Real Mechanic Reacts to More Horrible Tiktok Car Advice
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- čas přidán 11. 12. 2022
- Thanks to Porsche for sponsoring today’s video! Click here bit.ly/DonutPorsche to check out job offerings at your local authorized Porsche dealership.
We forced real mechanics to watch good and bad Tiktoks to see if they're legit or not.
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Whoever's in charge of getting sponsors needs a massive raise
They need more sponsors to pay for it
@@Fresh1O1O then looks like somebody better get fuckin busy huh
I'm sure porsche approached them. They will have filled up their apprenticeship programme in a few hours. Great opportunity too.
Having 7 million subs probably helped a lot
@@crazedw00kie haha right!
Sponsored by PORSCHE? Man you guys are hitting it big time, nice one 👍👍👍👍
Literally yelled *WUT* 🤯
Les go
Probably wouldn’t change my mind either 😂😂😂
yea dude they should do a hi low porsche series
MrBeast and then Porsche I was like holy shit we’re going somewhere!!!!❤❤❤❤ hells yes boy!!!
Well, they've been sponsored by Porsche before when Nolan talked about the Cayenne in one of his Wheelhouse episodes. That sponsored bit was talking about their pre-owned Porsche program.
Respect to the young lady, she's legit.. Whoever's in charge of getting sponsors needs a massive raise.
Angelina is the only one who recognised that drilling the bushing out was damaging the part.
Definitely bad advice. Well done Angelina.
It might also be the editing. They seem to cut a lot of content and commentary so they don't have four experts all saying the same thing, but complementing each other.
Nope run a drill bit in reverse it don’t cut that’s a damn good hack
@@droptine7848
Nope.
A drill in reverse wont drill a hole, it can still do plenty of damage being used as it was in the video.
She responds as a teacher. She teaches at a college. The other 2 respond like shoo owners. She’s always going to respond in the “least damage possible” whereas the other 2 will always respond in a “If it doesn’t break anything than it works.” *Potential Damages* unless immediately apparent and costly, aren’t considered in a lot of shops.
Drill in reverse, the bushing likely won't come out. In reverse, the bit will likely score up the inside, but that's not too big a deal. In forward, the drill bit will likely cause deeper scratches, water will get in with capillary action and cause rusting over a Long period of time. Good luck pushing the new bushing in with the drill. Little gain, imo.
Justin looked so happy doing the sponsored segment. I know he’s been around a little bit now but it’s so nice seeing Justin become comfortable on camera and becoming an amazing host. It’s like he’s been doing it forever he’s become a natural.
Yeah I remember when he first started out he was so awkward and looked kinda nervous, but I'm glad he's start to get more comfortable and open. I feel like the energy and just friendship of all the guys at Donut is just infectious as FUCK. It's great to see the chemistry between everyone and it makes me smile that Justin is getting along well. Also, fucking PORSCHE sponsored this video? Damn that's cool
@@jamesquevedo1191as soon as i started seeing him in videos i know my boy has potential and damn he’s dope
@@leakybandz1208 I love seeing him just make cameos in Zach and Jeremiah's show about testing tools. They're all sciencey and smart and they'll just call Justin over to break stuff 🤣
WE STAN JUSTIN
I’m so happy he’s actually talking more because he is so knowledgeable
Can we talk about how far Donut has come in terms of sponsorships.
How far they’ve come in general is flipping amazing.
@@nichickmetfacts
Yeah even johnny sins keeps commenting on their vids
@Ashley White *insert scottish accent* disgusting.
True man it goes bigger and bigger
Back in the 80s, a friend of mine did the head work for a well known NASCAR team. He said after extensive flow bench testing, they determined there was better atomization of the intake charge when the intake ports were finished with a 120 grit sandpaper roll and the exhaust ports were finished to a mirror finish to minimize carbon build up.
came here to say the same. i had a well known machinist build the heads for my buell engine and he finished the intake ports rough for better atomization of the fuel. that bike absolutely ripped
that depends entirely on the engine, 80's were still using carburetor's so atomisation was important. That no longer is necessary, dead set smooth is better in the vast majority of cars after the 00's with fuel injection.
angelina should have her own segment. I’d watch just her reacting to stuff. Loved her explanations
Definitely
She needs to get back on her CZcams channel
Simp
She definitely stands out. Incredibly smart.
She's got the looks with intelligence to back it up, not common nowadays with social media clout.
