Customer States Just Bought Volkswagen From Auction, Does Not Start | Just Rolled In
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- Äas pĆidĂĄn 1. 05. 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
Here's the last video, just in case you haven't seen it yet:
âą Customer States Droppe...
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Credits:
2nd clip - Anderson Automotive via ViralHog
Each photo & video described.
These videos are meant to be educational but also funny, so if you have any questions don't hesitate to ask!
0:00 Intro
0:05 As mentioned the mechanics are unsure how this happened. We've seen somewhat similar "oil" like this in a couple of other videos and it happened due to using mixing oil additives together. Unsure if that's what happened here, but it's possible! Let us know what you think it might be.
0:23 Mechanic said: "A customer brought in a vehicle to have some work done and we found a snake in the fender well and had to remove it."
0:38 Mechanic said: "It's scrap. It's a fairly new tractor so everything is electrical, and corroded like crazy. Every bit of exposed metal in the wiring looks terrible! It might get broken down into parts if some of the casings or the cab frame can be saved. If not it'll get cubed."
0:55 Viewer who sent in this clip said: "they felt a clunking when braking and heard a scraping sound. The car just had the entire right side suspension replaced due to an accident 3 weeks prior and came back in with similar damage on the same side. My coworkers and I suspect the customer slid into a curb as the wheels were really curb rashed and after I recorded that clip I found the rear suspension to be tweaked as well."
1:07 The mechanic who filmed it said he thinks they tried using a brazing rod to try and repair the wheel.
1:15 The mechanic just installed this brand new master cylinder he got from a local parts store and found a hairline crack in it. He also said: "Cheap cast aluminum is porous because gas bubbles are trapped during manufacturing and this master cylinder is cheaply made."
1:28 The viewer who shared this clip said he was confused on why anybody would install a used engine with a rusty oil filter and not even bother replacing the oil filter. He tried asking the customer more questions in regards to who installed the engine etc. but he said it was impossible to get any answers out of them.
1:41 No extra info.
1:49 Viewer who sent in it also said: "In the UK, this car is exempt from an annual test, so had it started, he would have tried to drive it. "
From the looks and sounds of it, it seems like the customer actually tried doing the work himself but said he had a "specialist" do it. It would have made quite the noise if the customer ended up driving this on the roads. Good thing he came in for a check-over.
2:22 This technician found a mouse in this air filter box when he was checking the air filter.
2:28 2017 Dodge Ram 1500. A good reason to check under the hood of a vehicle you're going to park for a while. As well I've heard that Peppermint oil is a great mouse repellent because, in high concentrations, it can be quite potent and mice have a very sensitive sense of smell.
2:42 No extra info. But this is definitely a first! I'm surprised the customer didn't see this.
2:53 The customer told the shop that his gas pedal got stuck.
3:10 Outro. Thanks for watching! - Auta a dopravnĂ prostĆedky
Happy Friday-eve!
Next week sometime I'll be posting the best of May & June compilation (13 mins long I think it'll be) and a regular episode as I'll be taking a week off of being on the computer and will be replying to comments to a minimum.
Submit your photos/clips at www.justrolledinyt.com
Thanks for watching đ
Enjoy your time off! You def earned it :)
No more time stamps? :(
@@_Circus_Clapped_ I added them. They aren't showing up for some reason. I'll take a look when I jump back on the computer.
@@JustRolledIn This is why DIYers who don't know what their doing, please have your cars worked on by ASE certified mechanics.
2:57 that is why we don't let people drive though the car wash where i work at
I saw the video of the vehicle pulling in the garage and thought "oh it's the one where it falls into the trench again" and was completely unprepared for the rear-ending that happened.
Same here, completely focused on where the danger wasnât. Plain as day on second viewing.
Looks like the elderly customer did a 'hit-the-gas-instead-of-the-brake'.
Me too. What was wrong with him? Muppet.
Looks like the guy in the Subaru couldnât wait. Lol
Same here! I have a small shop and I let "certain" customers pull their own on my rack. I may rethink that now, my tool box is right in front of it!
