it's 28 years old and has MPFI, SRS, all of that jazz, and it's still going) as well as the stuff that was limited, desirable, or highly relatable in its time. In 1990 I would have _never_ predicted the rise of *serious* Honda collecting, but it's here. My Dad never thought the day would come that the tri-5 Chevys they were abandoning in the woods would be worth anything either. As you said, such is life. What is new and mundane to us will some day be cool and nostalgic to someone else and they'll do whatever they must to keep it going. I'd bet money there will be Tesla collectors for decades to come. How much of the cars will be original by then will be a question, but that's always been true in the hobby car world.
In other words, as things get worse and worse, the cars we take for granted now will seem special and better. Like the square body trucks, they used to just be "trucks" that I saw everywhere, but now they have a mystique that people love. I can see the GMT 800 trucks in that position in 20 years, many people say they are the best trucks ever made. But right now they are just twenty year old trucks. (Like my '57 Suburban was just an old truck when I bought it in '81, or my '69 pickup was just an old truck when I bought it in '92. But one big difference is the computer. Will we be able to get a computer for a 2003 Suburban, in the year 2053?
Preach Tony, we are a couple years apart in age, I lived it and I fully understand you. Whenever I start talking like this, family, friends and acquaintances look at me like I am speaking a foreign language. I have worked on cars since I was 10 on my neighbor's 57 Chevy BelAir street/strip car . The guy who owned it kind of reminds me of you. Thanksgiving almost always turns into this with my automotive engineer brother in law. You are awesome and much appreciated. Never stop, never surrender
Tony, this recent crop of "off topic" videos are just fantastic. It's really great to know there are so many like-minded people out there. Being almost 20 years old it's daunting thinking what could lie ahead for my generation with the state of the world lying where it is. These videos provide a sort of solace for me. Looking forward to more of your content!
What state of the world? Engineering and innovation? You know what they say, lead, follow, or get out of the way. Or sit in a rocking chair and complain.
I don't think internal combustion engines are going anywhere, people will start modifying fuel injectors and fuel systems to run ethanol and the kids will get to keep playing with old cars.
You are correct about the “you wrestle with this stuff” part. Nowadays you need a scan tool to check and set the transmission oil level, or to even change your rear brakes. There are plastic oil pan drain plugs that are meant to be used once, and because everything is controlled by a computer, everything requires some calibration or coding if replaced. It is all in the name of keeping the profits in the dealership as much as possible. Eventually the after-market catches up and they offer the special tools (or a version of them) and after-market scan tools can do some of the coding needed. I should know, I work at a dealership.
It's crazy to me working in Industrial maintenance. We have machines that have entire manuals full of prints and how to fix things. You can literally find a whole book of electrical prints to trouble shoot. You can call and they have people to provide technical documents and assistance. Then you go to work on a car and good luck to find any information or documentation. You just have to guess in the dark. They don't want you to fix it and it's getting where true mechanics are hard to find. Around here some days it feels like you either figure it out yourself or throw it away.
With cars exactly the opposite way .. they made the cars miserable too service, so you don't do it, and design it to fail after warranty.... in some years if countries don't do something,cars will be in the fields because there will be no people who repair them, or can't repair them..
I’m in maintenance also but even that is getting harder and harder to get info on. Many companies will provide a disc or drive with prints and a manual but where I work we don’t have access to a computer because the fears of them being hacked
Yeah, I had a 68 Mustang with a 6 cylinder and I replaced the starter motor from the top! Sure a 8 cylinder you'd come from below but it's still just bolts and electrical connections. Most of the problems back then came from squeezing big motors into small spaces and you had to accept that compromise which had reasons for it you could readily understand for example, vans are harder to work on as a function of their design ...the problem was space, that alone, not some other agenda... That said they used to make vans/delivery trucks with long noses...
One of the most egregious of all of these unserviceable items has happened to every car I've owned - the blend door actuator. A crappy plastic sub $5 part. Typically an $800-$1000 repair because the entire dash has to come out. To get the dash out of my Camaro required the windshield to come out, which of course broke in the process. Also the seats, console, steering had to come out. Cost $3600 to replace to replace this $5 piece of plastic. Just unreal.
Have the same problem on my '08 Impala. It flutters for 40 seconds, then stops. $600 to fix from my mechanic. Car has 245k miles, not worth the trouble now, but it was a recall item just after my warranty expired.
Uncle Tony, you are absolutely correct! About everything! I wasn’t expecting this video to go where it did, but now I have a whole new level of respect for you.
I totally agree with you, I fix my own cars and my newest is my daily driver a ‘94 Chevy 1500. I’ve been thinking about getting rid of all the electronic crap due to all the failures it’s having. Thank you for making this video.
Mechanical injection diesel is the way to go. They last forever, they are easy to service, and they can run on various different fuels. My friend has an 82 Toronado with the 350 Oldsmobile diesel. It has 542,000 miles on it. Recently we changed the head gaskets and put ARP studs. The cylinders are in perfect shape, they are standard size, the pistons are the factory ones, and the crosshatching looks excellent. It gets 40 miles per gallon on the highway and has a 23 gallon fuel tank. Everything is rebuildable. You can recondition both types of injectors on these at home. The Stanadyne injectors just require a tool for turning the pintle and a fine lapping compound. The CAV injectors get lapped just like a valve, they have a poppet and a seat. The pump is a Stanadyne DB2, used on a million different types of diesel engines. It can be rebuilt at any diesel shop or even by yourself if in decent shape. There are other old diesels in cars as well that are similarly easy to maintain. Oldsmobile made a 4.3 V6 version that didn't have the head bolt issue of the V8, it has 6 head bolts per cylinder. The diesel Chevette and Isuzu I-mark are also great. The old, pre-1990 VW diesels. There was a diesel Corolla and Camry. There was a diesel Maxima. There was a diesel Ford Tempo. Not to mention all of the Opel, Renault, Citroen, Peugeot, European Ford, and other diesels that are extremely cheap in Europe and wouldn't cost that much to import. Many of these cars are $2000 or less, with importing costing around $3000, you're at 5000 max. Many of them are under $1000 even. Diesel is where we all need to be going, not gasoline. Diesels will still be able to be fueled long after the new cars are all electric. And perhaps, biodiesel will be common because construction equipment, heavy trucks, and boats will not work as EVs.
Agreed with the concept. I had a 1982 bmw 320i gasoline auto with the M10 4-cyl engine. They had mechanical fuel injection and 'no points' ignition. Very easy to work on and reliable. Biggest issue would be the mechanical proportioning valve which was sensitive to vacuum leaks, but easy to diagnose. Also, power brakes and manual rack and pinion steering.
Used to love running the IDIs, but they're getting old now - parts are hard to find or are junk, fewer and fewer shops have guys who know how to tune, bench test (or even work on!) the mechanical injection pumps. Since you mentioned the GM 350 IDI: ask a modern diesel tech who Roosa Master is and their eyes will glaze over. The days of "old" diesel (in the US) have passed unless you're real good, have a full shop, and a parts stockpile. The cost of the garbage no. 2 they sell now sealed it for me years ago.
@@silasakron4692In my situation between me and my friend, we have 2 shops, injector and pump flow bench, Stanadyne and Bosch calibration and rebuild tools, pop testers, 4 axis CNC milling machine and lathe, manual milling machine and lathe, access to a waterjet, 3D printer, all types of hand and power tools, boring bar, block and head O-ring cutter, valve grinding machine, boring bar, electroplating setup, EDM cutter, X-Ray machine, magnaflux, cam grinder, and much more. We could likely build an entire engine from scratch pooling both of our resources and have in the past made entire sets of billet pistons, multiple sets of connecting rods, bearing spacers, timing sprockets, camshafts, and even a set of solid lifters in an unusual size. So while I would say I'm in the "full shop" situation I wouldn't say it's impossible to do at home. I rebuilt multiple Stanadyne pumps in my kitchen before I ever had access to the tools. Stanadyne will sell you replacement heads and rotors. The dimensions that need to be adjusted can be measured with regular micrometers, and the assembly usually doesn't require any special tools. Diesel fuel today really doesn't do any damage to the newer design head and rotors, which can be ordered from Stanadyne with DLC coated internals. In many areas , there are biodiesel suppliers that sell better quality fuel for a fraction of the diesel price. Here it is $1.75 cheaper a gallon for B100 than D2. Parts that are no longer available can be substituted. For example a rare 5.7 head and rotor and camring can be substituted for a common 6.2 head and rotor and camring. A 4.3 head and rotor can be substituted for a multitude of other 6 cylinder head and rotors. Just requires looking at pictures or in a catalog for a while. Things like head gaskets, Cometic will make a set of custom MLS head gaskets for $89/each. Chances are, they have already made them in the past too, so no old gaskets needed. They have made gaskets for my 79 Subaru, a Cosworth Vega engine, and my friend's 350 Diesel. Timing chains can often be made from lengths of off the shelf chain, often stronger than the originals. And so on. I've been keeping rare and obscure engines on the road since I was a teenager, and still daily drive one of my first cars, a 79 Subaru DL. It has parts off of nearly every brand and type of car, from GM to Ford to Suzuki to Daewoo to Lancia, and is nearly as reliable as a modern car. Once all of the rare and unreliable parts were replaced with more common and easily available ones, the problems and getting stuck on the side of the road stopped. Now I can get in, on a cold day, turn the key, and it starts and runs just like a modern car, with no ECU, no fuel injection, a dog gear manual transmission, and not even a radio. It just keeps going and going, and gets 45-50 mpg on the highway. A diesel would be more ideal, but a carbureted small engine can work nearly as well, and is achievable with considerably less tools and skills. A more modern engine can even be converted to carburetion and installed in an older car. One such one I built was a Nissan KA24DE with carburetors off a Yamaha R1, on a custom intake manifold, and a modified distributor from an Isuzu. The same is possible with some diesels. VW TDIs for example can be converted to mechanical injection. It's possible to do, just requires a lot of thought put into what parts will work, and sometimes looking into what parts were available on engines overseas. Diesel engine injector testing and rebuilding doesn't usually require anything more expensive than a $60 pop tester. I do think it's still possible for someone with a reasonable grasp on how engines work to drive a non computerized car, reliably, and do their own work at home.
So glad I have kept my 70 Challenger and 70 GTX. I have touched almost every nut and bolt on them. The Challenger is a 340 and driven weekly. The GTX is a 440 and being restored. I have owned them since the 70’s. I rebuilt the engines and assembled them myself. Just recently took the rear end apart on the Challenger and put new bearings in it. Easy to do. But most people thought the required a Technition to rebuild. It all seems so easy to me. Both my sons own several cars and wrench on the cars themselves. My grand kids have their toy cars and bikes they ride. They too will wrench their own stuff. None of us have ever spent a day in mechanical school or a job as a mechanic. It is in our blood. That’s why I don’t watch much TV. I prefer to learn from guys like you Uncle Tony. It’s real information that I really enjoy watching. Thank you. Looking forward to every next video.
One of my biggest regrets is that I sold my '67 Chevelle. It was the 300 Deluxe, not a Super Sport, and it had a straight-6 and a Powerglide. It belonged to my brother and his wife, and I fell in love with it the first time I saw it. After I'd had it about 8 years, I had some hard times, and had to sell it. Looking back, maybe I wasn't so short of cash after all. I should have kept it.
My 2005 Saturn Vue transmission service was $160 or close to that. Took 30 minutes to do and I was on my way. My 2016 Jeep needs a full day appointment cost $1200 . That's why one day there will be a revolution! I may not live long enough to see it but it's guaranteed to happen.
Uncle Tony is 100% correct on Governments. They’re really are NO GOVERNMENTS only CORPORATIONS masquerading as such. I too am a Professional Technician, over 30 years now. I started doing my own research into what Uncle Tony brought up about 10 years ago and discovered the exact same things.
Under English Common law, the man (or woman) is sovereign. Your constitution is an adaptation of magna carta. The revolution you should celebrate isn't 1776 (which was a part of the freemasonic French revolution) but 1640 until the glorious revolution of 1688. We freed the slaves but not like you're told.
@@monikacognomen1096Get this communist garbage out of here. You are completely misrepresenting the ties between multiple nations revolutions in a bs attempt to link them to Marxist rhetoric. When these garbage theories put forward by the Soviets have been completely and totally debunked countless times. You even made the ridiculous claim that the American Revolution was borne of the French Revolution. When the exact opposite is the truth. Which is what completely puts your claims as old Soviet garbage because the Communists refused to ever acknowledge anything good about the US was its own work. The same bs you see online constantly these days. Go spread that garbage on another channel where you will have tankies eating it up. This channel contains American patriots proud of their country who won’t stand for that BS.
Honestly I think we are catching up for open source code reading for electronic issues but ECU stuff and electronic diagnoses is the first battle, the second battle is in getting good quality replacement parts at a reasonable cost. The third battle is not having enough non dealership places to perform the jobs
1- one can never catch up to a target of new BS every single year. Including new manufacturers some years! 2- one can never catch up because aftermarket shops are dropping like flies
First what's up Dude.. ok yeah brother I work in Auto parts.. for a distributor.. local shops and stores.. use to be in sales.. trying help out wrench diagnosis what's up with this 2012 Camry etc.. from wheel speed sensor, cam, crank etc, Mass, TPS.. they all work in concert with each other.. any one of them can change your work schedule.. I see a car.. I see working class folks getting to work.. upper crust can't even care.. but.. dude 700 or more in work.. can break folk's
sure, go clear codes on a newer chrysler without having a "security link" active on your scan tool. I work at a dealership, and did rear brakes on a jeep. We had to send it to our sister dealership to have them clear the parking brake code and turn the check engine light off.