Sponsored by Porsche! Congrats for this achievement and reward! You deserve it. 🎉
I am not a fan of Porsche but it is impressive that Donut has car manufacturer sponsor
Bro they're a massive multi-media conglomerate - the people you see on the channel don't run donut whatsoever. It's a corporate company.
they, much like most of the industry right now, are desperate for technicians. it's about time they started advertising for these positions like this
*GAWK GAWK GAWK*
@@markus7166Ben Shapiro compilation
I love the difference between an instructor and the two shop owners on when something is "bad practice" vs "gotta do what you gotta do" 😂
I was wondering about the differences in their approaches why she was so much stricter and going after the ideal everytime. While the others were much more practical and focused on the reality. I didn't even think about the fact that she is an instructor and they are practicing technicians.
@Aaron Burkeen it would most likely be due to the way the automotive instructor has to teach. The main certification all automotive instructors are trained for is the ASE certification test, the instructor knows that test to a tee they change their couses to meet that tests standards. Though with it being a test it is hard to test real world situations so many times the ASE exam is a lot more strict as the automotive instructor is
She looks very incompetent ... That big lecture for destroing ECU was pretty lame and untrue
@@miletinic920 Right, let's base our determination of competence on your biased opinion of what she looks like. good job, troll.
I think the real difference comes in when you consider "who do you want to have working on your car" vs "whose actually cheap enough to work on your car"...
Paul definitely seems like the kind of guy that if you're a customer, you want him watching over the shop because he will make sure things are done right, and if you're his employee you'd better have your game together because he will put you out on your ass in a heartbeat if you screw around.
Lots of laughs. Hope there's more videos like this! "Class 8" mechanic here since the late 80s. Some of the tricks I know people argue and can't believe until they try it or you do it in front of them and prove it. Example: Heating a bearing in an oven so it slides right on a shaft instead of wrestling with it on a press.
The Porsche sponsorship is INSANE! Whaaat! Well done Donut!
like your profile pic
No it's not, they've had Porsche sponsor before. Also dodge and other brands.
This is nothing new or big. Also not much of a sponsorship when it's just Porsche getting free advertising for kids to go to a school they can't actually go to
@@brucebonner3491 Porsche is not getting free advertising. They paid donut for this haha
@@talonmcmanus88 hahahah false.
Stop acting like you work for the business kid. Fucking pathetic.
Facts prove they didn't. Just like how 70% of "sponsherships" don't pay anything. Also sponsherships are usually less then $2,000 which is jack shit.
I wouldn't be suprised if you're just like the hundreds of other imbeciles in the comments that don't understand how the platform works, and are soo desperately trying to defend and protect a company that has no care for your existence in the first place
@@brucebonner3491 You have to be the most outspoken and arrogant person I've ever seen who simultaneously knows absolutely nothing. Where did you pull those statistics from, and why do you think that applies to Donut Media? If you think a channel with 7.5 million subscribers shoots an advertisement and includes it at the beginning of their video without pay you have to be taking the piss
The fact that you guys partnered with Porsche to offer this kind of program is incredible. Hats off to whoever came up with this idea. Sky is the limit all around!
Yeah honestly they’ve come so far I love to see it
Higher standards, I’m loving it!
I’ve done the rear brake delete trick. I’ve also been pushed by the rear wheel drive through an intersection with my front only brakes locked in the rain. Almost lost my life that day. After that I just put it in neutral before I got to the light. Made it home safely to change my shorts.
Brought a triumph head to a machine shop that mostly did race motors. Did a port and polish job myself that i was quite proud of, he told me the exhaust ports were perfect but the intake sides benefited from being a little textured, his explanation was you wanted to create turbulence when the air/gas entered the chamber for a more complete burn.
Donut is the MVP for putting duration bars under their sponsor ads.
Don't tell Porsche that, teehee
It's amazingly helpful
The one channel I tend to watch the ads for tho! 😂
I still watch their ads tho, especially even they're funny
@@Bman-wm4ib nah their ads so good it’s almost not worth putting the bar there
As someone currently apprenticing at a porsche dealer I thought the sponsor ad was insanely cool today. Not only did I not skip it, I watched twice.
I had to skip it because I know I’ll never own a Porsche. Which makes me sad but I am happy for ye over there :D
Is it worth it to work at a Porsche dealer? Are you a tech or sales?
@Taylor Smith I'm a tech and I think it's worth it. I get to see so many cool things that most mechanics don't get to, and attend porsche specific technical training courses. There are lots of extra hoops to jump through, and lots of attention to detail which is expected.
That’s awesome, I’m hoping to jump over as in house counsel to Porsche NA in a few years.
@@taylorsmith3031 Of course its worth working at a Porsche dealer, those guys charge you Ferrari/Lamborghini repair prices, even if they did absolutely nothing.
Your salary will be amazing.
The "get out of my face price" had me laughing so hard. Weve definitely all had those. Glad I found this channel. Its rare these days to find other techs who know their stuff.
Seen a bunch of these videos, and I think this is my favorite trio of mechanics.
