This is what happens when all the hard working true geniuses of the world are in their parent's basements playing video games.If they can't get an oil level right, what happens during a brake job? You're scaring me...
This is what happens when all the hard working true geniuses of the world are in their parent's basements playing video games.If they can't get an oil level right, what happens during a brake job? You're scaring me...
Every vehicle I have had "capacity" is the top line.Tick above the lower hash is properly filled, no?
They probably fill a set volume.
Worked at a dealer when I was a kid. I was the shop rat - aka whatever needed done.I'm weirdly obsessed with watching TE Videos on TikTok. The guy is a Honda tech and he just makes videos about what he's doing that day but he has funny phrases for everything and he's constantly talking to himself. I think most of the talking to himself is an attempt to make sure he has done everything he needs to do by saying it out loud. I don't know a whole lot about being a mechanic but he seems to be very efficient, very methodical in his work, and he really cares about doing it the right way. Interestingly, he does plenty of regular oil changes as opposed to a minimum-wage oil tech. The problem is for every one of him, how many out there don't care?
Post Covid!The entire post-9/11 world sucks.
Along these lines, I just had a conversation with my 19-year-old who is in college but whose friends all went into trades. We were talking about what attributes make someone successful regardless of what they choose to do for a living. Higher education doesn't make you smart and it isn't a guarantee to make you successful. Turning wrenches doesn't make you dumb and really smart people will be able to be successful doing just about anything. There are people turning wrenches who in an alternate universe are neurosurgeons and neurosurgeons who in an alternate universe are living in their parent's basement. There are a lot of factors that go into determining where we end up in life but one universal truth I've found is that smart people see "the bigger picture". Smart people see the reasons to try and do everything they do as well as they can, regardless of what they're doing, whether it's studying for exams in college or doing an oil change on someone's very expensive vehicle that they rely on to go to work and feed their family. Unfortunately, over time there seem to be fewer smart people in the world who see the big picture and live their lives compelled to try and do everything to the best of their abilities, and more people smoking pot in their parent's basement complaining that life isn't going as they hoped.This is what happens when all the hard working true geniuses of the world are in their parent's basements playing video games.
My father was much smarter than me. He lived a very difficult life and got no real breaks, including being abandoned as a child and grew up without electricity or running water. He didn't let that stop him.Along these lines, I just had a conversation with my 19-year-old who is in college but whose friends all went into trades. We were talking about what attributes make someone successful regardless of what they choose to do for a living. Higher education does make you smart and it isn't a guarantee to make you successful. Turning wrenches doesn't make you dumb and really smart people will be able to be successful doing just about anything. There are people turning wrenches who in an alternate universe are neurosurgeons and neurosurgeons who in an alternate universe are living in their parent's basement. There are a lot of factors that go into determining where we end up in life but one universal truth I've found is that smart people see "the bigger picture". Smart people see the reasons to try and do everything they do as well as they can, regardless of what they're doing, whether it's studying for exams in college or doing an oil change on someone's very expensive vehicle that they rely on to go to work and feed their family. Unfortunately, over time there seem to be fewer smart people in the world who see the big picture and live their lives compelled to try and do everything to the best of their abilities, and more people smoking pot in their parent's basement complaining that life isn't going as they hoped.
My point was regardless of what you choose to do in life, those who try and do the best job they can have a much higher chance of being successful than those who do not.
My father was also smarter than me. He had my sister at 16 and still worked his way through high school and college with straight A's as a political science major and math minor while working nights 6 days per week. Unfortunately, he had a terrible drinking problem by his mid-20s and worked in a factory until he died at 48 from cancer as a consequence of drinking/smoking.My father was much smarter than me. He lived a very difficult life and got no real breaks, including being abandoned as a child and grew up without electricity or running water. He didn't let that stop him.
He taught me that it didn't much matter the profession - but if you were really good at it you would most likely make good money doing it, or find a way to make money doing it. I think he was right. Problem of course is only a few can be the best - its a matter of finding what that is?
Like you, my early automotive career was spent in a dealership (5 years). 1976-1981 I started on the lube rack while going to automotive trade school. After a year advanced to regular “line tech”. The guy that I worked with on the lube rack worked “just enough to buy dope”. There were so many others that came and went and truly showed up doped, beat up, eaten up with crabs, running from the law, and general dregs of society. Hopefully some of that has changed but it sounds like it’s still the same. Felons from a halfway house were really “special”. Had one ask if he could “crash” at my apartment until he “got on his feet”. NOPE! The Sheriffs Office came by and picked him up one afternoon. It was a real eye opening time of my young life. No dealership oil changes for me…free or otherwise.Worked at a dealer when I was a kid. I was the shop rat - aka whatever needed done.
I have said this before. Of the 4 mechanics, 2 I would let work on anything I owned, one I would let work on my car if he was not hung over which wasn't very often, and the 4th I wouldn't let wheel my trash to the curb.
Others I know who have also worked in shops tell me this is pretty normal.
There are so many maintenance items that the average person would have absolutely no idea if they were or weren't completed. Did they change the transmission fluid on my 2022 Kia Soul last week? I have to take their word for it because I'm not disassembling everything just to check.@Gawardawg
Always check your vehicles after a change.
Still remember a decade back, my wife and daughter took my daughter's car to Sears for an oil change. I mean, Sears, what can go wrong. Right?
As always cause I trust no one. I checked the car when I got home from work. Same old oil and same oil filter on the car. Young oil change kid who took the car in at Sears put the car on a lift and went out back to have a smoke.
All this was confirmed when I went back to Sears with the car and the manager brought the techs over to the car to check it. They agreed, not changed and then said they saw the kid put it on the lift and also saw him smoking out back at the time.
The same thing had happened to me last year. I took advantage of an oil change special with coupon from their Honda service website.Seating here drinking my coffee. Wife had 2023 HRV oil change a week ago . Dealership. Free. I actually don’t have hardly any time till I retire. 12 hour days 6-7 days a week. I finally got around to checking behind them last night. They short changed the oil level. It’s just a tick above lower hash mark. It’s a 25 mile drive back to dealership through some thick ass traffic. So I’ll just get me a quart of Mobile 1 0w20 from Wal Mart and be done with it. I did look under the vehicle for a leak on the floor. It was dry. Y’all have a great post hurricane weekend. It’s wet here. Wardawg