Serviceability was common in just about all products made during the time period you mention not just cars. There once was a law that things needed to be fixable by more or less average people. Everything has slowly become throw away products. IMO, once things were built by computers, and not by hands, everything has become unfixable and with heavy computer control that require dealer level scan tools and subscriptions to reprogram, it has made the driveway mechanic a thing of the past.
I used to service refrigerators, replacing compressors etc in boxes that were purchased for $400 or less 15-20 yrs prior Now they make this stuff that is “better for you” in which the components are often not serviceabe, but the fancy stainess steel cabinets run $2000-$3000 or more, and are destined for the scrapyard after 10 yrs
My dad was a US Army mechanic trained in the 1960s and he taught me how to work on my own vehicles and small engines like my lawnmower and weed eaters. Now everything is designed to be obsolete and to be replaced instead of repaired. Right now all 3 vehicles I have are early 2000s models, and no vehicle I've ever owned has gone to a garage for anything as I've fixed everything myself but boy have I seen some crazy stuff. Like I'm a woman, and I'm not overweight I'm like 5'7 and 135 lbs and I have lil tiny slender arms altho I've got muscle because I push mow my acre lawn and do a lot of other stuff. But I noticed even in manuals for an average sized man that to even replace a lot of simple things for a guy who's much larger than me they make it so you have to remove a whole lot of things you don't need to mess with just to fix what you need to. Like I used to have a 1996 Chevy Cavalier and I would always be able to snake my arm down beside of the engine and untwist the old fliter and twist on the new oil filter and meanwhile guys would have to raise the car and remove the front passenger tire to use a lil access door to remove the filter. Right now in my 2001 Chevy S10 ZR2 the starter is out, and to fix it for a man he'd have to remove that passenger front tire but I was able with the tire on and it just turned to remove both the cables running to it. I have no idea what people will do with those new all electric vehicles, because it seems to me like everything about them is going to be unrepairable and that you'll just have to get a whole new EV. It's the reason why currently all over insurance auction lots all over America you have Tesla's and other fancy EVs with just even minor body damage that have been completely totaled out because they're not even making replacement fenders or this and that for them. Can you imagine what that's going to do to insurance costs? Just because let's say a shopping cart rolls down the hill and dents up your quarter pannel, the insurance adjuster comes out and says well your car is totaled out here's a check. Because that's happening today.
I have a 99 zr2. The plastic oil sending unit broke and leaked oil badly. The distributor had to be pulled to get to it (so they said). I thought 300 was rather steep to replace a scew off cheap part. I wonder if the distributor really had to be pulled out. All I know is I couldn't get to it.
Reading this reminds me of a car I had. I had to remove a headlight to replace the air filter. And I cut my hand every time replacing the oil filter. When the horns quit, I found them inside the front fender. It was a pleasure to get rid of that car.
Being a mechanic for over 20 years, i have noticed some new cars have warranties that if you touch these, the warranty is void. Some customers I’ve had cant even get basic maintenance without tampering warranties. Newer technology has made it tougher to work on vehicles. Still own my shop and still have my customers who visit my shop loyally due to my reputation is what keeps me going every year. Now you have to get courses to be up to date on newer models.
So OBVIOUSLY you've started charging more for newer vehicle and tell your clients that the new vehicle is gonna cost them 30% upcharge for complexity right? Or you another moron who just takes the loss so your clients don't understand that
A perfect example of what your talking about is the 3.5 3.7 ford V6 installed in the Ford edge, Taurus and explorer. The waterpump runs off the timing chain inside the motor. You have to drop the motor to change the waterpump.
I have a 2005 dodge stratus with the 2.7 l v6 in it that’s like that….cant find anyone to attempt the repair so it’s been sittting for a decade…155,000 miles on it is all…..I loved that car too….i was getting 35 mpg on the highway in it and otherwise never had any issues with it breaking down…..
I was out of town when it became necessary to replace my fuel pump. I was so glad that I had not filled the tank the night before. This job had to be done in a parking lot where my truck was when the pump stopped working. I am convinced that FORD does all of this intentionally to make extremely difficult .
We think exactly alike on all of this. But living under a government drowning in debt is like swimming in a river full of drowning men. They won’t let themselves drown until they have dragged you under first. A desperate government will take anything they can get to keep themselves solvent. That might even include the shirt of your back if you don’t bury it deep.
I'm not a gear head but I am a conspiracy theorist so YT must have recommended this to me because I am also having car issues.. What you said here is 100% correct. People need to wake up, and if they don't the other side looks glorious either way.
One of the bigger problems to is that most American humans are less capable overall and have willingly given up their capability in the name of giving tech the ability to manage every aspect of their lives. Why learn how to change a flat tire when you can push a button to wait for someone to do it for you?
@@K03sport EVs will only be one of the many options of vehicle types. Tech is further along than they would let us know. Who knows what batteries they will be using but I'm sure they will have better capacity with less charge time. Possibly wireless proximity charging while driving. At that point though, you'd be able to buy a hydrogen vehicle that actually looks good while they phase out the primitive combustion engine.
I get what you are saying but I think people are awake, but it doesn’t matter because they are disempowered. Like a lion in a cage that knows it’s in a cage and doesn’t want to be there, but what can it do ?
@@biopsiesbeanieboos55 what the lion can do is roar loud as hell so the tamer knows that if this lion gets out the cage it's done. They do have us by the balls. The least we can do is let others know that taxes, the Fed, the Corp America has all been a scam. This is 100% fact. Congress are literally gangsters. Live in the system but don't be of the system. They are in the process of losing right now. Check out world currency. Looks like a whole lot of people are dropping use the US dollar. Petro dollar has already gone bye bye. Asset backed currencies?! No banks!? Tick tock!
Before I was born in 1989, my Dad always repaired his own cars. He could do welding and spraying, he could strip an engine and gearbox. He even did a rebuild on a 1958 Austin Cambridge. Now he has a 2011 ford Mondeo, and he says he's sick of it, and is selling it, because every little job seems to cost a shed load of money.
Had to bust out the G n R "out ta get me" half way through. You are so right in every way. I'm lucky being in dry Colorado so keeping older stuff on the road is easier, except parts are drying up. I'm hoarding and draining the junkyards for my 70's Mopars...but for how much longer? ( not long)
24:10 We are currently in the fourth turning. What you're saying makes sense. I also believe that we will come out of this better than before. It's crazy now, we just have to hold it together for a few more years.
Tony, your spot on i was in the factory commercial automobile repair industry (certified GM" Chevy &Oldsmobile technician) in 1978,79 and 80) the factory created such a nightmare of a repair process on GM that everyone at the shop they sent to the GM training center in Charlotte, NC still couldn't accurately diagnose the problems even with the codes the on board computer s were telling us, were accurate we became parts exchangers until the computer stopped throwing the bad codes and the engines finally ran correctly. Thats when I turned my back on new car repair and joined the Army and did other things.
I remember when that garage blew up. My late mother used to go there for service once in a while. It was a terrible tragedy. Always be extremely careful around gasoline.
When I had to adapt to EFI I wasn't happy about it but I've actually got comfortable with it. This canbus crap however is a deal-breaker. I don't want anything with that wretched setup.
Absolutely! They managed to create a single point of failure, and disperse it throughout the whole car! No way to diagnose it except ripping everything apart and unplugging sometimes dozens of modules to do continuity and resistance testing! F-that! I love my 90s EFI, enough tech to make it rock solid reliable, and in the rare instance something electrical does go wrong, they are easy to diagnose, and nothing has to be programmed or vin coded!
The beancounters thought canbus was a good idea at the time but it evolved into a cascading failure like a row of dominos. Apple has the same canbus problems.
Sometime between 87 and 89 GM decided to attach a heater pipe to the water pump bolt of the 3800, turning a 30 min job into a hand-wringing, head-scratching can of worms. Ultimately I found that although it totally went against my instincts, bending a bracket to get that pipe off was a lot easier than continuing to take off more parts and run into more obstacles
I'm rolling in a 1998 Saturn SL. Manual 5 speed, cable connection for throttle, all mechanical. Love it. Gets as much as 40 mpg out on the road too. What you are saying is absolutely true. My wife's Prius has a computer module to operate the horn - and it has gone bad. $400 bill to fix? Who knows, still broken. That part your talking about "CORPORATE" that started in the 1870s...thanks for sharing that. I hope folks do their research.
The one I hate, is the elimination of the transmission dip stick. Insane greed.
Absolutely insane greed.
Is there anyway to drill into the tranny case and install a dipstick and sleeve?
sealed Trans too
@@douglashewitt5064I think you can, yes
merccedes also got rid of the engine oil dipstick
I worked 30 years in a bus garage. When I started we overhauled literally every single part of the bus. We rebuilt 30 amp relays, every part of the engine, brakes, radiator. nothing left our shop to be overhauled. by the time I retired 90% of the benches were empty and all the parts were scrap and replace or send back as cores.All the parts became sealed units with no way to repair or parts available.
To be fair...... An alternator that isn't working usually needs new bearings, and a voltage regulator, and maybe the pulley is worn..... So if four parts have to be replaced.... Just get a new alternator and send in the core.
And because it was rebuildable, it's life span was forever short of maybe rust or frame fatigue. But again, if maintained then back to point 1.
@@sasquatchrosefartsthe alternator you get is rebuilt from parts stores! Just rebuilt chevy alternator cost me 15 dollars, rebuilt alternator on my dump truck for 22 dollars.
@@sasquatchrosefartsan alternator failure isn’t really what he is talking about. Yes, a wasted 100,000 mile alternator NEEDS to just be changed out. But the overwhelming culmination of down-chain electrical failures related to interlinked systems is unreasonable.
sealed for life components should come with the disclaimer, for the life of the auto loan.
Another thing they did around here was "cash for clunkers." What that did was eliminate almost all the easy to work on cars, leaving only specific desirable cars to survive the crusher.
A cryin shame
The worst travesty in automotive history, as far as I'm concerned.
It took a ton of vehicles directly out of the used market stream. Had to destroy all power trains, eng, trans, diffs etc. They are all now proudly displayed as recycled steel in an abandoned Olympic city.
💯 percent truth!! The whole point was to force all of the non-computerized vehicles off the road AND destroy all of the used parts availability! Curious thing is, it hurt the poorer amongst us the worst, the very people these scoundrels claim to represent! Evil madness!
In California, liquid glass went down the throat of engine. lastly the yard manager put red X on parts that couldn't be sold no matter what.
My brother was dropping a tank on a car to replace the fuel pump, and the gas shot out like a fire hose he said, burnt the shop to the ground, he had 3'rd degree burns on his right arm, but the gas hit the drop light, the bulb exploded, and ignited the gas. Hats off to you guys, he had said for years they are intentionally screwing the 'shade tree mechanics', I believe it.
I'm sorry that happened to him, but likely it was his mistake..there are safe ways to relieve pressure and an incandescent bulb working on fuel is a no go.
Non mechanical pump is far beyond 12 psi lucky he it wasnt worse.
@@JamesCat-qx6sb valve on the fuel rail
@@JamesCat-qx6sbYou do realize back in those days incandescent bulbs in drop lights were pretty much the only affordable thing around right. Accidents like these were the reason lights changed.
@@raymond4648 Early TBI systems used 9 to 12 psi. It was only with port fuel injection that higher pressures were used to prevent vapor lock when hot exhaust spits back out of the intake and hits the injector.
Tony as a retired new car dealer, this was always the manufacture plan. Don’t forget “special tools” we had to buy from the car maker. This made it even harder to work on a car without these tools.
I remember when this was done even on the Allen plug for the Renault 4 oil sump. Of course all us car Diyers ground down something to fit, but it left a sour taste.
Like the Cadillacs.
Oh fk specialty tools .
I’m an independent Harley mechanic and there are specialty electrical diagnostic tools (breakout boxes) that make an electrical diagnosis much quicker and easier. The Harley manuals even give you the breakout box part numbers but then the dealers won’t sell those tools to anyone because they don’t want the average person to be able to fix their own bikes. Gone are the days of simplicity.
I have been telling buddys to keep these older cars around. iam a master mechanic of 35 years. run my own shop late model parts are horrible and hard to get. And now with the layoffs hard to get factory parts. you better know how to keep this old stuff going or your walking
I’m only 25 and the cars from the 90’s and early 2000s barely even resemble cars these days. I can’t even imagine how much worse it feels growing up in your generation. You guys REALLY had the best cars for the working class. I wish we could go back.
Same here
move to Cuba
@@johncarcamo6772 Castro kept the best of USA, and sent the worst Cubans to USA. LOL..
Meh. Outside of Toyotas, Hondas, and the compact trucks which no longer exist, there weren’t any really great cars until the late 90s.
@@brianm5637 dude there’s been great cars since the model T lol
"Things are weird now and they're going to get weirder." This man does not lie! This is the first one of his videos I've seen, and he is 100% correct on both the mechanical front and how we're getting screwed by the corporate/global government.
But how things come out on the other side, he is DEAD WRONG.