Sandro seems like the type of dude to fix your car and then put some upgrades in it just because he felt like it at no extra cost.
Sweetie Sandro
QQ
@@SEATACxá
That's the sign of a good tech. I love when I'm doing heavy line work and let a customer know hey you need this or I am going to go ahead and take care of this while I'm in here. If I have to take things apart around a serviceable item to get where I need to whats the cost of a few minutes to take care of it.
Also ps "they aren't going to send it to you dry" when it comes to turbos, work for Hyundai 🤣
No one ever does this, but I just wanna shout out @Porsche for sponsoring this video and proactively seeking out people in this audience that might have the interest and the aptitude to join their business. Well done @Porsche.
The real definition of "smart ads" for sure!
You can't even have a selt belt ticket on your record to work for them.
Porsche is a Volkswagen with a better PR guy.
It was just an ad. Sounded as cheesy and generic as any other featured paid-content.
@@agentelvis81 how much advertising do you see to buy a Porsche? Working for them?
I had an old Ford Ranger on the Carolina coast years ago… the brake line rusted out and I was spraying brake fluid down the highway till there was nothing left. I made it to the exit, the manual transmission made it possible to control the speed a bit, found the leak and was able to cut it to pinch it off. I was young and saved the day… Just one of those golden memories. 😊
The water trick is like when you hold the tube of a bicycle tire under water looking for a leak. My dad showed me that in the bathroom sink when I was a kid because my bike tire kept going flat but we couldn't find the leak when we took it out.
I really really like that new mechanic. He is hilarious without even trying. I can’t imagine if he got more comfortable on the show.
Sandro? yeah dude got like old school Fast Furious vibe going on with him and I love it, he's laconic but somehow fits with Donut Media. Tried looking up Miranda's Shop on youtube but got nothing tho
"Welp, engine's out." lol I think I'd like working for that guy
“Three mechanics, and a girl who teaches a class.”
its crazy how big donut media is getting, watched you for ages and I'm glad you guys are finally getting the recognition you deserve
they’ve been big. look at their sub count
@@nacl2858 ik they are big, what I'm saying is I've been watching them for so long its wild to see how far they have come
"I pee myself a little bit every day, and I'm doing just fine!" 😂🤣
I love how they were all so impressed by the thumb thing. It's something so simple and obvious when you see it, that you can't believe you'd never thought of it before.
Jeri’s love for the power brake hack while everyone else hates it makes me happy for some reason. He just personifies MO POWA BABY!
Roadkill!!!
It will only work on old vehicles, they make new cars have brake lines that have a front and back brake connected to it so its safer if one gives out
The Angelina/Jeremiah combo is always comedy gold.
That’s gotta be his sister right? They look a little too similar imo
@@Embiid-is-my-God Yeah....kinda
@@Embiid-is-my-God But he is kinda big in comparation to Angelina
@@brunex_247z8 Siblings can be different sized. I'm 5'9" and my younger brother is 6'3"
Aye she knows her stuff big time
I have heard many people speak of a "main fuse" in a vehicle but after 45+ years working them I still haven't found one.
I love these posts! I learn a lot and the panels are always straight up pros!
“It’s only a dollar my dude” that shit killed me 😂😂😂
like $8 a can here.
The smirk on his face when she says "needs a special tool to pull it out" 😂
Are they brother and sister? They look so alike!
2 funny :)
I chuckled at "at the base of the shaft" 😄
To check the valve's seat seal use gasoline or kerosene instead of water to avoid rust.
I was thinking the same thing, everyone has gas
The beans from last nights supper would like a word...
5:30 I love how all the guys are like 'wow that's weird but A for creativity' and the girl is like 'No way, there are so many better ways to do that.'
cuz all the guys think about is sick burnouts
Angelina's laugh at pull out and grease is just priceless!
Love mechanic react videos
I hate angelina
And shaft..lol
You gotta be really careful refilling cans like that. They're designed to be disposable so they're not reinforced enough to be repressurized safely and walls or valves can easily fail.
Not only that, for air you need much thicker walls to withstand pressure.
I mean, most folks at home are pushing 90-125psi, but that's probably high for the can. Gentle bursts highly recommended, dont try to fill it til she blows for sure
@@kjur18 Don't be daft. 90psi is 90psi. Doesn't matter if it's air, water, butane or anything. The only reason the air tank for a compressor might need to be extra thick, is that you'll end up with condensation inside the tank, which will rust it out. So the walls of the tank need to be thick enough to survive some corrosion. After a few years the tank may need to be replaced due to internal corrosion. OR, use a dryer on the compressor outlet.