The one who said the car wouldnât park straight should have been told the lines on the parking lot were crooked.
Imagine being so bad at driving that you think your vehicle is broken. Truly impressive.
I was expecting the rear axle to be messed up causing the car to "crab" a bit. Just because you're traveling in a straight line doesn't mean the car's straight.
@@russellhltn1396 "Dog-tracking" Used to see it in the 70's. Cars with broken leaf springs. Owners didn't notice until it started eating tires.đđ
@@dh190852 I've seen Ford trucks do it too, saw one the other day going up I-95, it was obvious the rear was shifted.
Happened to my service truck a few years back. I was pulled way over to let a trailer go by on a back road, but didn't realize that where my right wheels were there was a steep cut-out in the ditch. Even at 40km/h, I hit that thing so hard I broke the u-bolt on the rear axle and damn near jammed the wheel into the back of the wheel well. Never did drive quite straight after that lol
That weeping master cylinder is a poster child for the phrase, "New doesn't always mean good."
Eric from SMA has lives that a few times.
The VW Beetle is literally the simplest car VW ever produced - from it's conception, it was intended to be so utterly simple and easy to work on that ANY German citizen could perform practically ANY maintenance or repair, ANYWHERE in Germany. A car so simple the engine can be removed, dismantled, rebuilt and reinstalled in a day. Yet these "specialists" couldn't handle it...
you inadvertently answered your own question when you said any "German" citizen could repair it. Obviously these guys were not German.
@@dcsteve7869 Exactly, they should be able to do it faster and better! đ€Ł
I'd hate to see if these "specialists" were amateurs.
(Cue 'The World of Commander McBragg' theme song).....And did I ever tell you how I fixed a PanzerKampfWagon III for General Rommel in North Africa during the war??.... It was a very strange situation being British, but...."
@@Patrick.Weightman the Germans would, but not the average parts swapper here. They are meticulous mechanics. You can't doubt the intelligence and engineering ability of a people that gave us modern rocketry, the axial compressor (jet engine), and still have enough of their priorities straight to create an entire holiday period dedicated to beer. That said you have to be a very poor mechanic to not be able to fix a VW Beetle, even if you've spend the last several days celebrating Oktoberfest and you've killed several pints of Marzen
I've hauled my 1800cc engine that I removed in about 15 minutes in the dark (because we weren't allowed to work on cars in the underground parkade). So removed it quickly at night in the mostly dark parkade. Then a carried it up by hand all 15 floors of stairs, because the security guy at the front door would see me using the elevator with a VW engine in my arms. Rebuilt it and had to wait till the next evening to install it. Did that twice in the five years I lived in that condo. I only needed a small toolkit to do it all too.
The VW with the wheel bearings fitted wrong had a lucky escape when the engine would not start and was towed in. The wheels would have fallen off if driven.
That almost happened to me, I let a bearing get REAL bad. I patched it with some cloth and, no shit, bacon grease to drive me back to civilization from a friend's cottage. As I pulled into the Canadian Tire to get a replacement set, crunch crunch - some roller bearings fell out. Needless to say I just replaced it in the parking lot, race and all (punched it out with a 3/8ths extension - yes I rolled around with a full toolset, this was a 1984 Hyundai Pony purchased for $200)
Can confirm. If that style of wheel bearing fails, that wheel is gone and it's taking your brake drum with it :(
@@sorukowolf3222 I've seen it happen firsthand.
they most certainly wouldn't have gotten far...
one time someone meant it too good with readjusting a front wheel bearing on my old 1974 Ford Taunus (Cortina), and on my way home it failed on the autobahn at app. 120kph... without the disc brake the wheel would have fallen off for sure.
what happened was that the bearings, a good 40 years old at the time, seized shut, welded together with the inner wheel bearing shells, and ripped those loose from the hub, all within the one moment it took me to feel something tugging at the steering wheel. brake pedal also fell in, of course.
later I tried to repair it, couldn't get the hub off the pinion, it was all seized and welded together. the auto shop gave me the used parts for free, the boss was obviously feeling ashamed... I'm not sure if it's their fault, or it's just the 40+yrs old bearings finally biting the grass. I replaced the other bearing a few weeks later, of course and it didn't look good, too.
