Just Rolled In | Don't Talk To Me Or My Son Ever Again
VloĆŸit
- Äas pĆidĂĄn 5. 06. 2024
- Welcome to Just Rolled In!
For today's episode, we have some customer states photos and videos from all around the web and sent in by subscribers! If you have any questions about any of the photos or videos, feel free to ask in the comments. Also, check out the bottom of this description for more information about each photo & clip.
Hope you enjoyed the video and please consider subscribing. Thanks for watching!
If you want to submit your customer states photos/videos or car pictures, you can do so via our website.
www.justrolledinyt.com/
đ(Not all content sent in will be used and it MUST be yours)đ
Just Rolled In Merch (all profit from merch sales donated to local foodbank)
www.justrolledin.shop/
đFollow Just Rolled In on Social Mediađ
Facebook - / justrolledin
Instagram - / justrolledinyt
TikTok - / justrolledin
Which one is your favourite?
I really enjoy the content and humor, but I dislike the wallpaper taking up my phone screen with a reduced main image content. If there's any printed words, its so reduced that it is very hard to read. IMHO, eliminate the wallpaper where possible, and enlarge the main subject to full screen.
@@stealthg35infiniti94 This is quite an older video. I've changed things up since this one.
I liked the red green reference. Having met the man, the duct tape ratchet splint would be something he would do.
@@Sjackson2369 That is a *really young* Red/Green as well.
Favorite is the ratchet duck tape, it really shows that you can use it for survival if needed. At least he had the sense to take it to the shop too.
That's not even exaggerating... Red Green would be legitimately proud of that duct tape job.
If you can't fix it, duck it!
You must be Canadian
That is full fuck it engineering and I love it
If the women donât find ya handsome theyâll at least find ya handy!
We at the workshop had an off-roading weekend and our senior mechanic had an old modded Toyota Hilux which they used in expeditions in central Africa. One trek had a real axle bender section and the left front tie-rod snapped, we took a welding machine out there and welded it together, when we got it on flatter ground we set the wheel alignment on the old fashion way and drove the rest of the weekend like that and it drove 150 km back to town without a problem. The next day they fitted new steering components...
If it moves when it shouldn't: duct tape. If it doesn't, but it should: WD40. For all other things there's Mastercard.
An improvised patch that will get a vehicle back to town is always a valid solution. Reminds me of when my power steering pulley bracket broke and the serpentine belt wouldnt stay on, so I tied some shoelaces from the drive pulley to the fan to get it running. No power steering but at least it stopped overheating.
as a Canadian I'm proud of Red Green repairs that work ... duct tape manufacturers owe him a lot lol !!
Fellow Canadian here as well!
I'm from the US but I'm proud to say I know who that is! Bubbles mentions him once in Trailer Park Boys
MacGyvered it good enough.
Or A Teamed for that matter. The A Team were McGyvering things before McGyver was even on the air.
"Why didn't you tell me I shouldnt drive with my brakes grinding?"
"Well ma'am, we also didn't tell you that you shouldn't armwrestle a grizzly"
She's the reason for warnings like "Open box before eating pizza"
I should've taken film,of a customers truck.
It was a fleet truck, F350, 5 yrs old with 400,000 miles on it.
Stock motor, stock tranny, brake lines, fuel lines, everything was stock.
It looked brand new.
He drove it from the SC/NC state line up into Virginia through the swamps daily for his job.
I didn't believe him until he showed me pictures.
I was so impressed by him that I bought a lift for my shop to lift an F550 just so he could get the new F550 his company was offering him.
That F350 was nice but that F550 was a beauty queen !
Duck taping the ratchet to the tie rod - gonna have to remember that one đ€Ł
Red Green 4ever! "To be a successful inventor, you need three things: imagination, determination, and neighbors who mind their own business." My kind'a guy!
Plus a couple of duct tape rolls !
Hahaha I love that
That tie rod made me remember the dark night my new car broke down. (Three months old car). Two of the spark plug caps had completely melted away, and the two other were about to let go. Found some fence wire in the ditch alongside the road, replaced the HT wires with that, and drove home. Got yelled at, when I arrived at the dealer the next day to have it properly repaired.
Some times it is lots of fun being a mechanic, knowing how to patch up stuff.
So why did they melt away? Bad design?
@@computernerdinside Just bad design, they had a medium sized pile of wires and caps when I looked.