@@noxious89123 Well, yeah. But keep in mind that whatever gas they use in spray cans is in liquid form at that pressure, so it's more efficient as a propellant. To turn air into liquid you need much more pressure. As Wiki says on Canned Air: "True liquid air is not practical, as it cannot be stored in metal spray cans due to extreme pressure and temperature requirements. Common duster gases include hydrocarbon alkanes, like butane, propane, and isobutane, and fluorocarbons like 1,1-difluoroethane, 1,1,1-trifluoroethane, or 1,1,1,2-tetrafluoroethane which are used because of their lower flammability. "
Not only that, but spray cans are not filled with pressurized air. It's a refrigerant that becomes a liquid at a relatively low pressure. In the same way that liquid water can only get so hot before it boils, the refrigerants can only get a little pressure build up before they condense.
I did valves on a 2010 Hyundai accent after a timing belt broke. My valve spring compressor didn’t fit so I used a socket, hammer, and egg roll wrapper to get the clips back in lmao.
XD The ol battery cable reverso trick. Did that by mistake on the school's tug in our hangar, right in front of the instructor. He laughed when it sparked at me and I jumped back. He was like "Ok, I will give you one more try to NOT kill yourself."
Oh man that cholo you guys had was a freaking G! Bring him back more!
Dude reminds me of cousins. You know this guy's house smells like tamales right now.
@@737215 he doesn’t do Oil Changes…. He does Oralé Changes
we need those 3 full time on donut
As a mechanical engineer, I think we should look more into the dimple concept. I don't think it will have huge increase in power, but I'm curious to know what will happen. Technically the dimples should reduce drag.
Agreed. You see dimpling on some high performance cars' underbelly panels. They wouldn't bother if the effect were unmeasurable. The dimpling also increases the internal volume of the intake runner, which may or may not be beneficial. A good calibrated flow bench might give you some data, but you'd really have to do the test on an engine dynamometer to prove the hypothesis. In any case, I doubt it's really worth the effort if you were trying to get significant gains.
Small engine companies like Sthil already do it. Although it's an inverse dimple. It should aid in cutting low pressure areas and also (my guess) aids in cooling effects in carbureted engines. Port injection too for that matter.
The way I understood it air has less resistance against air, instead of air against a metal surface..... Have seen some pro's porting that left a rougher surface instead of polishing. Claiming these exact results
I was thinking the same thing. Dimpling breaks up laminar flow, which sticks to the smooth surface, creating a low pressure film. This low pressure film slows the air flow for a distance away from the surface, depending on air speed. The dimples create little vortices, with the direction of rotation going in the same direction as the air flow. This stops the laminar flow and the associated air flow reduction. Think of it as fluid ball bearings. The dimple diameters and depths need to be calculated based on pressure and flow rate so their effect does not go into the desired airflow area. Creating random dimples may or may not help performance. Automotive maufacturers don't do this as it's very time consuming to machine, thus increasing the part cost. The performance gain might not be enough to create a sale, especially if a larger diameter pipe could fit in the same location.
they produce turbulence and break air molecule to the max, more the molecule is broke tinner is the air .thecnicaly you can get more air plus it get the intake bigger. porting guys know theyre shit. some set up are better polish other dimple like that .
The dimpled inlet runner is done on wet intakes to aid atomisation, a polished runner can encourage fuel drop out on the runner wall. In a dry runner smooth but not polished approx cross cut with 120grit is best as it allows undisturbed flow while the flat surface reduces flow resistance caused by eddy currents at the boundary.
Angelina: Lecture
Paul: WTf Man?
Sandro: HeHe thats dope
For the dimples one you shoulda actually consulted an aerospace engineer. Yes dimples do create vortex but that's what helps create a boundary layer and allow for laminar flow in a tube
a lot of factors there, but yes, I wouldn't be shocked if that moved air more efficiently
@@Dies1r4e it's also meant for naturally aspirated single point and multi point injection systems so fuel would mix better with air and that increases slightly engine power, about direct fuel injection systems i don't know, haven't seen for them this porting style, but for turbos it's best to make it as smooth as possible
Ive seen some explanations about why sometimes dimples make a better airflow too, I dunno if this is the case but it sure isn't as simple as "dimples are bad" anyway.
modern cars have all kinds of sensors that measure exactly how much air and fuel are getting into the engine. so yes, it does improve airflow, but it usually doesn‘t increase power because the ECU will adjust boost etc. accordingly
Golfball
Idk who needs to or will see this but Paul and Lextech are such a good shop! I know this isnt a review page but they fr deserve the recognition. I brought my ‘16 Civic to them thinking I had an issue w my alternator and they originally told me me it was the alternator, but Paul personally came up to me saying it wasn’t the alternator as it began to charge when different buttons were being pressed. He recommended me to a shop that specializes in Hondas to have them check it out. Paul saved me from a $700+ bill! Definitely recommend them for basic check ups and toyota/lexus maintenance! 10/10!!