@@lotharrenz4621 They probably adjusting the wheel bearing without leaving any play, old bearing need a few thou tolerance. If they took all the play out the bearing would over heat as the bearing expands there is no room to.
The old man at the end didnât even seemed fazed at what heâd just done. It was like he meant to do itâŠ
"Nah bruh, my turn"
It's more likely that he probably was shocked and didn't understand what had just happened.
@@MechMK1 Probably doesn't even know where he is.
Pills...
Old-timer's disease (Alzheimer's)?
3:00 good grief the guy in the Subaru wanted his oil changed NOW! Get out of his way! LMAO !! đ€Ł
You said 10 minutes or under gosh darnit đ
@@JustRolledIn đ
Old-timer's disease (Alzheimer's)?
Losing perspective: what costs more, smashing 2 cars or a few more rotations on dirty oil? đ€·ââïž
@@stevie-ray2020 Not memory loss, just decayed reflexes and spatial awareness.
That last one is why the shop mechanics should bring the vehicles in to the bays.
Clip board on dash and looking at the other workshop operative smoking don't think they have a uniform / boiler suit must be on bonus - or sacked ?
I've seen worst at a dealership: a mechanic was taking an almost new Mustang GT 500 in for service.
Dude decided to make a lil' burnout. Ramed in a hoist with a brand new Lincoln up in the air. Both cars totaled. Hoist too.
Smart guy looking for a new job. đ€Ș
@@marcryvon Back in the 70s in our shop there only one hoist for the guy who the oil changes, the rest of us used jacks and jack stands.
The last clip is the reason why I am for mandatory, recurring driving exams for seniors. This gentleman, with all due respect, was clearly no longer fit to drive. Luckily, nobody got injured, but he could have hit a person as well.
Same here. In my area, thereâs more boomers than young people and every single time I drive out to town, Iâm either always this đđ» close to a head-on collision or getting side-swiped. More than half the time I look at who is driving, itâs an old geezer or hag who just canât keep their vehicle in their lane, especially around these curvy backroads I live on. They always drive way too slow too, holding up traffic. Their chins are usually above the steering wheel. Once you get that old, itâs time to give up the wheel and make some room on the roads and fuel islands for the next generation.
@@danieln.285 LOL, tic toc your turn is coming. (If you get that far.)
Most of the world does apart from the strange country you live in by the sound of it ...
@@danieln.285 Aaaah, as a 70 y.o. "boomer", I feel kind of offended "son" ! Look at the statitics, you'll see that we, older guys are not in the top positions for accidents. Young arrogants like yourself are. But I must agree that many in some areas should'nt drive anymore. Been in Florida a few times. OMG !! đ±
Are you kidding me? Have you seen the people with their cereal box licenses? We need mandatory driving exams for everybody.
oil polymerisation always gets me, it is truly puzzling how someone manages to get their engine oil in such a state
Wondering whether radiator stop-leak in the engine-oil could also cause that?
Some years back I bought a cheap second hand 02 Diesel Triton and took my time between services. The mechanic called me back to the work shop and show me the Oil Filter suspend midair, it was held up by think "no longer identifies as oil", black mass. He held onto the vehicle for another day flushing chemicals through, serviced it, I sold it with 400,000k on it and I see it driven around 4 yrs later, and drives state wide in Australia with it. Hard to kill a Diesel.
@@stevie-ray2020 Very likely that or some other dollar store flip fix. The buyer got scammed
@@stevie-ray2020 Not on an "air-cooled" VW.
@@CannonFodder873 Wouldn't stop some idiot if they thought 'stop-leak' was going to stop an oil-leak!
That snake đ....was that the replacement SERPENTINE BELT for the pulleys??
A buddy of mine who has NO knowledge of cars and no experience with auctions tried to buy car through one. He waited two vehicles before bidding $2000 (not including fees) on a 1998 F250 which was missing 2nd gear, had frame rot in the rear and some of the worst valve lash I've ever heard. When I asked why he bid on it he goes "well I looked at it before the auction start, and all the fluids seem to be full and where they should be... but at least I saved money to put towards fixing it."
