
Tiny Clark
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Everything posted by Tiny Clark
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First, you need to make sure the A/C water drain tube is not plugged. If it is plugged, nothing will help long term. I used odor-ban on two cars for this problem, but I don't think Sam's carries it anymore. Maybe something from a per store that eats up urine smells. You could also pour some lemon juice in there. The acid may kill the stuff that's growing, and it won't smell as bad as lysol.
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Wow, Bob, you sure went out on limb when you said I couldn't possibly fry a high wattage speaker with a low powered amp. When I was in Germany before, we sometimes got really bored in the avionics shop during midshift. Actually, we managed to burn up two voice coils on different speakers with a car Pioneer car stereo. One was a 5 inch, and one a 6x9. I had to prove to an individual who I worked with that burned up two small hifi amps and screwed up one speaker that this was indeed possible. One voice coil opened, and the other burned so bad it distorted the paper material the coil was warapped on, negating the clearance necessary to allow the cone to move. Maybe on paper it shouldn't happen, but don't say it can't be done. Maybe if the sigal was a true square wave, but the clipping we induced as viewed on the o-scope wasn't of that nature. I also repaired home speakers and amplifiers at the audio-photo club due to insufficient power being used to play loud music in dorm rooms.
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If you drain the oil when it is hot, there is still oil in the block that hasn't drained down. It can take hours fir it to all travel to the oil pan. IMO, yer better off draining when cold. Sand of the end of your dipstick, so to speak. It'll make it easier to read, even tho the subie is the worst car I have ever owned to check oil on.
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The easiest way to destry speakers and amps is too turn the volume up too high. With a 5 watt amp, you can easily fry 200 watt speakers because of what was said by commuter, distortion, which is actually the signal being clipped off, creating a flat voltage level. Speakers cannot handle clipping, because the voice coil tries to hold that signal, heats up, and starts to cook. This clipping also causes the amplifier transistor outputs to heat up, creating a Hiroshima effect. Tie me up, whip me and beat me, just don't make me listen to low fidelity...
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Ditto on Cougar's post. If the light isn't on when the key is turned on, this usually means the bulb is shot, then the 12 volts excitation voltage won't get to the alternator. The wire runs from the key switch, thru a fuse and on to the alt via the blk/wt wire. You could probably use any 12 volts that comes on with the key in the run position. As a matter of fact, you could also hook a bulb up in line and have the same set-up, but why not just pull the instrument cluster? If you bypass the bulb, you won't know if you have a charging problem.
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You should have 12v going to terminal 2 of the lights all the time, from the fuses. The low beams (They are tied together) are actuated by a ground on terminal 1, either from the daytime light resistor or the light switch. Either way, they both make contact in the daytime light relay. It doesn't make a diff if the lights switch is turned on? I don't know why it is switching between lights, but that being the case, maybe it's the point where the low beams tie together, which on my diagarm is on the yel/blu wire on the left light. I'm not sure if there is a connector, or a splice.
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Unfortunately, you have an R12 freon system. If it needs charging, it will be expensive. Most compressors have a pressure switch that will turn them off if the pressure in the system isn't up to snuff. Maybe you can find someone to put some stop leak in it, then refill it. Best bet may be to convert the system to R134.