Wonder why they yelled at you, because you knew exactly what the problem was and they couldn't sell you on some crap?
@@lsswappedcessna They just weren't used to seeing emergency repairs.
@@leifvejby8023 Ah lol
Ford escape with rusted out shock mount is such a great way to get rid of someone. Nice thing is you have multiple different chances for success. The rusted area is right above the exhaust so you know fumes are coming in. The shock flops around and you have a good chance of taking out either brake lines, fuel tank and other really unneeded stuff. The only real important problem is that the shock will punch up through the speaker, cant drive if the sound isnt working right.
Moore dumb what what ?? You mean that the sound system does not make the vehicle drive down the road.....
Ok, that tie rod one...Im a believer now. Duct tape fixes anything.
My choice would have been a piece of rebar and a couple of hose clamps.
When I was 16, one of my brake lines (rubber) ruptured just before the caliper on my 84 Silverado. I used 2 entire rolls of duct tape, wrapped it, filled it, and drove it 5 miles into town to the Napa and had a replacement made for it. Was good for 7 complete stops before the brake fluid ate through the adhesive lol.
@@V.is.for.Vae.Victus If it works, it aint stupid.
Yes duct tape does work for almost anything. Except STUPID! đ„Ž
@@danberg1018 Neah. Duct tape works GREAT on stupid. A few times around the head to cover the mouth, and bam--quiet! Stupid is fixed! lol. Truly the miracle tool! LOL
Every car should have a good quality roll of gaffers tape in the standard inventory.
I once temporarily fixed a coolant hose to the coolant pump with half a roll.
Got a mandatory yearly inspection, they asked how long the fix was there, my answer: just under 10 months.
How could anybody not like rhese videos. It's the customers who are right out from the nut farm. You can't beat these incredible videos. Rhank you for passing them along on your CZcams channel. đđđđđ
I've done some stuff to my cars over the years, but I never once blamed anyone but the guy responsible, me.
Great idea to do videos like this . Brings back a lot of funny /good memories of wrenching and people being wierd.
Glad you like them! Brings back a lot of memories for me as well.
Loved the Red Green reference
If you can't fix it Duck it.
That bald tire reminds me of an asian customer who we did a 4 wheel alignment for and we told him he needed to replace a tire at that time due to uneven wear . He came back 2 yrs. later and was yelling LOOK AT MY TIRE , YOU FUCK UP MY CAR , YOU PAY ME DOUBLE .
HaHaHa I could just imagen Red doing that on the possum van and Harold saying "That will never work uncle Red" Handyman corner lol... loved the Red Green reference!
I wish I could give extra thumbs up for the Red Green reference. Best show ever!
Great videos absolutely love red green. Don't see his stuff too much anymore
That duct tape one is impresssive.....I recently snapped a propshaft and would have roped it up to hold it off the road, then driven on the front wheel drive only just to get the car a couple of miles home....had it not sheared the brake pipes as well.....perhaps it would have been a bad idea anyway but after being stuck there 8 hours, I was really starting to wish I had tried it...with or without brakes.
2:12 - so now we know what the inside of a ventilated disc looks like without the inside surface of the rotor.
Im sure a lot of people will have done this...
I remember when I was younger I ground my brakes through the friction material, through the metal, and into the caliper (just turning the radio up to drown out the grinding and hoping it would last till the test), at that age, money is more important than safety. When I took it into the garage, the mechanic remarked 'its not too bad, you still have some disc left, I had one in yesterday where the brakes were down to the calipers and the discs were both down to the fins'....
For Americans, 'discs' is the English word for what you call 'rotors'....
@@Debbiebabe69 We use both terms.
@@Debbiebabe69 brake discs or rotors.yea,we get that.
@@Debbiebabe69 you know what we Americans _don't_ usually use, is future perfect tense ("will have done" this...). I love it, even though it's mostly used figuratively
Great clips and humorous reading on this one Adam!
I think you'll find that the flashing bulb is actually a brake/ tail light globe. It has a 5w filament (tail light) and a 21w filament (brake light). If the jammed it in the 21w will cause the flasher unit to heat up and the contact opens a lot quicker and therefore flash faster.
I think in Germany those bulbs had be called Bilux in the past, but that may have been a brand name of one maker only. They once were quite common.
Careful with the Red Green stuff;He s an icon round these parts.
Only had CBC growing up. All I watched.
0:50 Kids used to do this with the wheels on their VW Bugs.
