If you want to get your classy little lady to go "camping" with you sell that tinker toy and get a real RV. She's not gonna poop in a bucket and it worked for Desi.
You can probably sell it for more than you paid for it right now.
I'd say it is a bit inefficient for an oil change, since you have to keep raising and lowering the lift for various stages. During my last trip to Jiffy Lube, which uses a drive over trench system allowing one person to drain the oil from underneath while another fills from above, they used the wrong fasteners on my skid plate causing it to come loose the next day and become a hazard to my car and others. It took a month for them to finally get a replacement and install. A one-month oil change isn't Jiffy.
Unfortunately, the local Honda dealership started keeping cars overnight for oil changes, so they are not a better option for my CR-V.
When you have to pay for ill changes do not go to the dealership. Find a trusted repair shop that changes oil. They are far less likely to screw it up.
Valvoline is a little more pricey, but they take the time to to a quick full light inspection. Turn your blinkers on, brake lights, reverse lights etc... Obviously it is a shot at quick extra revenue.
But in WI and the amount of drinking that goes on here, it's "pull over prevention" check.
"Gusty Winds said... Valvoline is a little more pricey, but they take the time to to a quick full light inspection. Turn your blinkers on, brake lights, reverse lights etc... Obviously it is a shot at quick extra revenue."
Most vehicles now will let you know if you have a light out. My 2015 F-150 tells me if a light is out on my boat trailer.
Yes, you have to go to the dealer until the warrantee is expired."
Absolutely not true. You can change oil anywhere, including DIY. ======================================================================= If you change your own oil, I would recommend keeping your oil and filter receipts just in case you have a warranty claim. I get free oil changes on my Tacoma for another year, than it's back to "do it yourself."
"If you change your own oil, I would recommend keeping your oil and filter receipts just in case you have a warranty claim. I get free oil changes on my Tacoma for another year, than it's back to "do it yourself."
"Wow, My Audi dealer told me that if I did not service it there they would not know if I really did it."
Again, not true. To deny a warranty the manufacturer would have to prove negligence that was a direct cause of the failure. An impossible task and not financially worth the effort. And the middleman is the dealer, who has a financial interest in warranty coverage.
I get to my Ford Quicklube at 7:15 AM and there are already five or six people in line & packed all day? They, like everyone else, is having a hard time getting help, but the bays are full all the time.
That’s why I snapped that shot. For one brief moment, mine was the only vehicle in the Ford Quicklube and the scene seemed surreal. Especially with that claw foot tub shape floating above.
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36 comments:
Looks like the Costco bay.
I put a car lift in my garage for just that reason. And brake/tire changes. Hugely convenient.
You must have gotten there early.
Meade, Meade, Meade.
If you want to get your classy little lady to go "camping" with you sell that tinker toy and get a real RV. She's not gonna poop in a bucket and it worked for Desi.
You can probably sell it for more than you paid for it right now.
I'm just trying to help.
Nicely framed. And good timing.
It's a local Ford dealership.
I like the photo because it is, as Grant says, nicely framed, but also because the place looks so neat and clean and sunny.
The photo was taken at 11:31 this morning.
I like it. Hopper-esque.
But then, I call everything I like Hopper-esque...
What sort of camper rig is that?
Business does not appear to be flourishing in the service bays.
I'd say it is a bit inefficient for an oil change, since you have to keep raising and lowering the lift for various stages. During my last trip to Jiffy Lube, which uses a drive over trench system allowing one person to drain the oil from underneath while another fills from above, they used the wrong fasteners on my skid plate causing it to come loose the next day and become a hazard to my car and others. It took a month for them to finally get a replacement and install. A one-month oil change isn't Jiffy.
Unfortunately, the local Honda dealership started keeping cars overnight for oil changes, so they are not a better option for my CR-V.
At one time, I was all about doing my own automobile maintenance. Brakes, oil, anti-freeze.