@@trickyrick8621 just read ur immoral evil leaders that worship money, the end goal is most people gone and robots and brave new world and gataca as the future
@@trickyrick8621it depends on how you are now and what you expect ..yes some won’t like it but most will be fine after it’s all done
It will get way worse when EVs become more common, those cars are literally unrepairable and are junk instantly.
Love his videos as well. As a collapse theorist (and practicing Survivalist), he's right: We are collapsing, heading towards a brick wall at 1000 miles an hour. However, on the other side of the die-off, we'll probably go back to the future: The 1870's future.
Already operating in the mode Uncle Tony describes: I have two pickups, a 1995 Nissan, and a 1990 Dodge Cummins Diesel. I know every nut and bolt of these vehicles, and don't plan on buying anything newer.
As a mechanic of 34 years I completely agree. We have been getting screwed for years with cars e.g. no drain plugs on trans and diffs, fuel tanks scaring you , no access, special tools, restricted technical data I could go on and on. The technology is over complicated and less reliable now. In addition mechanics have poor pay, poor benefits, poor conditions and have to buy expensive tools, that's why there's a shortage of good mechanics.
Agreed 100%
I’m retired and was a fleet mechanic for a power company and have experienced so much of this greed generated engineering!
Dickhead job for dickhead people
Don't ever call one a mechanic they are "service technicians"😂
When the $5 circuit board cost $ 1,000 to be replaced, and the shop need $ 10,000 in computers to do the repair !
CAR VS COMPUTERS WITH WHEELS !
I wish hobby groups would arise that could take a popular modern used car, gut all the electronics, and sell a single board computer that could run the engine only off a few sensors like exhaust O2, manifold pressure, and throttle position. Then you can ignore all the fault codes from all the other junk and get running.
Computer network already...
It is in every aspect of our lives. A 90 day supply of doxycycline for a fish tank with a “yuck” problem costs $60.00.
A 90 day supply RX for human version of doxycycline (exactly the same different color capsule) costs $4,400.00 without health insurance. With health insurance $60.00. See what capitalism is doing to all those with no insurance or really crappy insurance? It’s the same business model forcing the cattle into the chute, with their beef tag identities punched into their ears. Humans are a mere commodity for finance, they won’t hide it with propaganda for much longer, and then their true colors will be on full display for the world to see. It is too late to stop them now.
When a leaking tail light Lense in a pick up truck can cost you over $5000.00 to repair, something is dead wrong !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
@@arnoldberk2809, can be done temporarily till the regs get changed use a marine engine.
Auto makers have made it crystal clear, they don't want us working on our own cars, mechanics or otherwise. They want you to just buy a new car once yours is broken. Or take it to them so they can charge you a premium to "fix" it.
I think the end goal is for people to just lease a new car every 5 years. I know people who do that and it's nuts the money they spend. Monthly lease payments forever and ever, increasing every 5 years without end.
I wonder if we could realisticly afford something like that?
@@soliniv1411 We can't, especially if that new car is not locally produced.
@@Bloodbain88The end goal is for you not to drive anywhere
Its not the automakers its the European auto alliance thinking its a top notch idea to deliver all these top down approach for every country who needs to achieve netzero. Though netzero is a sales pitch. The issue were facing is not pollution from our scantly dense compared to bigger populations carbon footprint. The ICE vehicles we have now are at the most carbon and pollution free vehicles but they as in EV European lobbyists brainwashing our legislators with "safe sales pitches" while our countrymen will never hear the likes of being able to teach their kids about automotive unless they risk killing they offspring or going bankrupt changing a part. This is what the Europeans wanted though. To have a logistics plan to completely defunc Ford and GM from the US to Australia auto market. Not because its going to scale global emissions but because its going to give more certaintly that the consumers will collectively be dumbed out of choice to never want to work on a car again. Look at these listless social media entrepreneurs all flashing the same electric cars yet the reality of that is any normal person buys one of them realizes the only saving money if something breaks out of warranty or it burns your house down at least the energy you saved in oil an gas can offset the savings you made right? Or the who infrastructure shortfalls of EV charging stations an having all these roman candles all in working ordee hopefully not just in the affluent rich suburbs. Its a nice idea on paper giving these people so much control but ultimately its at the consumers detriment and expense. It means nothing for global netzero emissions esp if the foundation we working with here is so that instead of securing a diverse energy future its basically push all our coal gas an oil to be exported for other countries by destroying our economies an minimizing the publics equity etc. The parts industry for sure are a nail in the coffin what do you ecpect when we let Europeans manage our countries though
My father had an auto repair shop for 40 years, from 1946 to 1986. He got out of the business when he saw this trend escalating. He retired and worked part time outside of the auto repair field. He had no regrets getting away from the business as he saw things continue to get worse.
the golden age of mechanics...everything is absolute ass to work on now
you make it sound like he wasn't going to retire anyways...that's 40 years
He should have stayed in the industry and fought this sh8t show and not ran away with his tail betwen his l egs. Things would have been quite different if people did this in the past!
My grandfather did the same thing.
@@JeriDroyou sound ignorant saying that, like you missed the message
I bought a 1978 Chevy truck 2 years ago, because I wanted a simple replacement for worn out parts.
Well it’s not simple when you can’t get parts for a rear full floating axle brake kit. My fix was to go Aftermarket and replace the drums with disc kit. Works great now.
These are the kind of choices we will have to make and we all might start looking like Mad Max.
See you in Thunder Dome!
Totally agree I have worked at the same Ford Dealer for 33 years and I say it everyday, they have a team of engineers finding ways to make these cars beyond hard to service. From simple oil changes to overhauling engines or transmissions. This profession has become a joke and I don’t advise anyone getting into this field.
Really when you think about it,today's ceos and auto stock portfolio is becoming more like a bunch of thugs that have a short life and nothing to offer in brains.
IF we quit buying their crap they'd change their ways or go out of business. Which is exactly what they deserve.
Hey loses go electric end of problem 😅
Engineers are the worst these days - not all of them but when you make a structurally sound product with a tiny plastic part or specific tooling that keeps it from working correctly drives me nuts as a mechanic - I’ve had to tool and shave down points of contact to make parts fit or salvage a bike - rebuilding the bearings without a full disassembly so the bb cups don’t snap from rust - it’s annoying when a customer brings a basic repair and I tel them you need to buy a new bike there’s no fixing it
preach it brother . turned 60 recently been in the profession tooooo long . some of the bs you have to do to repair the simplist problem bogged down by the whos paying inigma our dealership seams to struggle with getting that info up front. if it was my bussiness id wanna know how this project is getting funded. oem parts with a 300% mark up and now you wait weeks to even get the part.. hows your productivity?
My sons ...edit (girlfriend's mother)... was an engineer for one of the big 3. She quit a 6 figure job because she could design things that would be accessible and last for hundreds of thousands of miles but was told to design things to make it through warranty period only! And be inaccessible to the general mechanic.
There's also a reason why it's your son's girlfriend and not your son who worked for said company and it's not just because he is or isn't and engineer. They go out of their way not to hire male engineers even less so white engineers. Talent, ability? Those play second or third fiddle to what genitals you have and what your skin color is in today's cooperate America, doubly so for STEM jobs...
Good for her!!!
I wish all automotive engineers would quit or go on strike about this issue!!!
General Motors I assume!!???
@letthereberight I don't know which one. I think my son said he either wasn't told or didn't remember.
🤬
I worked in appliance repair in 1976 and the guy I was learning from tried to explain to me how the industry was moving toward planned obsolescence. The idea was to create an endless market for products that weren’t serviceable, thus allowing for more profits for established manufacturers.
wow they were way ahead of the curve. I actually use appliances as an example for where the auto industry is going
I can (barely) remember when my mothers' refrigerator was converted to 60 cycles, from 25 Hz. That thing was still working when she passed away. A neighbours' fridge needed a door seal. The part was $85. She bought a new fridge. (it was old ). I worked in electronics. I can remember about 50 different tube types stored on the wall. And an appliance guy up the street, with burners of 2 sizes, 1 type of control for all burners, a few different oven elements. I marvelled at the simplicity. Now, the digital display on my stove is getting very dim, but I will likely wait and buy a new stove...
I was shown by a body shop owner back in the 80s how cars were purposely designed to collect and hold moisture/salt/debris so that they would rust out and gave to be replaced sooner. I think Japan has killed a lot of the planned obsolescence movement as Americans started noting in the 80s that a Toyota or Honda wasn’t the complete piece of shit death trap tgat American cars were designed to be.
American nanufacturers took 25 years to catch up, but have already started going the other way in trying to profit off higher priced vehicles designed to shit the bed after the warranty expires again.
Appliances are pure overpriced junk today. I own a still working 1936 Frigidaire by GM refrigerator. Nothing built in the last 20 years will still be working every day.
@@drewthompson7457 A capacitor on the control board for the digital display is going bad... Unfortunately, the components on the control board are probably sealed inside a potting material, making sub component replacement impossible.
I’m 67 years old, and live in a state where an auto over 15 years old only needs to pass a safety inspection. No emissions testing needed. I own a 1965 Chevy Nova with an inline 230 six cylinder, three on the tree. It’s my personal FU to the car industry, the parts industry, and government regulators. Being a three on the tree, that makes it an effective anti theft device for about 50 percent of the population as well. I love the car. And get more thumbs up than ire from the community.
Love it!!
Here in North Carolina, they got rid of Emissions testing. They do safety only now. If your vehicle is over 30 years old, it don't need an inspection at all.
novas are interstin cars..
@@anteneupitra When they first appeared in ‘62 there were several engine options. Four, six, and eight cylinder models ranging from coupes to sedans to hardtops to wagons and even Super Sports. Cool cars in their day.
The 50% number would be too low with just a regular standard transmission..... 3 speed on the column? Definitely less than 20% and probably less than 10% can drive one.
The same thing happened to hearing aids and other electronic devices. I repaired them for 25 years and watched them get more expensive and less repairable. (1990 to 2015)
I am one of your customers. I simply cant afford them, but need them.
same thing happened to cameras, it got to the point we had to send the camera to manufacturer for repair. and it took like 6 months to get t back.
I'm a little conflicted about this whole topic. I mean, yes, many things are less serviceable but aren't they also more advanced?
Same thing is happening to computers which I fix for a living. Parts that are coded by the manufacturer for instance. Stupid amounts of glue when little screws would do. Now we have systems-on-chip which is the end basically.
@@blissfuljoy6049They don’t have to be less serviceable to be more advanced.
Apple, for example, puts it in their contracts with their part suppliers that they aren’t allowed to sell OEM parts to anyone but Apple. (Third party repair shops can’t buy replacements easily) They intentionally make things hard to repair, and that’s just one example.
Something you reminded me of that happened to me several years ago. I hurt the engine in my truck, and I was across town at a friends house. He had a coworker of his over that day that I was there. Those two worked at the Mercedes dealer in town; the coworker being a service tech. I proceeded to remove the engine from my truck in his driveway with hand tools. This tech, was completely blown away that I was able to take the engine out of a vehicle, fix it, and put it back in using just hand tools (and a hoist) in a driveway over a weekend. He had never seen or heard of such a thing because it's not possible on newer cars.
That doesn't make any sense. He must have been inexperienced, a lube Tech or a liar. Dealers pull engines and transmissions with hand tools everyday.
@@2DclanSnipingTeam some people these days are THAT oblivious of how things used to be. it's truly sad. tough times are coming.
@@2DclanSnipingTeam Pull it and fix yourself or let the dealer rape you hard for that service should be a point that you should have made after that statement and without the first part.
You kidding? You damn near HAVE to remove the engine, just to get to anything that needs changing/replacing.
@@painkillerjones6232do they take the engine out of the top with the car on the ground, using just an engine hoist?
I thought new vehicles had the engines removed out of the bottom with the subframe and everything attached?
When I was locksmithing about 7 years ago our boss had to pay for a service so we could call in the vin on a car so they could give us a password to be able to talk to the car via a plug in diagnostics tool just to be able to program a new fob to a vehicle. It was absolutely insane. Oh and if the customers car battery was at 11.5 to 11.9 volts the computer wouldn’t let the new fob be programmed. It was always fun telling the customer that we couldn’t program their fob because their car battery was too low. At the end of it the customer would be out anywhere between $200 - $400. The older vehicles all you had to do was hit and hold buttons in the vehicle to program a new fob or jam a paper clip in the obd and be good to go and it only cost you like $20 - $40. They have definitely screwed us over in every way, Tony is spot on!
Seems pointless til you buy a mid-2010s KIA and your car thief can easily program a new fob for himself
My 86 Camaro needed a fuel pump. I have the factory service manuals, and the procedure included dropping the entire rear end to remove the fuel tank. Instead of following that procedure, i cut a hole over the tank to access the top of the tank, cut the steel fuel lines, removed the assembly, changed the pump, put it back together, used neoprene fuel hose and clamps to hook the lines back together. Created a fiberglass cover and attached it using nut-serts and bolts. Later i did the same thing to my 2002 Yukon. I expect that with the convenient hatch, the pump will never fail again.🙂
99 Tahoe. He'll no I ain't dropping tank. Studied diagrams enough till got enough confidence to get the 4 inch grinder out. Bingo, right over the top of pump one piece cut out. After replaced the cut out made a nice hinged panel for future.. ir didn't hurt that the interior was already pulled as it had become my daily work truck loaded with tools. 2 front seat , open storage behind it.