Tom Mallon Yes, I was one of those kids. Back in about 1969 when I was a Senior in H.S., I did that to my VW. I thought it looked cool!!
Love the Red Green shoutout!
Underrated show.
Keep your stick on the ice.
âDonât let the body guys hear thatâ đ€Łđđ€Ł
The duct taped tie rod is lol funny!
lol, I about died at how you pronounced blimey.
đ đđ
That splint reminded me of the story of when my Dad splinted a broken ATV axle because he didn't want to walk home from the hunting trip.
That last one is the best. I ride a old shovel head Harley and if werenât for zip ties and duck tape Iâd never been able to keep it on the road
@3:51 - Hey, now THAT is very interesting. I have that exact same issue on my old Subaru and could never figure it out. Going to try that fix tomorrow. Thanks!
I've done something like that to a tie rod just to get the car home. Of course I did fix it right after that but in a pinch you do what you have to do.
I agree whatever it takes to get you home or to a shop I always carry bailing wire and duct tape
@@charlesvlcek2550 thats what held the old model t,s togheter.
I literally laughed out loud at the Red Green reference đ€Ł
4:22 Darn, I didn't know you could install a bulb backwards, one side tab is higher than the other, but apparently I did it once.
With enough force you can...
Love the Red Green reference.
FN nailed it.
When that guy said "Red Green is smiling somwhere" he was talking as if he was dead, which is hilarious if you saw the promo for his "this could be it tour."
I've been called ugly, yet very handy! đâ âĄïžđđ
So many fresh and exciting new ideas here!
1:40 I have a dozen 9/16th's wrenches. I only work on imports XD I'd totally use a 9/16ths as scrap metal
That duct tape one, lmao! Iâve got a buddy that swears by that shit!
Welcome to the handyman portion of todays video where if it ain't broke your not trying.
I've seen a few tires that had a huge amount of weight on it from previous balance attempts. If we get one of those, we just tell the customer the tire can't be balanced. Either take it elsewhere or replace the tire.
We had to use our shoelaces for a throttle cable and a stick under the side of the hood so it could move freely. I was controlling the throttle from the passenger side while my friend was in control of the clutch, brakes and steering. When we got pulled over, the cop was not amused
I guess the worst thing I ever seen was on an old Ford Station Wagon. I worked with the guy, and he drove his son's car in. I guess his son was a house painter, and he didn't want to put any money in it.
Each tie rod end had a radiator hose clamp holding the ball and socket together.
This guy had a PhD. I admit it was his son that did it, but you would think before he drove it 35 miles on the interstate, he would have at least glanced at it
NGL I am flabbergasted about the duct tape. That dude is a genius, or a madman.
crazy like a fox
The lady with the brakes.
Some people are just clueless.
In high school I had a friend who thought you drove your car until the oil light came on, then you topped it up. He thought that because that is what his father would do, so to him it was normal.
Nailed it
Holy cow, that red green reference.
Some how it will always be your fault. Some people can not take responsibility for anything
Have a like for the red green reference
You should see some of the small planes I used to work on. If I hadn't retired I would have a channel like this one, "Just Flew In....Barely."
I had a '78 Chevy K5 Blazer once. The rear U-joint on the rear driveshaft let go one night, dropped the driveshaft to the street. I pulled it out, locked the front hubs, and drove away. I drove it like that until I got rid of the Blazer. Never did fix the driveshaft.
my dads car got front grill, bumper damage so he got some parts from a salvage yard. the grill he got had a broken mount stud. he drilled out the broken piece and put a bolt thru it. he then took a wire coat hanger and cut a few inches out of it. he twisted the wire around the bolt then in order to tighten it he put a turn buckle with the wire on one side and bolted the other end to the radiator support.
I'm afraid I'm going to get this wrong, but hope you'll all understand I'm not a mechanic, just the daughter of the ingenious man who did this: back in the late 1970s, Mom and Dad were traveling in the Dakotas when the travel trailer they owned had a problem. A leaf spring had broken, and they were way up in the highest hills, no help available anywhere for a very long way.
Dad always carried his toolbox with him---he was a shade tree mechanic, but knew enough to at least do jury rigged stuff in an emergency---and he took his Vice Grips and clamped the leaf spring with them, then drove over 200 miles like that until they found an RV repair place. The mechanics there were very impressed that the Grips held the leaf spring and suggested that Dad should let the company know about that. They took a couple of pictures for him to send as a testimonial. The Vice Grips people were so impressed, they sent Dad a new one, even though the old one(s) (he had a second one in the toolbox) still worked perfectly!
