Happiness is
#1
Lexus Fanatic
Thread Starter
Happiness is
Not opening your hood for 3 weeks (way too cold), and finding that when you do, everything is good....oil, power steering, coolant, um brake fluid is visibly under max but the brakes have gone 21k since it was full, normal imho.....
snow tires are at 35 (I deliberately went a little above 33 so when it's 20F it would be about 34, a little higher)....
I'm coming right up on 101k, this thing has so much life left.....
snow tires are at 35 (I deliberately went a little above 33 so when it's 20F it would be about 34, a little higher)....
I'm coming right up on 101k, this thing has so much life left.....
#3
Lexus Fanatic
Thread Starter
#4
YES! It would be 'funny' for the Eagles to win, and add insult to injury, and play the big game at Viking's stadium! lol
On a side note, 11 years ago I signed up for Eagles season tickets. I called customer service at the beginning of this season and they said I was customer number 8,xxx in the waiting line, and that I'd "probably" be a season ticket holder by the 2020 season.
$orry to hijack thi$ thread, but happine$$ i$ being an Eagle$ $ea$on ticket holder and re$elling the ticket$ for a hand$ome profit.
On a side note, 11 years ago I signed up for Eagles season tickets. I called customer service at the beginning of this season and they said I was customer number 8,xxx in the waiting line, and that I'd "probably" be a season ticket holder by the 2020 season.
$orry to hijack thi$ thread, but happine$$ i$ being an Eagle$ $ea$on ticket holder and re$elling the ticket$ for a hand$ome profit.
#5
Moderator
I called it as Pats/Vikings when the Packers fell flat on their faces back in December.
Oh, 48 degrees here at O'Hare today.... So, yeah Happiness....
Oh, 48 degrees here at O'Hare today.... So, yeah Happiness....
#6
......the Eagles winning the Super Bowl!
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#8
Not opening your hood for 3 weeks (way too cold), and finding that when you do, everything is good....oil, power steering, coolant, um brake fluid is visibly under max but the brakes have gone 21k since it was full, normal imho.....
snow tires are at 35 (I deliberately went a little above 33 so when it's 20F it would be about 34, a little higher)....
I'm coming right up on 101k, this thing has so much life left.....
snow tires are at 35 (I deliberately went a little above 33 so when it's 20F it would be about 34, a little higher)....
I'm coming right up on 101k, this thing has so much life left.....
#10
Not opening your hood for 3 weeks (way too cold), and finding that when you do, everything is good....oil, power steering, coolant, um brake fluid is visibly under max but the brakes have gone 21k since it was full, normal imho.....
snow tires are at 35 (I deliberately went a little above 33 so when it's 20F it would be about 34, a little higher)....
I'm coming right up on 101k, this thing has so much life left.....
snow tires are at 35 (I deliberately went a little above 33 so when it's 20F it would be about 34, a little higher)....
I'm coming right up on 101k, this thing has so much life left.....
Only thing I've noticed with my Toyotas is they are bad about developing corrosion on the battery terminals, you really need to keep an eye on that, cause it can lead to a no-start. Had that happen on my old junky 1993 pickup at work. Went back in and bought a Coke out of the vending machine, poured it on the corroded battery terminal. The carbon dioxide bubbles in the coke eat battery acid, truck started after that little trick. If you don't want a sticky mess, use club soda, same trick with the carbon dioxide bubbles dissolving corrosion on the battery terminal.
#11
Lexus Fanatic
Thread Starter
That's standard Toyota operating procedure, at least for me. Even for my 2004 Tacoma with 187k on it, check tire pressure, check oil/fluids every other gas fill up, clean, always on the full mark, change every 5000. Same thing with the 1992 SC300. Same thing with my old beat to pieces 1993 Toyota truck with 170k on it. All of them ran like a top, never used oil, never used coolant, keep an eye on things and they are rock solid reliable.
Only thing I've noticed with my Toyotas is they are bad about developing corrosion on the battery terminals, you really need to keep an eye on that, cause it can lead to a no-start. Had that happen on my old junky 1993 pickup at work. Went back in and bought a Coke out of the vending machine, poured it on the corroded battery terminal. The carbon dioxide bubbles in the coke eat battery acid, truck started after that little trick. If you don't want a sticky mess, use club soda, same trick with the carbon dioxide bubbles dissolving corrosion on the battery terminal.
Only thing I've noticed with my Toyotas is they are bad about developing corrosion on the battery terminals, you really need to keep an eye on that, cause it can lead to a no-start. Had that happen on my old junky 1993 pickup at work. Went back in and bought a Coke out of the vending machine, poured it on the corroded battery terminal. The carbon dioxide bubbles in the coke eat battery acid, truck started after that little trick. If you don't want a sticky mess, use club soda, same trick with the carbon dioxide bubbles dissolving corrosion on the battery terminal.
#12
Only thing I've noticed with my Toyotas is they are bad about developing corrosion on the battery terminals, you really need to keep an eye on that, cause it can lead to a no-start. Had that happen on my old junky 1993 pickup at work. Went back in and bought a Coke out of the vending machine, poured it on the corroded battery terminal. The carbon dioxide bubbles in the coke eat battery acid, truck started after that little trick. If you don't want a sticky mess, use club soda, same trick with the carbon dioxide bubbles dissolving corrosion on the battery terminal.
#13
Not to bust your "bubbles" (pun intended ), but the carbon dioxide gas isn't dissolving the corrosion. It's the phosphoric acid in the liquid that does the "cleaning". The bubbles make it appear as if the bubbles are doing the "work", but they're simply moving the corrosion that's freed/dislodged by the phosphoric acid, to the top of those bubbles. The bubbles do act like an agitator though. Same concept when cleaning a bumper or chrome item with soda. It's the acid that's cleaning the chrome, not the carbon dioxide gas/bubbles.
Also I remember an early episode of Mythbusters about cleaning chrome with Coke. Coke worked better on an old junkyard truck bumper than a commercially available chrome cleaning product, which blew my mind. Keep in mind that was like 10 to 14 years ago, the state of California might have banned that cleaner they were using at that time.
#14
Lexus Fanatic
Thread Starter
My dad always used baking soda. That is a funny thing. In B school, one of the greatest ad campaigns that I can remember today, was the one telling you to go and buy a box, put it in your fridge, then, POUR IT DOWN THE DRAIN, and buy another box. Imagine telling your customers to pour your product down the drain, then go buy some more. The genius of Saatchi & Saatchi.
Today I find most ads to be silly, especially for the pharma industry. Many, of the GEICO ads seem pretty clever. With such a bad product, they should be! lol
Today I find most ads to be silly, especially for the pharma industry. Many, of the GEICO ads seem pretty clever. With such a bad product, they should be! lol