"I have the factory service manuals" // Do you know that in USSR every single device had a service manual? Including TV-set, radio or cassete player? It was an obligation for a factory to provide a service manual. Despite of this fact there is still idiots who say USSR was the worst thing in the world!
@@alextrezvy6889
Yes, we used to have them on everything. Now not so much. If you want them you usually have to buy them. But, some manufacturers refuse to make the information available, Apple comes to mind, but there are others as well.
@@alextrezvy6889 Yeah right, that's why hockey players from the Soviet Union bought piles of electronics/clothes/jeans to take back, when they came to North America. Shelves over there would be empty of food and other necessities we take for granted. There was a Russian hockey player, who was drafted by the Vancouver Canucks in the 1980's i think it was. A Canadian player and his wife were over visiting, and the Russian couple were overjoyed---showed them all the meat they had scored that day--fridge/freezer full. The Canadians asked them "why would you buy all this meat". The Russians thought it was like the Soviet Union, the shelves would be bare for days. They were told that here the shelves will be just as full tomorrow. Only idiots think it was rosy in the USSR. Why do you think that when their athletes came over here, they were basically under lock and key, so they wouldn't defect? That's a FACT.
@@alextrezvy6889Back then almost all appliances in the US came with service manuals and diagrams.
You don’t need to utterly change economic systems to mandate the inclusion of a service manual lol. That’s just a simple industry regulation Congress 100% has the authority to do.
But at the moment it isn’t mandated. So it’s cheaper to not include one, so companies don’t. If all companies have to include them, then there is no competitive incentive to leave them out.
Not too many people realize or will admit that there's a corporate US and a constitutional/common law US. You are spot on and correct. 👍
Yep, one wants to hurt and enslave people (u.s.), the other one is just the earth (usa)
I want to know more.
Two national governments exist, one to be maintained under the constitution with all its restrictions. The other to maintained by congress outside and independently of that instrument. Justice Marshall Harlan
Look up judge Anna vaughn
@@roberthamilton1152the United States of America went bankrupt in the 1870s.
Since the English bailout our country is a COMPANY and your birth certificate is collateral on loans to the company.
Go to court. Notice how much it resembles the deck on a ship?
Maritime Law
An old timer in manufacturing explained to me long ago that during the onset of the industrial revolution, most machinery was made "in the old country". There were no parts for it. What you did get with the machine was a set of blueprints & specifications. When something broke or wore out, you made the part as you had in your possession all the information to do so.
It also reminds me of naval ships, they had on board stock of common parts, i.e. steel stock, pipe, fittings, dresser couplings, etc., you had a machine shop on board. If you didn't have what was needed, you made it. It may not be perfect but it got you back under way one way or another.
If that's what we're headed back to it's fine with me.
But it's not where we're headed. They don't teach that sort of stuff anymore, since a long time now. It would be great, but finding someone young and willing to do that... Even me, I fully realize what's happening, but I clearly know I can't do stuff like that. I can get by with tools and repair stuff the best I can, that's about it
@@adamdion7574 There are machine shops open all over the place. I'm no machinist by any means, but I can cobble enough together to have a professional finish it up if I have to. You probably have more resources available than you think you do. I'd bet if you went to a car show and asked around you'd find a half dozen guys with at least a lathe.
With a mill and lathe ,oxy/accet & welder even a novice can make just about any thing . @@adamdion7574
I have a 12x36 “gunsmith “ lathe and a full sized milling machine in my 20x20 garage 😎
Who is they? And why do you need them? I don't need anything from "them" . I am a Man and have a brain that thinks without being told what to think, or how to think. And yes, we will eventually end up back to what was as this current system is designed to implode.
I noticed it starting with non greaseable steering and suspension components. I remember asking my dad why.
Non greaseable works if designed correctly. My parents have a 2001 Toyota Camry with over 300K miles. Zero grease fitting, zero play in any of the suspension components. Back in the day, one could grease all suspension components at every oil change and still have a suspension that was totally shot at 120K miles. I do still buy greaseable u-joints for my older junk and grease them at every oil change. Kind of a pain but it keeps me busy and out of trouble.
When I first saw non greaseable fittings, I thought, well oil changes and lubes are easier, but, the customer will be paying for suspension parts instead, one day.
My 65 Ford had non-greasable tie rods. They advertised at the time that the components had a lifetime lubricant that did not need greasing. After 45 years they were worn out but they did make it that long. Car was a Falcon so it was considered disposable even then.
Further, some manufactures require special tools to instal parts, and these tools are only available to dealer workshops.
My mother's Ford Mondeo was taken to an independent shop to have the transmission replaced.
The rear main oil seal showed signs of leaking.
Got the car back, and it was pissing engine oil after 100km, (60 miles), of use.
Sent it back to the shop, and the poor bastards had to do the major strip-down, but called to say they couldn't obtain the installation tool from Ford.
Fortunately, they spoke with an engine reconditioner, and found a work-around.
Car is back, not leaking.
So they did the entire job again, but stood by their work - no charge.
Poor bastards.
Excellent service.
I also went through this on a ford escort years ago. I did a clutch job and resurfaced the flywheel. While I was in there I replaced the rear main seal, but I failed to check for a wear ridge on the crank surface that the seal rides on. The seal would work fine at idle, but leaked like a stuck pig at higher engine RPMs. I had to pull the whole thing back apart and install a sleeve on the crank with a new seal, and that solved the problem. It is amazing that something that I have done hundreds of times in my career can be overlooked when one is in a hurry to get the customers vehicle back? I only work on my own these days, but when I pull a transmission out, I always check that crank surface (lightly) with a small 90 degree pick. If it hangs on a groove, I automatically sleeve the crank. I hope others learn from my mistake?
The last big truck (Peterbilt) had something like $17,000 worth of emissions equipment on it. The salesmen told me that the dealers loved it. He said "In the old days we had to up sell a $170.00 stereo and now you're forced to take a $17,000 up sell by EPA".
We hated it at the manufacturers. A bunch of garbage to package on the frames (while trying to keep it out of the way of the up-fitters), even more extra coolers, even more wiring and plumbing, FAR more warranty, way more weight, lower fuel economy, etc. It's all a nightmare scenario of basically doing everything wrong to your product that you possibly could. I don't think we harvested much in the way of money out of it either. Like you said, it has to go on _all_ of the trucks, and believe me, there is no cartel or friendship in the heavy truck game. If someone else could cut the price of their EPA garbage versus your Pete, they would have. Especially when you're talking about fleet sales... If brand X was $100/truck cheaper than brand Y, that would be a huge competitive advantage. Nobody was getting rich off of it. In fact, we were sweating it pretty hard.
Maybe the actual salesmen like it because they're on a percentage commission so any cost increase to the truck was good news for them?
Go
Goobermint 🥵😩💯🤷🏿♂️
All pushed by the democrat MARXIST party and there ilk for CONTROL!@@TheBrokenLife
bastards
What a racket. I work for Volkswagen and when customers come in with fully deleted and tuned diesels I get excited
We have seen what John Deer and International Harvester have done to farmers
The right to repair act with the John Deere stuff has been overturned recently. They lost in court. But even at that I get why they did it. Protects themselves. Any idiot could “fix” or “tune” a tractor and bugger it up, remove it and go blame Deere for it and they foot the bill for some idiots hack work. Im a farmer myself and it sucked for sure but I get there side if it. Good to see it’s over turned now tho.
We run strictly all Deere stuff too. And currently having computer issues on a 8320r and the transmission module. Private mechanic having hard time fixing it but is what it is. Bloody tractor has 38 computer modules on it. People think cars are complicated electronic wise ? Lmao.
Not international harvester but case ih and Navistar. International harvester has been gone since 1987.
@DanWoelders-fd5zd you're not a farmer. They're the farmers and you're the crop.
@@DanWoelders-fd5zdyou think they would have any qualms about telling someone who screwed up to kick rocks? They don’t even pay for their own fuckups
This all started when Gi;lette said "Give away the razor and sell the blades."
And it is happening in all industries: Apple and John Deere both recently lost cases prohibiting the right to repair.
Also printer ink cartridges.
@@iamthemossEpson Eco tank has solved this problem. Check them out
Light bulbs too. #plannedobsolescence Strength! GODspeed!
Yeah. I wanna rebuild my own light bulbs
@@gmw3083 Damn right, I used to be able to buy a case of filaments that would last me for years.😁
Tony - just to let you know, not all automotive manufacturers did things intentionally to make things harder to service. I worked as an engineer at GM Saturn in the 80's. ALL of our product development meetings included someone from both the service side, as well as UAW rep from the assembly side. We specifically worked to make things easier to service, even for a novice. I especially remember how we as engineers HATED to do auto trans fluid changes, and wondered why we just couldn't have a spin-on filter same as for the oil, as well as a drain plug, so you didn't have to do 30 bolts and drop the pan making a huge mess and requiring a pan gasket to boot. Auto writer idiots panned the motor as to having inadequate power and making too much noise. What they didn't know was that those motors were understressed on purpose, as well as having a mean time between failure of well over 500,000 miles. Yes...timing chains can be noisier than belts that have to be replaced at 60k miles, but they are bullet proof, and weren't as quiet and sewing-machine like as the Japanese motors. Same thing with the space frame construction, the same as race cars, as well as having totally rust-free polymer body panels. But once again, idiot auto "writers" panning them because of the large body panel gaps (as if that mattered) that were required to allow for expansion clearance due to temperature. I could go on and on. Rant over.
My bro worked for GM as a junior engineer and said the same thing. I believe he worked on interior panels for the uplander van.
I believe that
Imagine buying a GM today... I'd literally sooner buy a Chinese car.
Back in the 1990's, I really appreciated GM products. Generally, there was good clearance around whatever you needed to service. The non-Saturn products had fat bolts on the transmission pans, where bolt heads on Ford and Chrysler products would snap off. Except for changing something simple, like an air-filter, Toyota's were a complete nightmare.
Auto writers are morons that couldn't get a journalism job elsewhere.
Here in Florida it is easy to do, no state inspections. I bought a 2004 Ford F150 with a blown engine. I put new motor mounts, an old 302, mechanical fuel pump, new fuel tank and lines. It is now my daily driver. I’m also working on an old 1953 Dodge army truck. No computers or EFI for me.
Florida here too !! Same brother . Got my 71 Grand Prix and lmfao overhead cam ranger that got plucked and sbc swapped . All mechanical. When they shut down vehicles with whatever crazy magnetic BS . It will be guys like us rebuilding and teaching how america was really suppose to be
That's the way.
That is one single election away from changing entirely. Florida is NOT a "free state" by ANY stretch of the imagination. The difference in Florida is those who own the government here are not quite in the same club as those who are part of the DC/London/Brussels Empire....but they engage in the EXACT same behaviors. Eventually they'll die off, get bought out, or simply decide the headache isn't worth it and capitulate, then we will get the rest of the oppression here too.
mechanical efi was a godsend. not as complicated as some would think.
@@Poolguy8879 my 1995 chrysler lebaron. swapped out the auto 4 spd and put in the 5 spd manual from an old acclaim. at least it has an OD. minty when i bought it. aside from one head gasket - actually not that hard to replace - it still drives just right. reliable, comfy, no issues.
i wouldn't drive chrysler now if you paid me...
You speak the truth Tony. Back in the day we bought and fixed everything with the money we earned and saved for the next thing we needed. Now the world is strung out on credit for things we want but don’t need. The manufacturers build everything so we can’t fix them. The whole thing’s a train heading for a cliff. Not a matter of if but when.
In the end, the regular people with the knowledge and “know how” will be the most valuable people in the world.
But they will all be dead by then. Then you have all these weak men not understanding lefty loosy, righty tighty, screaming what does Google say???
And a target at the same time. Look at those peeps who found a way to run engines on a bunch of alternative fuels. Where are they now?
@@adamdion7574 yep.. very true!
Yep... deleted by some form of government entity!! Aka a lowly foot solider that works for them
Once the regular people stop keeping this world turning, the shi is going to hit the fan.
I am a 46 year old woman who knows nothing about cars and yet it suggested one of your videos to me, and this is the 2nd one I have watched. Love hearing the truth and I wish I had even a sliver of your skills and knowledge. I did not use my life and time wisely for what is coming....
You've taken the first and most important step by becoming aware. Now learn as much as you can and try to find like minded people in your social circle...or create one if need be.
Be confident, avoid the fear mongering and don't question that inner voice when it tells you something ain't right.
Odds are, you'll do just fine. Good luck to you.
@@UncleTonysGarage Thank you so much for responding to my comment (totally unexpected). I appreciate that advice and it honestly makes me feel better. 🙏
There’s still time to learn how to fix things. Most times it’s not that hard- the next time something small and cheap takes a shit, take it apart. Probably only need a Phillips screwdriver. Figure out how it’s supposed to work, and why it doesn’t. Look the item up online, see if parts are available. Sometimes you may have to just shoot in the dark and order 2 or 3 diff parts. Put it back together, You’ll fix it. I fix stuff all the time and have never done it before. Washer, dryer, oven, vehicles, etc. People always say to me, how do you know how to do so many things? I DON’T! Half the time I have experience to lean on, the other half I just use reason and common sense to figure it out. If it’s broke, you’re out absolutely nothing by just taking it apart, seeing how it works, and putting it back together.
@@UncleTonysGaragethere is a tangent you are missing...... Good abs systems do significantly help the average driver. Once you have a car with wheel speed sensors, you might as well run harnesses for computer ignition and fuel injection.