He ended up selling it for $1200 less than 2 months later.
tbh i tell everyone who wants to go to a vehicle auction that they should go. you canât get a thorough enough inspection until you pay for it because the auctioneers know damn well that no one will bid on the car otherwise.
This is why finding a reputable mechanic is so hard and so important
Can't understand how somebody can install wheel bearings backwards man. SMH.
Great to see how much your channel has blown up since last year. I subbed in like August of last year and now you're at almost 200k. Great work man.
Be safe out there, and take it easy. đ
People will always find a way to screw things up I've realized lol. And I appreciate you being here all this time! Thanks for the support đ
I had to bring my '83 GMC Jimmy K5 into the dealership because my landlord refused to let me work on stuff on the property (understandable, but I prefer to do my own work) and I just needed wheel bearings and brakes, but the truck spent a whole day in the shop only to be sent back to me with nothing done because the guy couldn't figure out the wheel bearings because they weren't sealed unit bearings like he learned how to replace.
I don't know why they gave an old vehicle to the youngest guy when I know there was at least two mechanics working there who probably worked on this vehicle at some point in the 25 years since it had been sold through that dealership. But at least that guy admitted defeat and didn't try to install them bad enough to attempt to kill me.
That "specialist" is special alright XD
I bet he was Hell with round pegs and square holes!
'specialist' > My neighbor's kid
00:38 this happens to a few people every now and then in my region, North West Spain. The thing is, the Atlantic does have tides which, depending on the phase of the moon as we know, they may have a higher or lower range. However, Spain also has a Mediterranean coast, and this sea has hardly any tide at all.
So, it's not uncommon that we have tourists from the inland or the Mediterranean coast, or people from the inland who have only known the Mediterranean coast. They come here and park their car on the dock or so, which isn't a problem most of the times. It actually becomes a problem when they can't seem to find a parking spot anywhere else and they park their car on the ramp fishermen use to get their small boats on and off the water. They park their cars near the water when there's a low tide and, well, you can imagine the rest.
What amazes me the most about this thing, even if they didn't know a thing about tides, is that there is algae and moss in the area between low tide and high tide, and they don't stop for one second and think "huh, these things need water to live and it's quite slippery here, I wonder why..."
como ciudadano de secano dire que durante mi educacion apenas se hizo incapie en las mareas , asi que entiendo que alguno de mis congéneres fodechinchos tampoco lo sepa y pierda el coche aparcando en algun sitio con marea ; ) ; )
@@NikoMoraKamu supongo que en la fodechinchos school se estudiaban esas cosas aunque fuese de pasada, pero vamos a suponer que no o que no se acuerda, incluso que no le sorprende que pueda haber vegetaciĂłn propia de entornos acuĂĄticos y que pueda pensar "bah, es que el agua estĂĄ cerca" en vez de "el agua puede cubrir esta rampa hasta aquĂ". Si se es fodechinchos 100 real no fake, estarĂĄ obviamente familiarizado con el concepto "dĂłnde coño aparco el coche si no hay sitio?" asĂ que otro punto es Âżpor quĂ© si no encuentras sitio en ninguna otra parte del puerto/pueblo/loquesea sĂ vas a aparcar en una zona donde no hay absolutamente ningĂșn coche? porque claramente no lo va a haber, salvo que sea otro fodechinchos con denominaciĂłn de origen o incluso algĂșn local que sepa lo que hace y no vaya a dejar el coche allĂ todo el dĂa, pero lo mĂĄs probable es que a partir de cierta "raya invisible" (que curiosamente estĂĄ a la altura, nunca mejor dicho, del lĂmite entre "no vegetaciĂłn" y "sĂ vegetaciĂłn") no haya nadie mĂĄs Âżes que el fodechinchos es mĂĄs listo que nadie?
Después dirån que las mariscadas son caras, normal si incluyes el precio del coche ;-)
I never even considered that, tides just seem normal, it never occurred that Med based people might not have the same appreciation
@@Firecul Same here.