13:45 That is exactly why you do not connect the Negative clamp onto the battery at the source vehicle iow the vehicle with the good battery but instead clamp that cable to somewhere on the frame to ground it so that some wrong connection or if the faulty target battery does something crazy, you do NOT damage the good battery in the process.
Best videos. 5 videos in and definitely a lifer now. Learning so much new shit. U all not responsible for the finger indention trick which has changed my life the second i seen it but learn a ton from y'all. Thx🤘
The comeback of Audience Guy makes me cry of joy.
Also the video and the sponsor are so good. Love this
I thought the same thing
Pre Hi-Low James
I like that Angelina was the dissenting voice in many of the iffy hacks because she knew there were better ways to do the things they were doing and therefore it wasn't a hack.
She really knew her shit and I've the assignment.
She's the one I would go to for regular maintenance and repair work, the other two I would go to for an undiagnosable/irregular repair.
Nothing to do with who is better, simply that strange issues sometimes require strange solutions that probably aren't standard but fix the problem.
But I'd trust her to follow manufacturers procedure and have the right tools to do the cleanest most professional job.
@@CheeryRhymes The guys id trust to get a beater going from point a to point b, but I wouldn't let them anywhere near a new car.
The fact is that some people will (either subconsciously or consciously) think that it's okay if they do something jank or outright dangerous with their vehicle, because they don't care if they get hurt. They never think about if someone else gets hurt. Look at the idiots that had that "show car" on the road and rear ended a minivan with family in it. The only brakes that worked were the front ones and they got cooked in seconds. They didn't care and almost killed children over it.
Asoon as I saw a female I turned this off they are not mechanics
Tension bands are the best imo. I replaced the original ones on my car when I changed the 32 year old coolant pipes for brand new reinforced ones (thicker). Used the braces with the bolt and guess what? One snapped mid trip and lost all my coolant in a rainy Christmas night, 30 miles from home in the middle of the mountains. Called my father that brought tools and materials. Had to dissemble the battery tray to get to that pipe and seal it, 30 mins in the pouring rain.
Got lucky though because the 32 year old ECM warned with Check Engine light. Otherwise, the engine would be fried. Got new tension bands adequate to the size of the new pipes, took out all the braces and never lost a drop ever since. Suzuki knows best.
The finger imprint trick- factory workers back in like WW2 times would do that to check their rivets in hard to reach/hard to see places.
I'm surprised more dealerships/brands haven't done ads like Porsche in this video. I feel like this is the perfect audience to have good conversion on ads like this.
That's because nothing breaks down at the rate of German plastic.
The golf ball dimpling is actually something Mythbusters tested in one of their episodes. Would be worth looking into further!
The issue is that the area used to dimple woukd be better off just being opened up. I think the concept is that the large dimples create a buffer zone for air to ride over increasing velocity. Problem is the buffer it creates is larger than actually helps
From what I've seen you don't dimple intakes like this unless it's running a carburetor. It's for fuel atomization.
@@suprafastmafc the dimpling works because turbulent flow seperates later than laminar flow on the trailing edge of a ball, and dimples are a nice symmetrical way to create turbulence on a ball. Unless you have flow seperation, dimples will make your airflow worse.
Not a hack. That's exactly why some screwdriver handles are hex shaped.
The wrench in the screwdriver may not seem new to most at all. I’m glad you guys explained how the screwdriver handle is actually intentionally designed for box, open end and even pliers or channel locks. What that guy was actually showing is that he can now apply tremendous downward force into the head for less chance of tooling. It alleviates your arms focus on downward AND twisting force. You now divide the two perpendicular forces between two different more focused/balanced levers. and I have used the technique all the time even on the smallest corroded appliances or even in framing construction and carpentry. It’s basically the same as resting your chest or shoulder right against the impact or screw gun like it’s a firearm.
Loved how they tried to contain themselves while talking about “pulling out” 😂
Jeremiah: 😄
I applied for a service technician for my local Porsche dealership through y’all . I hope I have some good news to share with you all 🤞🏿
best of luck
@@innocentguy1 thanks man
You won't be hired unless you have prior experience in european or Porsche cars. You missed the whole point of the ad. You apply for a non tech job to be eligible to apply for their service technician training program. Porsche won't let you touch anything mechanical without the first level of certification and that's just a glorified lube tech position till you start gaining more time and certifications under your belt.
Walking that bushing out with a drill bit is legit. Definitely gonna do damage to the bushing before he starts eating into the metal with the bit.