I agree that it's sad there wasn't more respect for carburetors, as new materials like silicone could massively improve a carb. But they didn't know silicone would be developed to this level as a diaphram. The industry changes according to materials. But at least small engine makers are developing carbs based on new materials.
I love how you’re trying to say it without actually saying it and have RUclips censor you. Just by what you’re saying tells me you know exactly what’s going on and why. We need more people like you to help wake people up. As the Patriot Nurse would say, “Beans, Bullets, and Band-AIDS.”
I’m 27 and been working as a tech at a toyota dealer now for about 6 years. I’m used to all the stuff you talked about and it’s “normal” for me and is “normal” for all the people who don’t know any better. I agree, we should go back to the old days. There’s a reason both my vehicles are early 2000’s vehicles because they are extremely easy to work on compared to these new 2023 vehicles coming out.
Yes, even Toyota and Honda, which are probably the best have way to much gadgetry now. Recently rented a new Corolla. It was actually very luxurious for an entry-level car. But the electronics were mind spinning. I can see why any new car that becomes flooded, it is instantly written off.
One thing that made me realize that was the tap to my radiator core. Wanted to buy a new one because old one was leaking (1961 plymouth) couldn't Dinsmore anything decent. Then found out I could just wrench it open..put 2 new o-rubbers in there and been fine for the last 4 years. I'm 29 was also a shock for me how easy it could be
I constantly tell my wife I don't want a vehicle newer than 2010
Post 9/11 to pre-Great Recession. That's the sweet spot. I'd go back to '96-ish for imports. Now stop telling people. I want more NOHC Buick V6s
@@lukek1949I have a 2016 Corolla and it's a great car. My 2004 Toyota tundra is also a great truck with the 2uz 4.7 V8. If it needs a starter I have to remove the entire intake and injector rail. An $800 job at the shop, for a starter. The timing belt and water pump was $1000 but that's every 100,000 miles. Hopefully I won't be having to change that starter anytime soon.
As an independent shop worker, my gripe is "special tools". Need a special socket for this and a special tool for that doodad. Never ending spending spree.
Yes your so right on the specialty tools ,ughh I hate that ..
Agreed, so many engines from different manufacturers need their own set of timing locking tools for example
Yep , allen key, torx , tamperproof torx, double hex, double square, double triangle, keeping mechanics poor and the mobile spanner man wealthier
Also gm lt1 distributor cap socket, Cadillac water pump socket, Ford spindle hub sockets, and don't get me started on the euro special socket scene 😳
I was gonna help my neighbor chsnge the spark plugs on his 2017 Silverado but i wasn't about to buy that spark plug remover.
Another example of craziness: on a 2021 volvo you cant replace a damn speaker with one from the same model parts car. Only the dealership has the tools to "register" it on the computer system. Its supposed to be two freaking wires, now its like an internet cable!
Insanity
damn bro i never even thought of that
they might be lying tho i mean speakers are speakers maybe you’re not doing it right. did you strip it to see if it’s just two wires? bc you can’t usually always change speakers to aftermarket
There're more than two wires, its no longer simple plug n play
Planned Obsolescence - You can thank Edward Bernays who came up with this practice and sold it to the big 3 auto makers. This business model is now the standard among most major manufacturers of virtually any type of appliance or machinery.
And people are still gonna buy them junks. We consumers are incentivizing it sadly whether intentionally or not. And the government don'r care too so good luck to all of tou folks there in US
Just in time manufacturing. No inventory, order as needed.
Every car is a lemon now. You cannot pay it off, nor keep it going.
So sad. Cars used to be ENGINEERED, not sure what they call it now.😢
@@IOverlordI mean, what’s the alternative? Where do you buy a good appliance these days? Who even makes them?
We recently bought a $750 portable AC. Read the manuals, followed every instruction to the letter. It fried its own circuit board-a thing it genuinely doesn’t need, it’s just an AC, it could be all mechanical-in 7.5 days.
The company wanted us to go through a replacement process they estimated would take 3-4 weeks and included cutting the power cord.
That’s $100 a day for the life we got out of a brand new appliance. Luckily, it was within the retailer’s return window, but that’s still utterly insane to me.
This is one of your best videos Tony, and I agree 100% that people need to do their research.
Back some years ago I stopped by a family operated garage where I live that's been on business for 35 years now, and one of the brothers was replacing the spark plugs in a car that he had been working on for like 3 hours, and in order to replace a couple of the back plugs he had to actually jack up the engine in order to get to them, and I remember saying something like "the people that design this stuff don't think about the poor mechanic that has to work on it", and he said no, they were thinking of me specifically when they designed this because they want to put people like me out of business.
I've learned things over the last few years thru my own research that have opened my eyes to so much.
I've said it a million times, it has never been more apparent that the people have lost control of their government.
A lot of the reasons why are obvious, but a lot of the reasons aren't, and that's why it's so important to do your research.
It was never intended for the people to fear their own government, but for the government to have a healthy fear of the people, but that horse left the barn a long time ago and I'll leave it at that.
OH , They ARE Thinking about You !!! And ME & Anybody else that has the Ability to FIX vehicles !!! I'm NOT a mechanic , however , I am pretty good at diagnosing my problems with automobiles & decent at doing the work myself !! However my ability ENDS with cars built IN 2000 !!!! The computers & computerized systems in the MODERN car have made it IMPOSSIBLE for any SHADETREE mechanic to do ANYTHING !!! LUCKILY for me , I drive a 1990 Chevy truck with a 350 CID engine , which I am still able to do some work on !!! AS an example : I had some problems with the Antilock brake system & was able to remove it !!!!!! WONDERFUL - - - - - THEY have FIGURED OUT how to FORCE consumers to return to the DEALERS for ANY work with their PROPRIETARY KNOWLEDGE of their systems ........
We all need to ride horses again. Fuck it. Go horseback!!! See how auto's like that! But than again. They already have rules for horses in cities. 😂.
Short answer… we the people became complacent and failed to hold our government accountable when we had the chance. Now it’s grown too large and is too entrenched to be reformed peacefully. And nobody wants to do the unthinkable until they’re pushed to their absolute breaking point. And when that eventually happens, things will get VERY ugly.
Enjoy your conversations. As a mechanic in a shop since 1984 couldn't agree more. Still a old school car guy, love old AMC Jeep products. In 1990 started in the Heavy Duty Diesel truck and equipment field. What's going on with cars is also going on in Heavy Duty field. I laugh at how much plastic, computers, and finicky everything is.
The old straight forward all steel, non computer equipment was so robust and non stop able! Keep fluids in them and keep going. Now everytime I turn around a big new piece of new equipment is shut down over computers, sensors, emmisons etc.
Sad day America can't even continue a day of building in construction without shut downs over sensors, computer updates etc. Telling crew can't work today till dealer comes out with laptop and diagnostic equipment. We are not building things better! Bottom line is throw away world and being controlled.
Letting women make laws results in impractical environmental restrictions
That why the only vehicles I own living in Comiefornia are all smog exempt, 3 Cummins 6bt trucks, and a 58 ranchero 406 FE 2x4, 4sp!! All smog exempt. This state sure hates them.
What's funny is that people don't understand that all this is happening as a result of capitalism and it's many intrinsic conflicts. Welcome to the future of capitalism. America, land of the fee, home of the slave.
The irony is that the pretext for these overcomplicated, throw-away vehicles (along with other throw-away goods like dishwashers, etc), is to "save the environment ".
So true.
My dad worked from sun up to sun down from his garage for over thirty years. Than came the "modern" fuel injection and front wheel drive. Customers did not want to compensate him for the cost of replacement parts that could not be rebuilt and his labor to install theses parts. He retired and enjoyed a long and happy retirement, no more drama to put up with.
I drive a 1974 LTD. Greasable everything, a big 9" rear end with bearings and seals that maybe cost $20. Rear wheel drive is the way to go. Hand and leg room for days, everywhere. Even under the hood.
I worked at a shop in high school, the one that I always remember was when a Lumina Z34 rolled in and my boss chuckling and saying, "hope it doesn't need an alternator."
It did. and I learned about what you are talking about.
Exactly correct. Did 2 of those things. My boss's wife had an Old's with that same engine. Alternator went. No fun!!
.
This is why I still have a 1978 F250
This is becoming true with heavy construction equipment too. Mechanics need access to the manufacturer’s database to reset engine trouble codes that the average mechanic does not have access to.
I work on boom lifts all the time as a commercial painter and several times in the last few years I've either been stuck up in the air against a building or in a bad spot and had to be rescued by another lift because some safety code had been tripped and it will not allow you to lower it or even be operated from the ground control. The technician comes out and spends half a day working and pushing buttons and making phone calls just to reset it.
young engineers trying to make a name for themselves, most annoying species on the planet
Not a truck but my old polaris quad had a single bushing missing from the front diff. I went to multiple dealerships from multiple cities to try and buy just the one bushing because they insisted that I "had no option" but to buy the entire 1,300 dollar kit instead of just selling me the one part. I paid a local shop 25 dollars to buy stock material and cut two of them. Had it fixed in half an hour.
I was a weekend racer/gearhead turned dealership technician in an attempt to be a better mechanic. I gave it over a decade and every year the cars would be more complicated and every quarter, *the flat rate times would be amended down.*
I walked away when the dealer I was at started asking me "so how do you want to pay for this?" when things would inevitably break during repairs. I ended up getting handed a divorce, lost my son (nearly lost my mind) and was barely making ot paycheck to paycheck, so I just figured I wasn't good enough to do it anymore.
I built a dang race car out of my old daily driver, but the everyday struggle beat the passion for cars out of me. I went to Tesla as a last-ditch ahot at stayimg around the automotive industry and the mgmt was so wome, more than half the damg job became office politics and other techs back-stabbing.
You got robbed.
Honestly, these are my favorite Uncle Tony videos. I could just listen to him talk for hours.
There's a guy who's been trying to wake up the American brain-dead forever and he says it like this.
"You're failure to understand evil doesn't make those who do, wrong"
Something I’ve noticed multiple times recently is that unless they can plug a modern computer into it for diagnostics they won’t work on it. Had this happen recently with a vehicle from 2002 and 1976. Modern techs are not given the skills to properly diagnose without the use of a computer or scan tool. That blows my mind!
So true! I had a 1998 GMC Safari van that had a broken vacuum hose to the cab heater. They kept my van for three days and never called me. When I went to check why the repair delay, the mechanic said it had no place to plug in a scan tool to find what was wrong so he said he hated my van and didn’t want to work on it, ( I had told him what the problem was when I brought it in). I asked for my keys back, went to another garage down the street known to work on my type and age of vehicle. Within two hours my vehicle was fixed and after three years is still working perfectly.
Air -gas-spark......look at me I'm a mechanic!
Experience has taught that guy he wants the easy work. He knows how bad a job can snowball digging around looking for problems. He wants the
plug-N-pay work.
Dumbed down MF's. Exactly what "Smart" phones have done to people. "Smart" anything, really.
They also want to pay the least for labor, exasperating the problem! They want advanced diag on a lube tech pay.
@@lannyhoward9208Either is wasn’t a 1998 or someone is lying because EVERY VEHICLE from 1996 up has a DLC (the place to plug in a scanner)
I had an Explorer years ago that would kill the cruise control every time you turned on the headlights. Turned out to be a tail light bulb where the brake filament fell to the tail lamp filament, so when you turned on the headlights the cruise module would think you were stepping on the brakes. That was a head scratcher for a little bit
Reminds me of a guy that had a 1970s ford with the ignition box on the fender. He couldn't ever figure out why it would randomly die it was only about 10 years old or less. After changing numerous ignition peices they realized that whenever he was driving beside a big rig with a powerful CB it was enough that when they would tone in on the mic near him that it would interfere with the ignition box and cause it to shut off. Really bizarre but true😂
@ReidHenderson Someone fooled w/ the electrical system or it had another owner induced issue. That was the 70s. No vehicles were great then anyhow. Ford was better than 90% of em then ..& now!
At least you don't have a newer Camry that burns 1qt of oil every 1000mis! It's maddening. Total garbage.
@@Davido50
A lot of cars use low tension piston rings and burn oil. Not just Toyota.
Before I hear you out Tony my thoughts were the first deliberate attempt to fowl up home maintenance guys was GM’s introduction of the Vega. None replaceable air filters and none rebuildable engines. To me that was the first mass introduction of malware.
your observations are very insightful
I know a mechanic (a good mechanic) who was changing an in tank pump….. he accidentally set the car (and his garage) on fire
One more thing Tony, i heard a couple days ago Steve Magnante was showing some improvement, really hope to see him back doing what he loves 🙏
As a mechanic, you are singing my song brother. My first realization of this was my '88 Taurus, the heater core went bad (imagine that) and the manual I had said in the opening salvo of how to replace it was " remove dash" . I have very much seen the light since then, these thing's are intentional to discourage the DIY-er.
They made the heater core thin so they leaked just a couple of years beyond warranty.
Years ago, I had a 78 LTD. The heater core went in it. It was bolted to the firewall. It was a pain to lean over the engine with a cold wind blowing on me to change it out. But I preferred that by far to removing the dash. About 10 years ago, I sold it as the transmission went out. (I'm not that serious of a mechanic.) But it gave me 10 years of sturdy use and I did not fear an accident with an idiot in an SUV.
