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The mkiv Supra Owners Club

Another bad experience at a local garage part 2


Gazzawu

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Followup to this http://www.mkivsupra.net/vbb/showthread.php?t=90016

Took the car to another local garage and its the front wheel bearing coming out. So got that changed and problem fixed. I told the first garage that i thought it was the wheel bearing but they insisted the noise was worn brake pads. Idiots! Went to Halfords with my old battery and there is no charge whatsoever. The 1st garage actually tried to jump start my car but was unsuccessful and one of the fuse kept on sparking out. Any guys know what they might have done that actually messed it up? Its actually the recommended Halfords calcium maintenance free battery.Battery was within its warranty so got a brand new one as replacement :)

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Followup to this http://www.mkivsupra.net/vbb/showthread.php?t=90016

Took the car to another local garage and its the front wheel bearing coming out. So got that changed and problem fixed. I told the first garage that i thought it was the wheel bearing but they insisted the noise was worn brake pads. Idiots! Went to Halfords with my old battery and there is no charge whatsoever. The 1st garage actually tried to jump start my car but was unsuccessful and one of the fuse kept on sparking out. Any guys know what they might have done that actually messed it up? Its actually the recommended Halfords calcium maintenance free battery.Battery was within its warranty so got a brand new one as replacement :)

 

Maybe they connected the jump leads the wrong way round?

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Somewhere, sometime ago i read a "how to" on jump starting cars, it insisted you should always put the earth to the engine hook or the like. I have absolutely no idea why this is? the usual way always worked for me lol.

 

No amazing technical reason.

Rather than connecting a lead from a good power source onto a terminal that then has to travel through another cable. You get a better connection by going directly to the engine.

 

Hope you know what I mean. I've just re-written that three times and it still doesn't look right! :rolleyes: I'm tired!:search:

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Somewhere, sometime ago i read a "how to" on jump starting cars. It insisted you should always put the earth to the engine hook or the like. I have absolutely no idea why this is? The usual way always worked for me lol.
Because batteries emit hydrogen. The final connection should be made away from the battery so that there is no risk that a spark will cause an explosion.
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I used to know a guy who started one of the leading UK aftermarket ecu and associated bits recon companies. Of say 100 ecu's that came in for "repair" on average 90 were perfectly OK. Sometimes contacts were corroded on the ecu or loom plug, sometimes the problem was simply misdiagnosed. Of the few that *were* buggered I think 99.9% were Lucas EFI ones ! ;) Modern ecus are bullet proof as far as reverse battery polarity is concerned, and short of flashing the car to the high tension national grid, pretty much immune to spiking. Body shops raeely disconnect ecu's nowadays when TIG or MIG welding, for example.

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