Now, please understand, it's been nearly 50 years since I first learned of this, and Mom and Dad died 16 years ago, so I can't verify the details; it may be that I left out some important detail, but I do know that Mom never worried a bit about the broken leaf spring because she knew that Dad had another Vice Grips in his toolbox, so if need be, he could clamp that on, too.
Yep, he ended up owning three Vice Grips. I just wish I'd gotten one of them upon his death. Mighty useful tool, that one.
Duck tape can fix anything, that and zip ties đ€·ââïžđ€Łđ€Ł
they call it hundred mile an hour tape in the military.that stuff will hold just about anything togheter
1:53
read in Steve Irwin voice
And he would totally do that too.
@@michaelbujaki2462 you said it mate,love from down unda.
your comment about red green made me smile and laugh
Red Green would be proud.
I liked the captions.
Lol donât let the body guys hear that
3:25 Ford Escape/Mazda Tribute, right rear. Itâs always the right rear.
Very good emergency fix.
13 years of driving and I haven't had summer tires ONCE. Braking performance is just as good and +100 traction for dirt/mountain roads.
2:04 Not random at all, it's a Crocodile Hunter reference.
Reminds me: I ordered a case of duct tape to do some repairs on my Laguna Seca special!
Wow, never seen one a them thar 2 speed blinker lights before - does it use halogen fluid?
Love red green
I run winters year round on my Subi, theyâre actually really good tires, but to say Iâm doing it for that reason would be lying, Iâm lazy.
I consistently consider doing the same with my STI. I don't track it, and the stock rims are wayyy heavier than the ones I got with winters from Tire Rack
@@nthgth I do swap summer and winter tires on my Evo. The Evo has Ăhlins coilovers and it handles unbelievable with good tires. I ended up buying some Enkei RPF1âs a few years back so I could just quickly swap them whenever the weather changed. Funny thing is the RPF1âs are lighter but I have my winter tires on them đ it just worked out that way and I havenât needed new tires yet
Itâs almost June and I havenât done it yet though, so thereâs that laziness I was talking about. But I havenât even gotten the bike out yet, but thatâs more because Iâve been too busy, a CBR600RR.
Although, to be fair, the Michelin Xice 3âs on the Evo still handle surprisingly good, and they donât Chuck road debris and rocks all over the side of my car. I got some Rally Armor mudflaps to protect against that a few years back though. My only concern with the winter tires is they donât brake near as well. The rear end will kick out under hard braking until stability control catches it or I let off. Another concern I have that I havenât experienced is that the rear might slip under hard cornering with those winters on it. They do brake really well in a straight line, but any kind of offset to your steering angle, that rear will slip under hard braking.
its BECAUSE they earn a fortune and KNOW the trade, they feel they KNOW they can drive like that... lawl
Random that was a Steve Irwin impression
Duct tape at the end is my favorite
Ratchet splint, seen that before with a breaker bar although instead of tape they used hose clamps!
I don't know where 'Just Rolled In' originates from, but when I saw the Red Green clip, I figure JRI is made in the Great White North. Keep your stick on the ice.
miss watching red green that dude is funny.
I noticed that a lot of these appear to be from the rust belt. Man am I glad I live in the south.
In America, especially modern America, it's normal, and expected, for the owner of a business to not know anything about the business he owns. He's just there to collect the check.
As far as winter tires, I have a friend to does that. Buys new winter tires every fall and runs them year round.
My solution to avoid tire swapping was I managed to find an "all season" type tire that paid to get the "snow and ice" stamp on it.
If one side of the steering tie rod end snaps you can still steer. The dolly wheel is still touching the ground do when the rack and pinion steer the other side the dolly wheel will follow without being pushed by the tie rod end. But if you go over bumps and stuff, the dolly wheel will go in whatever direction the bump forces is so thatâs a big issue. Either way Iâm not surprised it made it to the shop. Itâs not a massive break. Just really sketchy.
Good point. I'm sure the driver took it pretty slow too, and did their best to avoid bumps especially on the side with the taped tie rod.
Red Green đ
so glad you bought a popfilter for the later vids ;)
Lol yea these videos aren't the best. I'm going to delete these ones soon I think.
@@JustRolledIn It shows where you came from, nobody gets it perfect right from the start. Keep up the good work!