I was shocked when I went to Darwin Australia to find out the difference between low and high tide can be up to 7.8m (2 and a half storeys).
That one reminds me of my brother when his engine was noisy. He took the valve cover off and found some "loose" rocker arms. He tighten them down. It did not run well after that hahahahaha
@Mike yeah and it can be pretty dangerous imagine failing to use correct torque at suspension parts or brake parts........
Looking at those bald tires, I know how the tractor got stuck on the beach.
Lol I was thinking the same.
That last clip is how everyone feels when they see someone who just rolled in get to go up first!
Haha, how everyone feels when they see someone who âjust rolled inâ get to go up first đ
@@jayasmrmore3687 Yep.. did you need me to bold it next time?
@@ColinRichardson I was not sure if it was intentional or notđ so I thought Iâd mention it lol
@@jayasmrmore3687 No problem.. Bold it is.. ;)
And you wonder why I change my own oil. đ€đ
I just changed mine the other day lol
Another reason you NEVER use quick lube shops.
YEARS AGO,
I leased a Jeep Cherokee. When I turned it is, the man
at the receiving station was STUNNED I had changed
the oil regularly. He said most of their lessors never
pop the hood. They have told him 'It aint my car'.
!
so does they force customers to pay compensate for ignoring basic maintenane ?? or its thrown at insurence company
@@Techie1224 the reason why in Europe you need to follow (and proof) the maintenance schedule of ANY leased car. Otherwise you don't even get issues with the value of the car but you'd breach the lease contract and you might pay a huge fine for that. Not to mention that every warranty is vanished as well...
Always glad to see an engine come back to life after the once-a-video oil booger is removed from an engine. Oils well that ends well.
I have that same problem with my parking. I pull in, I'm sure that I'm parked straight, but when I get out, the car is crooked. I never thought to blame the car...
One of my coworkers saw me try redoing my parking like half a dozen times and looked at me weird when I finally climbed out of the car and I'm all "Dude, you know I can't park worth shit!"
There's a place I use here in the UK where the parking bays aren't lined up across the access road, so you get people taking their cue from the bays opposite only to find they've parked across two.
@@Graham_Langley uh I hate that, you think you are nicely parked, open the door and have to get back in and park again!
The worst is when you pull into a parking lot where you can't see the lines! At night usually.
My little Toyota is slightly pear shaped, noticeably wider at the back than the front. Makes it really hard to judge if you're parked straight.
3:03 Nope, it's MY turn! lol
As for the snake they found, I'd just give them the car.
Lol! That's me and spiders. đ
Ole Sneaky Snake đ just wanted some root beer. I'm betting he was disappointed đ
@@JustRolledIn SPIDEYS ! Me hate SPIDEYS đ€Ș
Regarding the customer with leaking oil filter who installed used engine 1000 miles ago... I am not a auto mechanic but being in the same situation and having the used engine in front of him, i.e. out of the car and DID NOT:
-Replaced rear crank seal
-Removed oil pan to clean deposits and check-clean oil sump mesh.
-Replaced Head Gasket
-PCV system (unless engine is low low miles superfresh agewise)
-Replaced sparkplugs
-Replaced oil and filter
Is total idiot, cost of parts listed above - pocket change, difference in labor/time to do all that while engine is out VS when any of those will need to be done after engine installed is HUGE. Not even a stinking oil change? Wow...
The video of the dry bearings had me absolutely cracking up lmaoooo
That leak in master cylinder is fascinating. It is not visible at all, but clearly leaks quite a bit. I wonder how common (or uncommon) such microcracks are in car parts.
0:23
Luckily they have a trained snake handler on standby đ
I oily appreciate all you guys do. Finding lost animals is such a great public service. I have such a ball watching your videos, that I just wanna go out and add some more fluid to my steering wheel. Thanks for the ins.. insper....persperation!
donât forget to top off your blinker fluid while youâre at it
The snake whisperer really made me smile.
Gave him a cuddle too.