I thought they were going to straight dog these hacks.. but I'm actually learning a lot 🤣
About the crossed-wires jumpstart part... I once made this mistake because my friend's car had the red positive cap installed on the negative lead and vice-versa, and I took that as good enough info. Luckily, it started smoking at the terminal almost immediately so we pulled it and no damage was done, but ALWAYS check for the embossed "+" and "-" on the plastic of the battery, and don't trust that the black and red caps are installed correctly!
that's solid advice ty
I've done this too at work with tractors before too😅 same thing wrong coloured covers on 1
Also the positive terminal is slightly bigger
Same thing happened to me. I was helping a friend, and my glasses prescription was so bad I couldn't see the +/- marks (it was a VW Golf and the battery is way back by the windshield). I think I turned green when I realized what happened. I was terrified I'd wrecked her car.
I've also seen newer cars that don't have red for positive, it's just black for both. If you can't see the + and - on the battery, you've then gotta follow the cables to try and figure out which one is ground.
I like that the dudes are like "yeah send it" on some of the hacks and the girls like "nah don't do that, it risks damage".
My dad is the only man I know who worries about doing it right and minimizing damage. Both of my brothers are of the "Fuck It" variety. 😂
Something Something Why Do Women Live Longer Than Men 🤔
The dudes been doing that shit everyday🤣. Id trust that street knowledge over any book smart
Because they understood the point of the video and she did not.
That power balance test. Aircraft (ones with internal combustion engines at least) use a similar technique, though they are designed to, to test the magnetos. While you're doing your ground tests prior to a flight, you have both sets of magnetos running. The ignition actually has a way to shut off one set, or the other. You sit at idol with both on. You switch to one on, switch to both on, switch to the other on, back to both on. This tells you how each set is performing. You do notice a slight power loss when running on one, but it tells you if they are performing nominally, or if one is doing bubkis. If you switch to your rights and you get knocking and a rough engine, you know somethings wrong.
If you're flying and you get knocking and a rough engine on power input during runup, your piston sleeve has disintegrated on the ground at FIN.
the die grinder for the golf ball effect does work if it is a wet runner, like a carb setup keeps the fuel vaporized, as far as airflow probably no gain
The way she laid out and described all the steps in those process's was fantastic...Girl knows her shit.
and she hella cute too
I liked how she commented about the memory of dented metal. I assume that willingness to pop back into its original shape probably degrades over time so I would think that it's best to get dents fixed sooner rather than later especially when using paintless dent repair.
@@pkdude5334 yes and no in my experience...If there are no creases or hard lines in the panel, you should be able to work it back to normal with little issue... but, going back to what you said about time, the longer you leave it, better chance it develops hard lines and can't be straightened out without real work
Only real gripe I have is the power balance test. Yes it increases the risk of damaging the driver for the coil; but you can have a screw driver or test light very close when you pull the ignition wire so that if the coil is good the electrical current has a good ground to go to. I have done plenty of these tests on older cars and never had a issue pulling the coil wire. Not saying she's wrong, just adding on to what is good practice.
@@fightingfalconfan no such thing as a power balance test 😂. He was checking for a misfire
Damn, had me laughing. I grew up in Sounthern California, hispanic dude was the man. You definately made me a bit homesick. Thanks
Nice reactions!! My takeaway is that Sandro might be a vampire for sure! haha
Assuming a steady current flow (as opposed to a shock from a capacitor or from static electricity), shocks above 2,700 volts are often fatal, with those above 11,000 volts being usually fatal, though exceptional cases have been noted.
I would love to see a vid with old school mechanics proving tips and tricks they learned over the years and have the new school rate them. Some of those old school techs are worth their weight in gold when it comes to mechanical knowledge.
Scotty or whatever and car wizard are good. There's also a ford guy that rebuilds triton engines and stuff. Shows how awful they are. Ford mak* something
It’s true but man them old mechanics can get you into trouble too cause the old ways aren’t always the best and they’re just stubborn 😂😂
@Raburn which is why I'd love to see the vid i mentioned.
@@RaburnTPF0297 But some of us realize there are changes and we keep up with them...I'd never trust a younger "ACE mechanic" with an electrical problem. Most of them have zero clue about how an electrical signal flows within the components.
I remember watching a video from the 1930's about auto racing and the guy checked for misfires by literally slapping the exhaust manifolds with a wet hand looking for hotspots. Was interesting but don't think you can do that nowadays lol
I love these videos. As a mechanic of 15 years I can say Paul is a G and knows his shit. The girl is a little too by the book sometimes and it makes sense since she's an instructor.
I was just thinking, as someone who knows next to nothing about cars, if I had to pick my mechanic to fix my car out of all these, it would probably be Paul or Angelina based solely off my impression from watching the video.
As a mechanic in the making as soon as I saw they said no to the misfire diag I thought it was a good hack but I also only did this with distributor systems
No matter the trade, an instructor teachers you the rules.