Not so much anymore. The space under the hood is very tight, and it's a pain getting rid of the old oil.
r/accidentalwesanderson
Rabel, thanks. I think. https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=Ucb9O8q1eOc
Anthony, https://fourwheelcampers.com/model/grandby-model-pop-up-truck-camper-leader-full-size-trucks/
10W-40.
10W-41 even better if you've got it...
It's a local Ford dealership.
I assume it is free as per the sales contract.
When you have to pay for ill changes do not go to the dealership. Find a trusted repair shop that changes oil. They are far less likely to screw it up.
"It's a local Ford dealership."
Yes, you have to go to the dealer until the warrantee is expired.
Hope you also changed the air in your tires.
Valvoline is a little more pricey, but they take the time to to a quick full light inspection. Turn your blinkers on, brake lights, reverse lights etc... Obviously it is a shot at quick extra revenue.
But in WI and the amount of drinking that goes on here, it's "pull over prevention" check.
The open road west beckons!
Off road, BLM camping, big sky vistas...
"Josephbleau said...
Yes, you have to go to the dealer until the warrantee is expired."
Absolutely not true. You can change oil anywhere, including DIY.
"Gusty Winds said...
Valvoline is a little more pricey, but they take the time to to a quick full light inspection. Turn your blinkers on, brake lights, reverse lights etc... Obviously it is a shot at quick extra revenue."
Most vehicles now will let you know if you have a light out. My 2015 F-150 tells me if a light is out on my boat trailer.
Nice pic. Somehow, it comforts me.
I love oil, btw. Also gas. Also natural gas.
And they didn't come from dinosaurs.
THE END
Is that an old-fashioned clawfoot bathtub on the top of your truck?
"Is that an old-fashioned clawfoot bathtub on the top of your truck?"
LOL.
Curious George said...
"Josephbleau said...
Yes, you have to go to the dealer until the warrantee is expired."
Absolutely not true. You can change oil anywhere, including DIY.
=======================================================================
If you change your own oil, I would recommend keeping your oil and filter receipts just in case you have a warranty claim. I get free oil changes on my Tacoma for another year, than it's back to "do it yourself."
“Yes, you have to go to the dealer until the warrantee is expired."
Absolutely not true. You can change oil anywhere, including DIY.”
Wow, My Audi dealer told me that if I did not service it there they would not know if I really did it.
10W30, FRAM filter, drain it, change it, and we're off to the races.
It reminded me of a Renaissance perspective painting where all the lines converge at a vanishing point on the horizon (or here, behind the truck).
Original Mike said...
Hope you also changed the air in your tires.
=======
will that be monthly or by season [with or without fries]
"If you change your own oil, I would recommend keeping your oil and filter receipts just in case you have a warranty claim. I get free oil changes on my Tacoma for another year, than it's back to "do it yourself."
"Wow, My Audi dealer told me that if I did not service it there they would not know if I really did it."
Again, not true. To deny a warranty the manufacturer would have to prove negligence that was a direct cause of the failure. An impossible task and not financially worth the effort. And the middleman is the dealer, who has a financial interest in warranty coverage.
"It's a local Ford dealership."
The odds were good that it was a dealership. Dealerships use those lifts. Otherwise you'd likely see a row of two post lifts.
Next time you go there can you ask them the max weight that works w/ those lifts? I wonder if the lifts will work w/ an F550 w/ a heavy body.
I get to my Ford Quicklube at 7:15 AM and there are already five or six people in line & packed all day? They, like everyone else, is having a hard time getting help, but the bays are full all the time.
“…but the bays are full all the time.”
That’s why I snapped that shot. For one brief moment, mine was the only vehicle in the Ford Quicklube and the scene seemed surreal. Especially with that claw foot tub shape floating above.
"the scene seemed surreal"
To me, the size of the truck is surreal. It looks manageably small, as though I might be able to handle it. In the driveway, it's huge.
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