That VW tech needs a copy "How to Keep Your Volkswagen Alive: A Manual of Step-by-Step Procedures for the Compleat Idiot" by John Muir.
I bought the Honda version when I owned a 76 Civic; read the VW out of curiosity back when libraries had a thing called 'books' in them.
Channel is blowing up and JRI is still keeping it real.
đđ
âI hit the brakes but I kept going forward, Iâm so confusedâŠ.â
Ok Grandpa, time to get a bicycle
My brother is laughing in heaven Iâm sure heâs watching this May He Rest in Peace miss you big brother.
Old man at the end: "Hey, this isn't a Farmer's Market!"
And that ain't a Mustang! đ
that guy was treating that snake like a cat and petting him
More unbelievable clips that simply astound! You're the best J.R.I.
I appreciate that! Your support means a lot.
I've watched litteraly 90% of your videos, I LOVE IT !!!! Gotta check those I didn't watch YET
I watched all of them... Lol.
@@MattBrownbill I'm sure you are not alone!
iâve said it before and iâll say it again, itâs always a good day when JRI rolls into my YT notification box :)
I appreciate that. Thanks for the kind comment.
@@JustRolledIn no problem!
Thanks for another great collection. I always love it when animal turn up in the vehicles. They may not always be lovable critters, but what the hey, all god's creatures, eh?
Also, the one where the vehicle was full of water? Brought back memories. I'm from London (the actual one, in the UK). Growing up, I assumed that all rivers rose and fell like the Thames - can be as much as 7-10 metres from low to high tide. Down by Putney Bridge, in my part of town, there's a slipway, which at low tide looks like a tempting place to safely park your car. Despite several warning notices. Every now and then, we'd have the amusing sight of someone that had done that, except it was now high tide - at least that tractor had some clean-looking water in it; old Thames is a lot better now, but back then, I don't think they'd ever have got the smell out.
2:53
I'm here for my appointment!!!!!!
The guy with the snake is so cheerful about grabbing it out of there! What a guy!
Well, time Just rolled in posted just in time for my story.
My Charger has had no ABS or TC since I bought it. It was because of a fault in the HCU.
I took it to a local shop to get it replaced, and it just came back from the work.
I work as a detailer in a bodyshop (Not affiliated with shop that did the pump) so as I was already was dirty from working my shift, I decided to detail my car.
So glad I did as when I hooked up my OBD II Scanner and started taking trash out, I looked underneath my car.
There was something wet and green under my car.
Pop the hood and yep, my coolant is boiling.
The cap was popped off.
The cap was on properly when I left it at the shop, I know cause once, it flew off and puked all it's coolant up, so I know to check when it's seated properly and it was seated properly.
It can't shake loose, if it could, it would have done it ages ago. (Last time that cap was off was 6 months ago, during a inspection by myself and my certified mechanic uncle)
What I can't fathom is why the coolant cap was removed in the first place? Remember, it went in for ABS work and that's on the other side of the car.
That older mechanic with the snake was really adorable - I own a corn snake, and it seemed he was familiar with snakes as well, I think he said he owned a rat snake. Completely unafraid, charming dude.
(The snake also seemed very relaxed, wasn't trying to bite it all, just looked back at him like 'oh thanks, old man')
I can't stop watching these. Seen them over and over for the laughs. Nice jelly in that sump!
A bad antifreeze leak into the oil will do that.
@@joels7605 Or grease to hide worn rings. Seen it done.
@@marcryvon From what I've read elsewhere about this sort of thing, it seems likely someone has added way to much oil additive over a long time. Apparently it polymerises in the engine over time turning the oil into gel. I doubt antifreeze or coolant, as while it does thicken the mix in there, it also makes it go 'milky'.
2:17 i feel so bad for that owner, that "specialist" was destroying the car.
"Another shop" often means "I screwed up a repair". đ
Just loved the mechanic's laugh !
I like watching these. I went to a vocational school and learned auto and marine mechanics. Never worked in a shop but seeing the crazy stuff that comes through is always a treat.
The first one with the oil looking like spaghetti đ perfect timing as usual my friend!