As a guy who grew up in the 90s and early 00s, I loved working on my mid-80s truck. I could practically rebuild the thing with the tools inside the toolbox in the bed. When I finally bought a newer vehicle, I quickly discovered how much money I would have to spend on "special tools" to work on my own vehicle. I've always wished they would make cars simple again and enjoyable to work on.
The only simple cars left are go-karts, and even those it's a matter of time before they get stuffed full of computers.
@@noseboop4354 Imagine a go-kart engine with EGR valves, catalytic converters, 02 sensors and evap systems. Ugghh. They already have small diesel lawn tractors with full emissions systems in place. Imagine not being able to mow your lawn because it's derated due to an emissions system malfunction...
And I love working on 80's and older trucks. So simple and so much space. I Cummins swapped my '83 Chevy, it was surprisingly easy and I used basic tools. Well, I DID have to use a welder at one point to weld some braces for the radiator core support, after I cut a lot of it out for the intercooler. But to put a modern diesel engine and drivetrain into a 1983 truck that never had that option, that ain't bad.
I can't imagine the nightmare to do that on a new truck.
I wish they would make life simple and enjoyable again...they've removed it all.
@@racekrasser7869 And none of it to benefit the customer or improve the quality of life for anyone.
The same thing happens in Information Technology IT. Operating Systems upgrades that force you to replace fully working computers, phones and ipads. For no good reason other than driving revenue
System is messed up
Yes! Worked with a guy who had hearing aids. He said periodically he'd go into the shop and get the volume turned up a bit because the way they are made they have to connect them to a computer and use a special app to make any changes. So he said he went in to have another tweak and they told him they couldn't help him. The company was no longer supporting those hearing aids and the shop no longer had access to the app to make the changes. So he had no choice but to replace his several thousand dollar hearing aids with new ones even though, technically, the ones he had were in perfect working order.
I once read a Newsweek article on vehicle manufacturers doing things like making the muffler system route up into the frame and around just so it's harder to replace yourself. This has been going on for 30 years already.
Fairly certain that was Corvette doing that to save space.
buy nothing made after 2000. problem solved 👍🏻
@@myprivatewarmost of the good stuff is likely been scrapped and melted down to become some liberal monument in a blue city, no thanks to the _"cash for clunkers"_ program.
Anything else will likely be bidded way above the price range of the average classic car enthusiast, due to supposed scarcity/rarity of the item.
Which is unfortunate.😑
I remember as a kid, there were all kinds of mom and pop mechanics. Older cars were much simpler, but they did need more frequent maintenance. And the kicker was, no special tools were generally required! Then, as the years rolled on, the mom-and-pops started disappearing. Now it’s the dealer and large chains mostly. Really sad, actually.
Big corp will continue to eat all the guppies and leave us with a few big fat fish that will be inconvenient to get to, have worthless service and are absolutely good for nothing but taking your money.
I still work on mine. 98 Z71 Silverado and 2008 Cobalt. Lots more complicated than when I started in the family gas station in the 70s. Nice that spark plugs last 100k miles and cars last 200k miles or more if you do a reasonable amount of maintenance.
Did several fuel pumps. That can be a challenge the first time. Google and RUclips make it so much easier to get a heads up on new unfamiliar repairs.
Helps a lot if you already know the basics.
As a mechanical engineer and personal mechanic it’s called “planned obsolescence “. I’m keeping my 20 year old cars n truck by my own design since I can work on them
I'm 53 and started driving a 1976 Mercury Monarch straight 6 250ci I got for $500. It got me thru tech college, out of the house, and a year into working when I gave it to my brother still going. It had a cylinder that ran the plug black ever since we acquired it but it wouldn't quit. My wife & I now have a 2011 Sorento & 2009 Rio both with 165k mi and no issues. We're not in a hurry to purchase newer vehicles. EFI was a great advancement for cold climate driving up North, but we know people with newer vehicles that have oil consumption issues. I agree new vehicles aren't made to last, but other than just a few examples, it mainly started happening around 2012 when 0W oil & GDI became the norm. It was mostly the pre 2012 vehicles that were easily servicable and lasted, back when you could buy a new vehicle below dealer invoice and the customer mattered. Now you can't buy your kid a video game system without someone scalping the price up on the reseller sites, or a house that hasn't been flipped a couple times. The millenials are conditioned to be blind consumers and it's sad.
I’ve been a tech mostly In dealerships for 35 years. Your are spot on man!!! I’m so glad I’m on the downswing of my career because it just keeps getting worse with cars every single year !!!!
same here. I am a Mercedes tech and I am getting real tired of this crp
So if buying a new car today, how long would you expect it to last before it's not worth fixing?
@@blissfuljoy6049 it is better to find something from a much older generation like 80's
@@blissfuljoy6049 well depending on how well you keep up with maintenance. Obviously the better you take care of something the longer it will last. You need to keep up with the oil changes religiously these days . Honestly your best bet is to lease a vehicle instead of buying it. Pay the extra money for the extra miles. Usually by the end of the lease you’ll start having issues. We just got a 2024 honda in with 168 miles on it and has issues showing 🤷♂️ but usually 30 thousand miles is when you will start to see issues start .
@@Dirtmodmaniac What issues is your Honda having if you don't mind me asking?
I was seeing this starting to happen a couple decades ago myself. At one time I owned a 1984 S10 Blazer that had a 5 speed manual that used a hydraulic clutch. The slave cylinder for the clutch release was bolted to the outside of the bell housing on the drivers side, accessible for repair or replacement with the air bleeding procedure outlined in the Haynes manual. Years later, I had a 1998 Chevy K1500 truck, also with a 5 speed and hydraulic clutch. The slave cylinder went out on it and I found out that now it is mounted within the bell housing. Of course when it fails, it leaks, it leaks fluid on the clutch disk. So now, its a total clutch job to the tune of $1200 (prices then). Again, NO reason for GM to redesign this system unless it was to promote more customer pay jobs for repair centers. This was back in 2000 or so, so yes, this has been brewing for quite a while now.
I have a 2004 saturn vue with the GM 4 cylinder and 5 speed manual. It's been sitting in my driveway for a long time because the slave cylinder went out, and just like you described, it's inside the bell housing and has doused the clutch in fluid. It's such a pain in the ass to fix for such a cheap car I haven't even considered doing it yet. I also have a 4 cylinder 5 speed manual 1993 mazda b2600i (the last year they were made in Japan), and when the slave cylinder went out on that it was a 15-20 minute job to fix since it is mounted outside the bell housing, easily accessible. Sometimes the future just sucks.
That’s just an example of more labor needed. Not the same as dealing with proprietary systems. Not even close to the same thing.
@@seanneal552 the whole point of this video was how manufacturers/engineers make things harder on purpose to the detriment of the professional/DIY mechanics later on. I would say replacing a critical single small part in 15 minutes on an older car is a lot different than having to drop the entire sub-frame and engine/transmission to replace the exact same part on a more modern car. Also the design of the inside bell housing slave cylinder inherently means it will roast your clutch as soon as it starts leaking.
IKR, it takes like 20 minutes to pull a tranny by hand out of a Japanese car..🙄
As a tech training with Ford I can tell you the electronics and the pricing of these new vehicles is WAY out of hand. You can't even replace a battery in a new Ford yourself. They have a battery monitor sensor that requires to be reset by having a laptop plugged in with Fords software. People look at me funny when I tell them I'm rebuilding a 25 year truck to drive everyday. I like being able to save money on being able to maintain my own vehicle, after all that's what led me down the path of mechanic work. Really a shame what things have come to.
I trained as a mechanic from '89 for much the same reason plus I enjoyed the hands-on work and just fixing things. Then I went into mechanical engineering design. But the only thing my vehicles have ever gone into a shop for is those jobs where I simply don't have the equipment or it's not worth my time. It was the best decision I ever made - vehicles are the second most expensive thing most people will ever own - it's madness not to mitigate that cost by doing maintenance yourself. I honestly pity people that can't maintain their vehicles themselves - it costs a small fortune to pay someone else to do it!
I'm driving a mid-nineties car that I've had for 15 years and I really don't want anything newer - there's nothing that newer vehicles have that I want enough to put up with the headaches that come with it.
@@TonyRuleMy 2017 Honda was sold as the simplest car in many ways and I do all the work on it but just because a wheel turns when the ignition is on, and I am rolling the car by hand, the computer throws a permanent error for wheelspeed sensors and I have to pay 150 or more dollars to the dealer to reset it taking 5 minutes. Similar with airbag seat calibration when changing one of the seats. And then the car stereo has no media playback (no CD, no cassette) and is nearly impossible to upgrade. Yes its been frustrating but some things have been advanced and worked well.
Its scummy and evidence government cares zero for us because these cars and trucks should make servicing the battery easy not impossible
I’m with you on just buying and rebuilding an older vehicle, seriously considering a 7.3 idi truck myself.
I’m also a Ford Tech. Right now I’m trying to inspect the camshafts on a 2023 Aviator. Getting the valve covers off is a nightmare.
I was so fortunate when I lived in Portland my neighbor was an excellent mechanic. He worked 12 hours at the garage when he got home he never had a drop or oil on his cloths or on his hands. A matter of fact I never seen him without his coveralls on and was always clean. Always fixed my car and did an excellent job. I think auto mechanics are undervalued.
Hey Tony, we think alike on the out to get you message. I first encountered this about 1973 when I was going to college at Ferris State college in Michigan. The industry had previously replaced the road draft tube with the PCV valve. Then about that time they added EGR and air pumps, which a lot of people just disabled. Anyway, in one of the School labs, we hooked up one of the students 63 Chevy on the dyno and tested the output at the tailpipe. Then after just adjusting timing, fuel mixture, etc. we met the current emission requirements. So I thought if a bunch of students can do this, this is just a way for them to make more money and capture the service work at the same time. I worked at GM dealership for a while after school and started seeing what you saw. I’m sure a lot of guys are nodding their heads in agreement when listening to you.
My 1969 Grand Prix with a 428 4bbl and dual exhausts made emissions too. It was just slightly cleaner with far less CO than my folks' brand new 1988 Bonneville that was labeled "Borderline-needs inspection" and they had to pay over $100 for a garage to hook up a computer and do the timing and everything, and then it barely passed.
I remember a 72 Pontiac Lemans with a Pontiac 350 2 barrel I used to drive pass emissions extremely well and the readouts were surprising against a vehicle with pollution equipment like a TCS switch, catalytic converter, slower mechanical timing, too lean of carburetor settings. The car from the previous owners disabled the TCS switch and redone the timing a little more advanced. Not to mention it actually got good gas mileage city and highway with a decent amount of torque. Knew a guy who put a "dummy" EGR valve on an intake not designed for one on his 76 390 powered Ford Truck to get around emissions. It worked great.
My GM/Delco teachers and engineers told me 40 years ago about the changes that were coming and the mandates put on them by the federal government. Now it's all coming true.
Anyone with some common sense could see it coming. Anything can be good for the people but it will be massively abused in short order to pocket money.
Hell I was 15 and knew it was stupid and look at us now! Smmh
The mandates are making vehicles impossible to service? 😂
They make it impossible for competition to enter the market and offer simpler, more effective, less expensive alternatives. The mandates are not there for anyone's benefit but those companies already in the marketplace, and typically they exist to flush out the lesser players, force them to merge (aka centralization), and ultimately submit to total government control....you know like when GM and Chrysler fell into bankrptcy because gas prices were at 4.50 for a few months. @@rolandthethompsongunner64
My guess is the corporations were behind the mandates.
Funny thing is I cut myself an access panel in the bed of my 00 Chevy Silverado to replace the fuel pump rather than dropping the tank, cut it on 3 sides and folded it up, replaced the pump folded it back down and fastened it back with truss head screws. It worked like a champ, such an easy solution the engineers should have built an access panel into the bed.
I unbolted the bed. Had 4 people to lift it off.
Lol, I did the same on my Cadillac CTS...by the book says u have to lower the (dual) exhaust from the headers back, so u can then disconnect the driveshaft in order to lower the whole rear subframe assembly rear diff. & all just to get to a few bolts that are otherwise inaccessible in order to lower the tank🤦♂️
The freaking thing was still running fine too; it had just developed a small leak @ the very top where the lines connect to tha pump I couldn't figure out for the longest why my garage always smelled like gas fumes after driving this car...It wasn't until I really got down underneath it one day & looked @ it closely that I found where gas had been leaking down the side of the tank and I checked a few GM forums & read where it was a fairly common issue for this model...
@@riders.oregon4474most of us dont have 4 people to help. Last fuel pump i had to change was in a truck stop parking lot 150 miles from home fortunatelyi had a flatbed, and there was enoughroom to get the pump out withoutdropping the tank..
Yeah I did that on some of our trucks at work. Had some smashed up beds laying around so I cut panels and just riveted them over the holes. Corrosion rust and nastiness was the norm so using nut serts would have been difficult to take apart Riviots just drill out but at home I would use nutserts
Make sure it’s airtight. Carbon monoxide can get in.
As an auto technician for 40 years, and working on dirt bikes, mini bikes, lawnmowers, and old school cars since the 70s.. I've been watching everything you just confirmed. People won't listen to me when I tell them to buy an old school points distributor and make sure it has a manual pump.. But it's definitely coming. The push for electric cars is so crazy and the fact we already had electric cars and they failed LOL. People are blind
AMEN, Uncle Tony! I redid my 89 Firebird as a computerless road monster because I could and I wanted to! Since I tore out the EFI and put in a carb, I cut a door above the tank to get at the pump AND put in a drain on the bottom of the tank. BITE ME, designers!