At work the good experienced guys teach you what exactly the rules do and why, they also know why the rules change when things get modded etc and what the new rules are.
instructor?? id would of said 1st or 2nd year apprentice ,its 2022 i fully understand why shes there
By the book is sometimes harder, but ensures the job is done correctly. I've taken plenty of shortcuts that have worked, but could have led to other problems if they didn't. I think being cautious of stuff like that is fair. The dude drilling out the bushing, for example, could definitely have scraped the inside and maybe it will eventually not sit in correctly.
Yep, I learned the screwdriver trick in the 60's before electric power tools. You are less likely to strip if you use the proper phillips driver. Since electric drivers, my hammer impact tool has remained in the tool box *mostly* unused. (That tool was necessary for motorcycles.)
I’ve been doing that depressurising the can trick for year. It’s good if it’s the last can and you don’t wanna waste time going to the shop atm. Doesn’t stay pressurised long though.
If I'm not mistaken, dimpling an intake pipe like that one clip is actually better than a smooth flat surface. The dimples create air pockets/vortex's and those air pockets/vortex's act as a cushion for the air and increase velocity of the air flowing through the pipe. Now, this would almost be negligible on a "low horsepower" car (I'd guess below 1000hp) but would be beneficial on high performance car (over 1000hp) where every little thing matters. I remember watching a video where some engineers were talking about the amount of work and effort that went into a 2000hp (i think) GTR and how they got to a point where the smallest changes would net them a few hp as they hit the limits of the turbos and engine. I'd imagine they would have done this to their heads as there is some scientific backing behind a dimpled pipe leading to higher air velocity. Feel free to let me know if I'm wrong but I'm pretty sure I'm right.
Well just like a golf ball would like to see numbers of before and after.
@@chrisstuefen2386 there's plenty of research papers on the topic, a simple Google search will provide a plethora of information on the topic.
Heya guys, so @9:18 , when he is dimpling the metal, that is a process to increase atomization of the oxygen and fuel. its more common to see them in the valve ports as well as the entire upper intake. Through micrometering, its shown that the increased breakup of the molecules helps with performance. There are slight out-weighs through Atomization>Surface area. But through some instances, it performs better. There is a picture on the internet somewhere talking about why some Top-Fuel drag teams cover their work areas and engines with towels, so the competition can't see the ports or intakes. the photo was of a candid shot peeking under a towel and seeing the entire inside if the top half completely covered in those dimples, but much more intricate. Hope this helps! Much Love!
Thankfully someone typed this out to save me the trouble 👍🤣
I just wish that the commentators had said something like, I've never seen this or I don't understand what they're doing so rather not comment. I would have given them more respect for admitting a lack of knowledge on something, nobody knows everything and no-one is infallible.
@@TheRealShambo halfway through typing I was like "crap. I'm invested into this comment" lol
@@TheRealShambo Agreed
Also, air bubbles will form and sit in the dimples. Air has less resistance than metal.
i remember when i was back in vocational college, someone had put the terminals backwards on a bmw 3 series touring (08 plate) and no one noticed until we were back in the shop the next day and the whole place reeked of burnt wiring, luckily the battery was basically dead anyway so it diddnt set anything on fire before it ran out of power
So jazzed to see "in the crowd James"!!! I've missed him!
Sandro is hilarious 😂 seems like a good dude
all three of them are just lovely
I know nothing about cars, but sat through this video because it's invaluable knowledge, and funny ASF 😂
We lost rear brakes 4wdriving at the very top of a steep arse mountain decline, clamping the brake line was the best option and it got us down fine.
I feel like having car knowledge is one of the biggest flexes nowadays
It's just your insecurity
@@andrew348 lmaooo what, this generation doesn’t know shit about cars that’s why they get ripped off by mechanics. Dudes my age can’t even change their own oil or change a tire smh
I’ve got car knowledge, the only reason it’s a flex is because you save money. It doesn’t make you cool.
@@CodyCopper04 You ain't wrong...Only thing it seems to do for me is disappear my weekends because my relatives are a bunch of cheap fucks and do not, or can not buy something that will reliably point A to point B
I've gotten laid just cause I knew how to change oil at half off. Be proud.
Little buddy audience member return! 10:00 I feel like rewatching all the Up to Speeds again now. Lol
my only thing with the first clip is damn cant believe he did that to his nipex
@6:38. Its really good for those $16 automotive grade paint rattle cans. I rattle canned my S10 with those and with the $350 in cans it took I frequently got a dud with no air. Wish I thought of this!
Dimpling the intake creates slight turbulence along the walls of the intake to prevent fuel dropout. Fuel dropout is when warm fuel vapour condenses on the cooler metal intake, liquid fuel "drops out" of the air fuel mixture. Carburetor things.