âI had my foot on the brake to the floor! I swear! Thereâs something wrong with the gas pedal!â
Man I got one, but not good enough for this channel.
During an oil change, the dealer left my headlights in the ON position instead of turning them back to AUTO, draining my battery & making it so it would only crank after a jump.
I didnât notice until two days later after the change because I hadnât gone anywhere while the lights just stayed on the whole time. đ€ŠđŸââïž
$200 later, I have a new battery and a very expensive oil change. đĄ
Oh dang that sucks :/
How ye not know ye lights on fer 2 days?
@@woodhonky3890 I got the oil change in the middle of the day, came home & didnât go back out for anything. I live in an apartment & work from home, so I didnât see that they were on.
When I drove to Wal-Mart a couple of days later, I still didnât realize the switch was on until I had been in the store for 20-30 min. Luckily they gave me a jump.
I think it was the original battery in the car and itâs a 2015, so it probably didnât have that much left. Better that it happened now than in the winter I guess.
The snakeâs head is at a perfectly 90 degree angle the whole time and just looks so chill lol. Was waiting for it to snap and bite his face.
Grampa was PISSED at the guy in the Ford LOL
The last clip would have had me at the driver window looking at the guy like âbruhâ
This channel is giving me great pointers on what to look out for when it comes to cars. I don't know much about what's right, but I now know what's wrong!
Ye
Now you have to look for snakes.
01:16 Reminds me of an incident years ago when my brother's car kept getting coolant in the engine. Eventually we found that his aftermarket aluminum intake manifold had a porous area allowing coolant to seep into one of the intake ports. The company was very apologetic about it and exchanged the manifold for us.
That is one reason I don't care for aluminum rims or manifolds.
surprised the conditions were good enough for corn to grow in the car. how humid must it have been? lol. And the face of that driver that just rammed the other car out. Why is he so calm about it?
Dude at the end was absolutely hammered.
Best show on CZcams. Keep em coming.
I just got my first car thatâs totally mine. This stuff helps me learn. Really interesting to see and learn from othersâ mistakes.
Now you know you need to actually install the bearing races in your wheels and not park your tractor in the sea đ
That last video: "EXCUSE ME, I WAS NEXT"
a true Darren xD
This was the best so far. đ đ đ
Great video love the Volkswagen stuff!
1960 Volkswagon specialist. LOL. Those things are dirt simple. I have had 3 of them in the past. Great cars. They do have thier quirks. You have to give these cars a lot of attention and buy them cheap trinkets (parts) once in a while, if you do that, your car will last forever.
0:13 it's the forbidden taffy!
Last one is a perfect example of why there should be automatic license revocation for certain things. "Confusing the pedals" is inexcusable and a sign of being unfit to drive.
Like somebody tripping when going up stairs, falling off a stopped bike, not finishing sentences, making up new words that donât make sense.
I confused the pedals once. I was a pretty new driver and borrowed a friend's car, and I hadn't driven automatic in a while.
Getting off the highway, I popped the "clutch" (left pedal to the floor) and locked all four wheels for a moment.
Fortunately we didn't have Nodak's Law back then.
Stellar work as always, Sir! o7
Oh, and have a great day! Hope Mrs Just Rolled In is doing well! I'm sure we are all looking forward to Junior Just Rolled In when he/she arrives!
We appreciate that! She's doing fine đ.
He is due in mid October. That's why I'm taking next week off (still got videos that will post) as we are going to get his baby room ready and spend some time alone before his arrival.
@@JustRolledIn smart man.
You mean, when Jr rolls out
@@beezertwelvewashingbeard8703 I stand corrected! LOL!
All I can say is wow what a great episode guys that was an awesome episode great job guys can't wait for the next one đđđâ€
I like watching your follower count increase. Thanks for the enjoyable no-frills videos
Appreciate your support đ
That last one was hilarious!!!
Thanks , I love these videos. Im sorry you have to deal with things like these.. but its sure entertaining lol
Crazy times my friend, crazy times. Liked,shared. All my best.
Assembling a tampered bearing correctly is something that an average kindergartener could master.