I said, more or less, this in another comment, but I'll repeat it here: The average public gives _way_ to much credit to "the designers". It's not the designers that cost reduced your car into not having a a fuel pump access door or who set US global politics during the 1970s that made gasoline theft extremely common (thus eliminating drain plugs forever and making anti-siphon features the norm).
I'll also add that the lack of fuel pump access doors is almost _always_ on American cars. Import cars of the era nearly always had them.
@@TheBrokenLife , well said and yes, I was being lazy in shaking my fist at the "designers". I am reminded of the old joke that it all began when an engineer caught his wife in bed with a mechanic and ever since, retribution.
I will add that I have come to loathe new cars and motorcycles. Not only are they overly complicated (for an old wrench monkey like me) but lack the style and soul of the older vehicles. Yes, I hear my grandfather now saying the same of the machines I enjoy. Such is life, I suppose, but I honestly doubt that in 20-30 years many of ANY new cars of today will be kicking around.
@@morgangallowglass8668 No engineer would actually be mad about that. He simply had a defective wife and will remove her. Most engineers I've known don't recommend replacement in this circumstance. 😆
I can find something to like about just about any car and plenty of mine have had a little too much "soul". Most days just having an appliance to go A-to-B is good enough. That said, I've been hearing the doom and gloom on the horizon about future classics for decades. The truth is that there will always be examples of the car grandma never drove that suddenly emerge on the market (my daily driver being one of them... it's 28 years old and has MPFI, SRS, all of that jazz, and it's still going) as well as the stuff that was limited, desirable, or highly relatable in its time. In 1990 I would have _never_ predicted the rise of *serious* Honda collecting, but it's here. My Dad never thought the day would come that the tri-5 Chevys they were abandoning in the woods would be worth anything either. As you said, such is life. What is new and mundane to us will some day be cool and nostalgic to someone else and they'll do whatever they must to keep it going. I'd bet money there will be Tesla collectors for decades to come. How much of the cars will be original by then will be a question, but that's always been true in the hobby car world.
In other words, as things get worse and worse, the cars we take for granted now will seem special and better. Like the square body trucks, they used to just be "trucks" that I saw everywhere, but now they have a mystique that people love. I can see the GMT 800 trucks in that position in 20 years, many people say they are the best trucks ever made. But right now they are just twenty year old trucks. (Like my '57 Suburban was just an old truck when I bought it in '81, or my '69 pickup was just an old truck when I bought it in '92.
But one big difference is the computer. Will we be able to get a computer for a 2003 Suburban, in the year 2053?
@@chriswhite2151 I can get a computer that I can run an '80s feedback carburetor with in 2023 (not that I would), so... probably.
Preach Tony, we are a couple years apart in age, I lived it and I fully understand you. Whenever I start talking like this, family, friends and acquaintances look at me like I am speaking a foreign language. I have worked on cars since I was 10 on my neighbor's 57 Chevy BelAir street/strip car
. The guy who owned it kind of reminds me of you. Thanksgiving almost always turns into this with my automotive engineer brother in law. You are awesome and much appreciated. Never stop, never surrender
Tony, this recent crop of "off topic" videos are just fantastic. It's really great to know there are so many like-minded people out there. Being almost 20 years old it's daunting thinking what could lie ahead for my generation with the state of the world lying where it is. These videos provide a sort of solace for me. Looking forward to more of your content!
What state of the world? Engineering and innovation? You know what they say, lead, follow, or get out of the way. Or sit in a rocking chair and complain.
He's got survivor bias before the disaster has even happened lol. @@PhpGtr
You guys will be running Alcohol and upgrading electric car, wires, batteries for more range and acceleration. It'll just change.
@@PhpGtr Which are you doing?
I don't think internal combustion engines are going anywhere, people will start modifying fuel injectors and fuel systems to run ethanol and the kids will get to keep playing with old cars.
Last of the Old School Master car genius.Tony, is remarkable. God bless you.
You are correct about the “you wrestle with this stuff” part. Nowadays you need a scan tool to check and set the transmission oil level, or to even change your rear brakes. There are plastic oil pan drain plugs that are meant to be used once, and because everything is controlled by a computer, everything requires some calibration or coding if replaced. It is all in the name of keeping the profits in the dealership as much as possible. Eventually the after-market catches up and they offer the special tools (or a version of them) and after-market scan tools can do some of the coding needed. I should know, I work at a dealership.
Even the dealership don't know how to fix it
I like older cars as more information is readily available online for diy repair. No top secret denial of information.
It's crazy to me working in Industrial maintenance. We have machines that have entire manuals full of prints and how to fix things. You can literally find a whole book of electrical prints to trouble shoot. You can call and they have people to provide technical documents and assistance. Then you go to work on a car and good luck to find any information or documentation. You just have to guess in the dark. They don't want you to fix it and it's getting where true mechanics are hard to find. Around here some days it feels like you either figure it out yourself or throw it away.
With cars exactly the opposite way .. they made the cars miserable too service, so you don't do it, and design it to fail after warranty.... in some years if countries don't do something,cars will be in the fields because there will be no people who repair them, or can't repair them..
what? this is not true. there’s service info on every part. lol
@@LeavingCaladan you have a part number, it's not documentation, it's not the same.
I’m in maintenance also but even that is getting harder and harder to get info on. Many companies will provide a disc or drive with prints and a manual but where I work we don’t have access to a computer because the fears of them being hacked
@@UmbraWeiss huh? there are still entire engine tear down instructions for everything. mazda, hyundai and chrysler tech here
Thank you Tony. I felt like you and I were having a chat. No screaming or yelling.
I remember replacing the fuel pump on a 78 Impala I had in college. It was the driver side of engine and only a couple of bolts to remove and replace.
Yeah, I had a 68 Mustang with a 6 cylinder and I replaced the starter motor from the top!
Sure a 8 cylinder you'd come from below but it's still just bolts and electrical connections.
Most of the problems back then came from squeezing big motors into small spaces and you had to accept that compromise which had reasons for it you could readily understand for example, vans are harder to work on as a function of their design ...the problem was space, that alone, not some other agenda...
That said they used to make vans/delivery trucks with long noses...
One of the most egregious of all of these unserviceable items has happened to every car I've owned - the blend door actuator. A crappy plastic sub $5 part. Typically an $800-$1000 repair because the entire dash has to come out. To get the dash out of my Camaro required the windshield to come out, which of course broke in the process. Also the seats, console, steering had to come out. Cost $3600 to replace to replace this $5 piece of plastic. Just unreal.
Have the same problem on my '08 Impala. It flutters for 40 seconds, then stops. $600 to fix from my mechanic. Car has 245k miles, not worth the trouble now, but it was a recall item just after my warranty expired.
Uncle Tony, you are absolutely correct! About everything! I wasn’t expecting this video to go where it did, but now I have a whole new level of respect for you.
Same here. Tony just grew to be a giant in my mind. He obviously knows "what's up"! Fred
I can not agree more with you. I'm so glad he published this
I totally agree with you, I fix my own cars and my newest is my daily driver a ‘94 Chevy 1500. I’ve been thinking about getting rid of all the electronic crap due to all the failures it’s having. Thank you for making this video.
I used my grinder, and a couple of hinges to make a fuel pump access door on my truck.
Mechanical injection diesel is the way to go. They last forever, they are easy to service, and they can run on various different fuels. My friend has an 82 Toronado with the 350 Oldsmobile diesel. It has 542,000 miles on it. Recently we changed the head gaskets and put ARP studs. The cylinders are in perfect shape, they are standard size, the pistons are the factory ones, and the crosshatching looks excellent. It gets 40 miles per gallon on the highway and has a 23 gallon fuel tank. Everything is rebuildable. You can recondition both types of injectors on these at home. The Stanadyne injectors just require a tool for turning the pintle and a fine lapping compound. The CAV injectors get lapped just like a valve, they have a poppet and a seat. The pump is a Stanadyne DB2, used on a million different types of diesel engines. It can be rebuilt at any diesel shop or even by yourself if in decent shape. There are other old diesels in cars as well that are similarly easy to maintain. Oldsmobile made a 4.3 V6 version that didn't have the head bolt issue of the V8, it has 6 head bolts per cylinder. The diesel Chevette and Isuzu I-mark are also great. The old, pre-1990 VW diesels. There was a diesel Corolla and Camry. There was a diesel Maxima. There was a diesel Ford Tempo. Not to mention all of the Opel, Renault, Citroen, Peugeot, European Ford, and other diesels that are extremely cheap in Europe and wouldn't cost that much to import. Many of these cars are $2000 or less, with importing costing around $3000, you're at 5000 max. Many of them are under $1000 even. Diesel is where we all need to be going, not gasoline. Diesels will still be able to be fueled long after the new cars are all electric. And perhaps, biodiesel will be common because construction equipment, heavy trucks, and boats will not work as EVs.
But diesel fuel is now outrageously expensive. I am old enough to remember when it was much cheaper than refined gasoline. Another scam!
Agreed with the concept. I had a 1982 bmw 320i gasoline auto with the M10 4-cyl engine. They had mechanical fuel injection and 'no points' ignition. Very easy to work on and reliable. Biggest issue would be the mechanical proportioning valve which was sensitive to vacuum leaks, but easy to diagnose.
Also, power brakes and manual rack and pinion steering.
100%with you! Just bought another old dodge cummins
Used to love running the IDIs, but they're getting old now - parts are hard to find or are junk, fewer and fewer shops have guys who know how to tune, bench test (or even work on!) the mechanical injection pumps. Since you mentioned the GM 350 IDI: ask a modern diesel tech who Roosa Master is and their eyes will glaze over. The days of "old" diesel (in the US) have passed unless you're real good, have a full shop, and a parts stockpile. The cost of the garbage no. 2 they sell now sealed it for me years ago.
@@silasakron4692In my situation between me and my friend, we have 2 shops, injector and pump flow bench, Stanadyne and Bosch calibration and rebuild tools, pop testers, 4 axis CNC milling machine and lathe, manual milling machine and lathe, access to a waterjet, 3D printer, all types of hand and power tools, boring bar, block and head O-ring cutter, valve grinding machine, boring bar, electroplating setup, EDM cutter, X-Ray machine, magnaflux, cam grinder, and much more. We could likely build an entire engine from scratch pooling both of our resources and have in the past made entire sets of billet pistons, multiple sets of connecting rods, bearing spacers, timing sprockets, camshafts, and even a set of solid lifters in an unusual size. So while I would say I'm in the "full shop" situation I wouldn't say it's impossible to do at home. I rebuilt multiple Stanadyne pumps in my kitchen before I ever had access to the tools. Stanadyne will sell you replacement heads and rotors. The dimensions that need to be adjusted can be measured with regular micrometers, and the assembly usually doesn't require any special tools. Diesel fuel today really doesn't do any damage to the newer design head and rotors, which can be ordered from Stanadyne with DLC coated internals. In many areas , there are biodiesel suppliers that sell better quality fuel for a fraction of the diesel price. Here it is $1.75 cheaper a gallon for B100 than D2. Parts that are no longer available can be substituted. For example a rare 5.7 head and rotor and camring can be substituted for a common 6.2 head and rotor and camring. A 4.3 head and rotor can be substituted for a multitude of other 6 cylinder head and rotors. Just requires looking at pictures or in a catalog for a while. Things like head gaskets, Cometic will make a set of custom MLS head gaskets for $89/each. Chances are, they have already made them in the past too, so no old gaskets needed. They have made gaskets for my 79 Subaru, a Cosworth Vega engine, and my friend's 350 Diesel. Timing chains can often be made from lengths of off the shelf chain, often stronger than the originals. And so on. I've been keeping rare and obscure engines on the road since I was a teenager, and still daily drive one of my first cars, a 79 Subaru DL. It has parts off of nearly every brand and type of car, from GM to Ford to Suzuki to Daewoo to Lancia, and is nearly as reliable as a modern car. Once all of the rare and unreliable parts were replaced with more common and easily available ones, the problems and getting stuck on the side of the road stopped. Now I can get in, on a cold day, turn the key, and it starts and runs just like a modern car, with no ECU, no fuel injection, a dog gear manual transmission, and not even a radio. It just keeps going and going, and gets 45-50 mpg on the highway. A diesel would be more ideal, but a carbureted small engine can work nearly as well, and is achievable with considerably less tools and skills. A more modern engine can even be converted to carburetion and installed in an older car. One such one I built was a Nissan KA24DE with carburetors off a Yamaha R1, on a custom intake manifold, and a modified distributor from an Isuzu. The same is possible with some diesels. VW TDIs for example can be converted to mechanical injection. It's possible to do, just requires a lot of thought put into what parts will work, and sometimes looking into what parts were available on engines overseas. Diesel engine injector testing and rebuilding doesn't usually require anything more expensive than a $60 pop tester. I do think it's still possible for someone with a reasonable grasp on how engines work to drive a non computerized car, reliably, and do their own work at home.
My late neighbor lost his garage to fire just as the repair shop you spoke of. He wasn’t hurt but the garage was lost.