@@joachimtesdal5998 I appreciate the kind words.
The rear shock looks like my neighbors ford escape.
Same side.
They pop riveted some tin up in there, that lasted about 3 weeks.
It hasn't moved in 18 months and she still wants thousands for it. đ
I'm waiting for you to write a book about your stories đđ. They always crack me up.
@@JustRolledIn
Not car related but a good story anyways....
My bro in law called me from Cali to come out & do HVAC work for him.
He ran a crew & was high up.
I flew out from Pa.
His younger brother worked for him also.
My bro in law is white, his lil brother is black.
Yes, their parents are divorced.
Anyways, I called this kid Amigo.
He looked at me weird.
After a few weeks of me calling him Amigo, he told me his real name.
Yelled it at me.
He then asked me why I keep calling him Amigo.
I told him, at the right time, I would let you know, then I walked away.
Later that day we stopped at a mini-mart, or whatever they call them out there.
I waited in line, paid, took a step to my right and stood there.
Amigo was next in line.
The teller just spoke english to me and is now speaking spanish to Chris.
He looked at me, aggitated, and I said
This is why I call you Amigo, my friend. đ
He hates it that they speak spanish to him & not to me since I once pointed it out.
Won $100 because we worked together and nobody spoke english to him nor spanish to me, like I said would happen. đ
@@JustRolledIn
Ok car related,
Amigo had an Acura Integra 2.0 Vtec 5 speed.
Nice lil car.
Another guy on site had a Honda Civic 1.6 Auto with some mods.
I once peeped the Civic and was not impressed.
One day going to work, the Civic was following us.
Amigo is 19, has no clue about a Vtec, nor how to race shift.
He is wanting to decline the "invite" by the Civic.
I talked him into it, then through it.
He ate that Civic up đđđ
Bro, this dude was đĄđ€
I talked Amigo through,the whole thing, including driving down the center line.
*WE AINT AT THE STRIP HOMIE*
Amigo is having a fun time right now.
He's tuned in.
We kept that guy from passing us through some dead parts of town after exiting the expressway.
Amigo was about to cock block him and I said lay off, let him pass.
Amigo listened, then watched as the Civic almost took out a cop car, avoided that but crashed through the gates leading into the work site.
That race cost that dude big time.
â
Lost to a 19 yr old kid that bought the car because it was "ECO FRIENDLY" .
He said he never went over 70 before.
He once asked how fast we were going, I said 80 (real speed 120)
Then again, I said 85 ( real speed 142ish )
Then again, JUST DRIVE DUDE !
Ditto, Ford Taurus in snow country...20 years old though.
@@haroldwilkes6608
No excuses Harold. đ
I also live in the snowbelt and have a 16 yr old rust free Pontiac.
You know how hard it is to keep a gm rust free ?
I started that project back in 3rd grade đ
Not sure why your backgrounds are like a British garage from the 60s/70s but I have a puncture repair kit like the one top left that was my grandads.
Old background I use to use that I really liked
Just remember: if it flies, floats or fucks? Itâs cheaper to rent it.
Cool, now I know how to offset my rims
So fun
Am I the only one that sees the ratchet taped to the steering linkage and thinks "Good to know that'll work..."
I read the title with DankPods voice
3:53 ok⊠Iâm not gonna blame the customer for that one. That wouldâve confused the heck out of me.. did realize a bulb like that only goes in one way.
WOOOOO Ric Flair daddy..........
02:34..that's...actually pretty KQQl looking...think wall art!!!
We had a brand new Nissan patrol, less than 6 months old with 20,000kms on it, the thing was absolutely filthy with mud and the inside was coated in a thick layer of dust. And the front driveshafts front universal joint was completely fucked. The guy had spent the majority of those 20k KMs at the bottom of a mud pit haha but at least he can say it wasn't a pavement princess, it's lifted a good three inches and has 34s on it as well as the 5 point something litre V8 so it's badass to drive
Not gonna lie I've done nearly the same duct tape get it home repair but used a hammer handle
Red green lol
Oh god that's old
Duct tape is my hero!
my husband would aggree with you.
0:50, extra caliper clearance bro ???
Ive seen boy racers delibratly riding on 4 wrong way round space saver tyres....
Probably gives better traction than the ones who drive with so much camber the wheel looks like it is going to fall off...
Whered you find the red clip? 1983? Hes a baby