Square in circle, right?
The kindergartner was probably busy fixing their computer at the time....
"Tapered". If the bearing was tampered with, it should be replaced.
@@markh.6687 oops lol
@@JustRolledIn almost xD
That last one...
Talk about impatience. ;)
That last cars here for breaks the oils just fineđ€Ł
@2:22 I made the exact discovery one early winter morning when I was about to service the coffee machine in my garage, a frightened little mouse was sitting on the spill tray looking the other way pretending it didn't see me. :-)
Not sooooo crazy as the other times (except the rubber-like "oil" in the VW in the beginning of the video), but interesting!
I liked how the mechanic handled the snake issue. đđđ
Thanks for another chair rocker! Also VW Trade winds are the best vehicle.
2:15 a VW specialist? You mean you did that shit yourself? đ
The mechanic didn't even drop a cigarette 3:03 when the bump happened.
being a chad :)
That last clip âŠ.. wow đź
Happy holiday - love the videos.
I appreciate you being here!
I worked in an ER for 15 years, and itâs all the sameâŠ.except bodies instead of cars. The storiesâŠ.
Priceless!
definitely a doozy at the end I bet anything people in the pit we're like what's going on up there, lol đ
good stuff man!!!!1 you should be over 200,000 by the end on the month thats awesome!!!!!!
Just Rolled In Hi, a while back you showed a video about a cow bell that someone tied on a car, I told you I watched it with my dad so couldn't prank him and he said I could get my granddad. Well, I got him lol. I tied it up high by his gearbox, he finally found it though, he said it was driving him nuts trying to find it. He even drove slowly round the block while he had my uncle run alongside the car trying to find where the noise was coming from. I would have loved to see that đ€Łđ€Ł He did finally find it, then blamed my dad who instantly ratted me out đĄ Granddad was laughing the whole time he told us, so It was all taken in good fun and now granddad has the cow bell he is wondering which one of his friends to get. Seems like your video has started a cow bell trend đ€Łđ€Ł
Thatâs why you never stand in front of a car pulling in, good on the dude directing them in.
@ 0:38 I remember about thirty years ago when a guy drove a twenty five year old Zetor tractor into the sea to try and pull a stuck brand new MAN 7 tonne truck out. Both were covered by the incoming tide. In the aftermath I was given the Zetor to fix and like the tractor here when you pulled the engine dipstick sea water poured out. The gearbox was full of water, the transfer case was full of water, the back axle was full of water. In fact the only place where there was no water was in the engine cooling radiator which was as dry as the Sahara desert.
Oh it looks like they had people cued up in two lines for quick oil change like a drive through kind of thing, that's pretty neat. except the second guy was over-eager. Does the promo end after 5 or something?
3:00 the ol alzhiemers gas-brake pedal switch aye.
3:01 "ME FIRST! COME ON! GET OUT OF THE WAY! HONK HONK!" đ
Old man: âHey buddy your cutting line and I am getting my oil changed first whether you like it or not!âđ€Ąđ
Ford SUV driver: đ€Šđ»ââïžđ€Šđ»ââïžđ€Šđ»ââïžđą
That's what I was thinking.
I forgot to grease the bearing I replaced on my driveshaft once and surprisingly it lasted a full year before it started to shake bad as a reminder of my mistake. But I'm no so called "specialist" like the guy fixing the beetle claimed to be
Enjoyed đđâïž
Used to work in an auto insurance auction yard and can tell you those horror stories are true. The car may start in the yard but usually won't after the sale. No matter the condition they just want to get rid of them as fast as they can
That guy in the last clip couldn't wait to get his oil changed. Lol.
The number of people involved in collisions who swear they hit the brakes but actually hit the accelerator is incredible. Thankfully this time everyone was ok but sadly itâs often a deadly mistake.
2:42
Wow
Nature finds a way to live on anything đČ
Awesome as ever dude đ
Some unreal ones on there, wheel bearings are unbelievable đ as is the leaky brand new master cylinder đź a few rodent hotels in there too đđ€Łđ€Łđ
That VW bearing is priceless.