So glad I have kept my 70 Challenger and 70 GTX. I have touched almost every nut and bolt on them. The Challenger is a 340 and driven weekly. The GTX is a 440 and being restored. I have owned them since the 70’s. I rebuilt the engines and assembled them myself. Just recently took the rear end apart on the Challenger and put new bearings in it. Easy to do. But most people thought the required a Technition to rebuild. It all seems so easy to me. Both my sons own several cars and wrench on the cars themselves. My grand kids have their toy cars and bikes they ride. They too will wrench their own stuff. None of us have ever spent a day in mechanical school or a job as a mechanic. It is in our blood. That’s why I don’t watch much TV. I prefer to learn from guys like you Uncle Tony. It’s real information that I really enjoy watching. Thank you. Looking forward to every next video.
One of my biggest regrets is that I sold my '67 Chevelle. It was the 300 Deluxe, not a Super Sport, and it had a straight-6 and a Powerglide. It belonged to my brother and his wife, and I fell in love with it the first time I saw it. After I'd had it about 8 years, I had some hard times, and had to sell it. Looking back, maybe I wasn't so short of cash after all. I should have kept it.
My 2005 Saturn Vue transmission service was $160 or close to that. Took 30 minutes to do and I was on my way. My 2016 Jeep needs a full day appointment cost $1200 . That's why one day there will be a revolution! I may not live long enough to see it but it's guaranteed to happen.
Uncle Tony is 100% correct on Governments. They’re really are NO GOVERNMENTS only CORPORATIONS masquerading as such.
I too am a Professional Technician, over 30 years now. I started doing my own research into what Uncle Tony brought up about 10 years ago and discovered the exact same things.
Under English Common law, the man (or woman) is sovereign. Your constitution is an adaptation of magna carta. The revolution you should celebrate isn't 1776 (which was a part of the freemasonic French revolution) but 1640 until the glorious revolution of 1688. We freed the slaves but not like you're told.
@@monikacognomen1096Get this communist garbage out of here.
You are completely misrepresenting the ties between multiple nations revolutions in a bs attempt to link them to Marxist rhetoric. When these garbage theories put forward by the Soviets have been completely and totally debunked countless times.
You even made the ridiculous claim that the American Revolution was borne of the French Revolution. When the exact opposite is the truth. Which is what completely puts your claims as old Soviet garbage because the Communists refused to ever acknowledge anything good about the US was its own work. The same bs you see online constantly these days. Go spread that garbage on another channel where you will have tankies eating it up. This channel contains American patriots proud of their country who won’t stand for that BS.
no the Fed isnt a corporation. its the largest organized crime syndicate
Have you ever stopped and thought, Governments ARE Corporations?
That's what happens when we let rich asswipes lobby the people who are supposed to be working for us
Honestly I think we are catching up for open source code reading for electronic issues but ECU stuff and electronic diagnoses is the first battle, the second battle is in getting good quality replacement parts at a reasonable cost. The third battle is not having enough non dealership places to perform the jobs
1- one can never catch up to a target of new BS every single year. Including new manufacturers some years!
2- one can never catch up because aftermarket shops are dropping like flies
First what's up Dude.. ok yeah brother I work in Auto parts.. for a distributor.. local shops and stores.. use to be in sales.. trying help out wrench diagnosis what's up with this 2012 Camry etc.. from wheel speed sensor, cam, crank etc, Mass, TPS.. they all work in concert with each other.. any one of them can change your work schedule.. I see a car.. I see working class folks getting to work.. upper crust can't even care.. but.. dude 700 or more in work.. can break folk's
sure, go clear codes on a newer chrysler without having a "security link" active on your scan tool. I work at a dealership, and did rear brakes on a jeep. We had to send it to our sister dealership to have them clear the parking brake code and turn the check engine light off.
@@Jodah175 Those lights go right out with an icepick and a smack all codes clear now 😀🤦
Serviceability was common in just about all products made during the time period you mention not just cars. There once was a law that things needed to be fixable by more or less average people. Everything has slowly become throw away products. IMO, once things were built by computers, and not by hands, everything has become unfixable and with heavy computer control that require dealer level scan tools and subscriptions to reprogram, it has made the driveway mechanic a thing of the past.
TV repair shops.... Best place to get your tube fixed or to buy a refurbished one. Those are just gone now.
Of course
@@schickieschickler102 man, I miss those CRT tv's :(
I used to service refrigerators, replacing compressors etc in boxes that were purchased for $400 or less 15-20 yrs prior
Now they make this stuff that is “better for you” in which the components are often not serviceabe, but the fancy stainess steel cabinets run $2000-$3000 or more, and are destined for the scrapyard after 10 yrs
So glad to hear your take on what is happening, it's insane we have to speak very carefully if we want to continue to be able to speak.
My dad was a US Army mechanic trained in the 1960s and he taught me how to work on my own vehicles and small engines like my lawnmower and weed eaters. Now everything is designed to be obsolete and to be replaced instead of repaired. Right now all 3 vehicles I have are early 2000s models, and no vehicle I've ever owned has gone to a garage for anything as I've fixed everything myself but boy have I seen some crazy stuff. Like I'm a woman, and I'm not overweight I'm like 5'7 and 135 lbs and I have lil tiny slender arms altho I've got muscle because I push mow my acre lawn and do a lot of other stuff. But I noticed even in manuals for an average sized man that to even replace a lot of simple things for a guy who's much larger than me they make it so you have to remove a whole lot of things you don't need to mess with just to fix what you need to. Like I used to have a 1996 Chevy Cavalier and I would always be able to snake my arm down beside of the engine and untwist the old fliter and twist on the new oil filter and meanwhile guys would have to raise the car and remove the front passenger tire to use a lil access door to remove the filter. Right now in my 2001 Chevy S10 ZR2 the starter is out, and to fix it for a man he'd have to remove that passenger front tire but I was able with the tire on and it just turned to remove both the cables running to it.
I have no idea what people will do with those new all electric vehicles, because it seems to me like everything about them is going to be unrepairable and that you'll just have to get a whole new EV. It's the reason why currently all over insurance auction lots all over America you have Tesla's and other fancy EVs with just even minor body damage that have been completely totaled out because they're not even making replacement fenders or this and that for them. Can you imagine what that's going to do to insurance costs? Just because let's say a shopping cart rolls down the hill and dents up your quarter pannel, the insurance adjuster comes out and says well your car is totaled out here's a check. Because that's happening today.
When the stores stop selling Bondo, that'll be the day.
I have a 99 zr2. The plastic oil sending unit broke and leaked oil badly. The distributor had to be pulled to get to it (so they said). I thought 300 was rather steep to replace a scew off cheap part. I wonder if the distributor really had to be pulled out. All I know is I couldn't get to it.
Reading this reminds me of a car I had. I had to remove a headlight to replace the air filter. And I cut my hand every time replacing the oil filter. When the horns quit, I found them inside the front fender. It was a pleasure to get rid of that car.
I own a 1993 Dodge Daytona ES. You can't check the engine codes the garage has the box and cartridge that does that.
I agree, one thing tho. From what I've seen on yt, the tesla are pretty easy to pull parts to replace. "Like Legos " only time will tell.
Being a mechanic for over 20 years, i have noticed some new cars have warranties that if you touch these, the warranty is void. Some customers I’ve had cant even get basic maintenance without tampering warranties. Newer technology has made it tougher to work on vehicles. Still own my shop and still have my customers who visit my shop loyally due to my reputation is what keeps me going every year.
Now you have to get courses to be up to date on newer models.
Need to pay for courses to tell you that you cant repair shlt? k
So OBVIOUSLY you've started charging more for newer vehicle and tell your clients that the new vehicle is gonna cost them 30% upcharge for complexity right?
Or you another moron who just takes the loss so your clients don't understand that
A perfect example of what your talking about is the 3.5 3.7 ford V6 installed in the Ford edge, Taurus and explorer. The waterpump runs off the timing chain inside the motor. You have to drop the motor to change the waterpump.
I didn't buy a Ford Flex when I learned that the 3.5 with the internal water pump can leak the dilute the engine oil and seize the engine!. GENIUS!
Stupid. If that water pump seizes good buy engine!!
I have a 2005 dodge stratus with the 2.7 l v6 in it that’s like that….cant find anyone to attempt the repair so it’s been sittting for a decade…155,000 miles on it is all…..I loved that car too….i was getting 35 mpg on the highway in it and otherwise never had any issues with it breaking down…..
My 2002 mercury grand marquis is so easy to work on.
I was out of town when it became necessary to replace my fuel pump. I was so glad that I had not filled the tank the night before. This job had to be done in a parking lot where my truck was when the pump stopped working. I am convinced that FORD does all of this intentionally to make extremely difficult .
We think exactly alike on all of this. But living under a government drowning in debt is like swimming in a river full of drowning men. They won’t let themselves drown until they have dragged you under first. A desperate government will take anything they can get to keep themselves solvent. That might even include the shirt of your back if you don’t bury it deep.
Fact
Take a look at the “30 by 30 agenda”
I'm not a gear head but I am a conspiracy theorist so YT must have recommended this to me because I am also having car issues.. What you said here is 100% correct. People need to wake up, and if they don't the other side looks glorious either way.
One of the bigger problems to is that most American humans are less capable overall and have willingly given up their capability in the name of giving tech the ability to manage every aspect of their lives. Why learn how to change a flat tire when you can push a button to wait for someone to do it for you?
so, how do you think EVs will play into this planned obsolescence and disposable society?
@@K03sport EVs will only be one of the many options of vehicle types. Tech is further along than they would let us know. Who knows what batteries they will be using but I'm sure they will have better capacity with less charge time. Possibly wireless proximity charging while driving.
At that point though, you'd be able to buy a hydrogen vehicle that actually looks good while they phase out the primitive combustion engine.
I get what you are saying but I think people are awake, but it doesn’t matter because they are disempowered. Like a lion in a cage that knows it’s in a cage and doesn’t want to be there, but what can it do ?
@@biopsiesbeanieboos55 what the lion can do is roar loud as hell so the tamer knows that if this lion gets out the cage it's done. They do have us by the balls. The least we can do is let others know that taxes, the Fed, the Corp America has all been a scam. This is 100% fact. Congress are literally gangsters. Live in the system but don't be of the system.
They are in the process of losing right now. Check out world currency. Looks like a whole lot of people are dropping use the US dollar. Petro dollar has already gone bye bye. Asset backed currencies?! No banks!? Tick tock!
We had a heck of a time finding a mechanic that could/would work on the carburetor in our 1980 Ford F100.
My 84 dodge rampage was almost stolen 3 times. Couldn't start it. Apparently I'm one of the few who know how to set a manual choke. 😜🤣
Before I was born in 1989, my Dad always repaired his own cars. He could do welding and spraying, he could strip an engine and gearbox. He even did a rebuild on a 1958 Austin Cambridge. Now he has a 2011 ford Mondeo, and he says he's sick of it, and is selling it, because every little job seems to cost a shed load of money.
Had to bust out the G n R "out ta get me" half way through. You are so right in every way. I'm lucky being in dry Colorado so keeping older stuff on the road is easier, except parts are drying up. I'm hoarding and draining the junkyards for my 70's Mopars...but for how much longer? ( not long)
Great song. Saw them play it in concert before they were famous. They put the headliners (motley crue) to shame. I agree about the stockpiling.
24:10 We are currently in the fourth turning. What you're saying makes sense. I also believe that we will come out of this better than before. It's crazy now, we just have to hold it together for a few more years.
You are exactly right. By my thinking, though, we have another 9 or 10 years to go. Gonna be a tough slog.
A few more years, lmao.
Tony, your spot on i was in the factory commercial automobile repair industry (certified GM" Chevy &Oldsmobile technician) in 1978,79 and 80) the factory created such a nightmare of a repair process on GM that everyone at the shop they sent to the GM training center in Charlotte, NC still couldn't accurately diagnose the problems even with the codes the on board computer s were telling us, were accurate we became parts exchangers until the computer stopped throwing the bad codes and the engines finally ran correctly. Thats when I turned my back on new car repair and joined the Army and did other things.
In the mid 70s carburetors came with the air fuel mixture screws caped off and if tampered with killed the warranty.
I remember when that garage blew up. My late mother used to go there for service once in a while. It was a terrible tragedy. Always be extremely careful around gasoline.
When I had to adapt to EFI I wasn't happy about it but I've actually got comfortable with it. This canbus crap however is a deal-breaker. I don't want anything with that wretched setup.
Absolutely! They managed to create a single point of failure, and disperse it throughout the whole car! No way to diagnose it except ripping everything apart and unplugging sometimes dozens of modules to do continuity and resistance testing! F-that! I love my 90s EFI, enough tech to make it rock solid reliable, and in the rare instance something electrical does go wrong, they are easy to diagnose, and nothing has to be programmed or vin coded!
The beancounters thought canbus was a good idea at the time but it evolved into a cascading failure like a row of dominos. Apple has the same canbus problems.
Sometime between 87 and 89 GM decided to attach a heater pipe to the water pump bolt of the 3800, turning a 30 min job into a hand-wringing, head-scratching can of worms. Ultimately I found that although it totally went against my instincts, bending a bracket to get that pipe off was a lot easier than continuing to take off more parts and run into more obstacles
I'm rolling in a 1998 Saturn SL. Manual 5 speed, cable connection for throttle, all mechanical. Love it. Gets as much as 40 mpg out on the road too. What you are saying is absolutely true. My wife's Prius has a computer module to operate the horn - and it has gone bad. $400 bill to fix? Who knows, still broken. That part your talking about "CORPORATE" that started in the 1870s...thanks for sharing that. I hope folks do their research.