SANDRO AND HIS GUYS ARE THE BEST MECHANICS IN LA 👌🏽👌🏽
I think the overall takeaway from these videos is that TikTok and other social media can be a really good way to share car knowledge, but it's only really useful as a source if you *already know what you're doing* well enough to tell which advice to throw away. I think everyone in this video learned something new, but it was always a new application of knowledge they already had, and they knew what was trash because it was obvious from their experience.
The "golfball" dimpling decreases the resistance the golfball requires to travel through the air by providing a small pocket of more still air surrounding and clinging to the ball that allows it to slip through air more easily. If you think of a golfball sized obstruction in a pipe, the mass flow around the ball would actually be decreased by the dimples but the force exerted on the ball is lower... so on your intake this would actually lower flow rate.
the vice grips on the break line-- I purchased a mustang and was going to fix it for a 16 yr old (6cyl car) so i went through the cooling system, fuel system and when I got to the breaks, it didnt even have a caliper on the passenger side so i got everything I needed to everything all the wat around and couldnt get any fluid to the driver side back wheel, so I traced it from front to back and decided to replace the line by the back wheel because I couldnt get any air through it even, tried to run a wire through it and what ever it was to hard to to clear with a wire, so i tried to heat it up thinking i was replacing it anyway, but to my surprise it had been filled with what I assume was soldering wire or lead, what ever it was it dripped out after heating it up, another tire burner that didnt have the power to so otherwise
I like how legit and bad advice are both included. This keeps it entertaining and educational! Great job
The second one is solved by a tool called an "Impact Screwdriver". You hit the butt of the handle with a hammer and it converts the impact into twisting the shank of the driver. That way you fully seat the bit into the screw so you don't round out the head trying to get it out.
Nearly shocked the ever loving shit out of myself jumping a car like that, somebody else put the cables on the other car and I didn't know.
I loved watching the sponsor spot for this vid (the vid itself was great too haha)
Darn, I wish Porsche offered a similar program when I was looking into UTI. Sounds pretty awesome!
Urinary tract infection!?
I can confirm for you, Porsche is offered at Nascar Technical Institute in Mooresville, NC.
I had a 3.96 GPA, Perfect Attendance, All classes including Mopar and Mr.Wolfe's S.P.E.C Master Class, then went on to be given 100% Tuition to Mercedes-Benz USA Master Class in (Jacksonville) Orange Park, FL.
Now I Own my business and I collect and restore 70's-00's rare Cars and am an Owner Operator as well so I can Long Haul transport and relocate vehicles all over the US.
Ace hardware does the same with Stihl.
Porsche does have a program with UTI. I did the Peterbilt program through the diesel side
False boojie and daniel
From a body technician's perspective, I find it quite interesting how they pulled the camera away before they showed all of the little dents being removed with the ball, then cut back to the panel after it was nice and smooth. There had to be some light hammer work at a minimum to make that as smooth as it was.
Or they filmed it before denting it...
Yes! There was a couple little dings in the metal with the 'before'... and the 'after' was as smooth as new.... no way that happened as shown lol
As for the dumplings on the intake. Yes it provides extra turbulence so the air fuel mixes better, but it also increases air velocity. Because yeah it's not a golf ball, but physics are physics. Liquids move across a thin layer of itself and it actually reduces friction because the dimples create that microscopic layer of turbulent air. The rest of the air flow isn't even contacting the metal anymore.
You can buy pistons with this, and I've seen it on alot of diesels.
You need to RnD it to get a more effective pattern, (it doesn't have to look exactly like a goofball pattern) the people who make pistons have a patented design, but I imagine a couple hours of fluid dynamics study will help you figure out what patterns have what effect.
Dimpling the intake port works for GDI, but messes up port injection and carburetion.
He was so impressed with himself when he said "bread-press" lol was cute
That Rubber fifth wheel bushing and drill bit does work. On the jockey trucks I use a pry bar, or hammer and screw driver, normally they come out with socket and hammer. Sometimes you have to just shove a pry bar in there and rip them out. Spent many years rebuilding those jockey trucks. Thats an old TT Ottawa. The newer T2 Ottawa is an electrical nightmare. Easy to diag but so many electrica issues
Bread doesn't just work for clutch pilot bearings. If you have to solder copper pipe but the upstream shutoff valve is still dribbling a bit of water, plumbers will often stuff a bread plug into the pipe so they can keep the joint dry as they solder it. Take the aerator off the downstream faucet, turn on the water supply, and the bread plug vanishes down the drain.
14:48 “yeah, and they hired the wrong guy to do that sh**” lmao😂😂
Man, I love the holy trinity that is Angelina, Sandro, and Paul. I mean, it might just be great editing, but I'm getting just such good vibes from y'all hanging out