Crostro

joined 2 years ago
[–] Crostro@lemmy.world 2 points 4 months ago

What? No representation for series-parallel killers?

[–] Crostro@lemmy.world 2 points 4 months ago

I remember seeing stuff like this on somethingawful decades ago. Another one was removing the teeth from mouths of people laughing like the people in this image. It was also funny and slightly horrifying. Maybe someday somebody will try it again. I miss the old Internet

[–] Crostro@lemmy.world 5 points 4 months ago

Do you want to watch me play Rachmaninoff on a Stradivarius?

[–] Crostro@lemmy.world 2 points 4 months ago

15 years and counting. Idk if Italian leather makes the difference though. I didn't buy them, gift from my parents. Nails aren't the issue, wet dog is. Every year I have to buy leather dye but it doesn't last. I'm about to get rid of them.

[–] Crostro@lemmy.world 15 points 4 months ago (5 children)

And that's why I have leather couches. You don't see the hair until you need to move the cushions, then you have little mountains to vacuum up. Or, put the cushion back down and watch your living room turn into a snow globe

[–] Crostro@lemmy.world 3 points 4 months ago

41 and I'm surprised I'm not more crazy spending as much time alone as I do

[–] Crostro@lemmy.world 6 points 5 months ago

It is and it isn't. To use the onboard control to actuate the parking brake, yes, you have to use the paywalled software. But it's a simple motor. Positive and negative. If you disconnect the connector at the parking brake and use fused jumper leads to a 12v battery, you can cause the actuator to go forward or backwards. Make sure the parking brake isn't applied before doing anything, disconnect the cars battery, disconnect the p brake connector, jump the terminals once you figure out which polarity causes the retraction. Manually compress the caliper piston, replace the pads (and hopefully the rotors too). Pump the brake pedal as you would normally once everything is replaced, reconnect everything, and you're good to go. in my experience this doesn't work on ford but there's a service procedure that doesn't use a scanner to force the park brake into service mode. There's always a way around dumb stuff like this

[–] Crostro@lemmy.world 2 points 5 months ago

Good for you. There's plenty of things most people overlook or don't think about when it comes to doing this.

  1. Clean the mating surfaces. Make sure to use a flat block and reasonably aggressive sandpaper on the rims as to not change the plane. Use a die grinder to clean around the hub on the car side, a stud cleaner with an abrasive disc gets where the grinder can't reach.
  2. Apply a ring of grease around the hub, nothing on the studs or wheels, this can affect the torque on the wheel nuts. This helps with removal.
  3. Use a torque wrench. Guessing on the clamping force can cause wheel separations and if overdone, make removal extremely difficult and can snap studs.
  4. Recheck the torque after 100kms. And again after 500.
  5. Check the age of the tires. There's a 4 digit code on the sidewall like 2322. That's the build date of the tire. It represents when the tire is made. First 2 digits are the week, last 2 are the year. If you can, don't exceed 7 years (industry standard). Transport Canada recommends not exceeding 10 years regardless of tire condition.
  6. Torque your wheels in the appropriate pattern, remove your wheel nuts in the same pattern. Loosening wheel nuts in a circle pattern (especially with hot brake components) can cause deformation to the rotor and cause a pulsation when braking.
  7. Rotate your tires. Mark them where they come off. Mark them from where they came off and rotate them accordingly. If they're directional tires, make sure they're on the right way. Mark the location on the tread, not the inside. Gets confusing as the years go by. On the tread, that gets rubbed off as you drive.
  8. Don't do vehicle repair for a career, do it as a hobby to save you money.
[–] Crostro@lemmy.world 47 points 5 months ago (3 children)

At this point, I don't care what's between the legs, feminine presenting and the feeling that somebody loves and respects me would make my heart flutter.

[–] Crostro@lemmy.world 9 points 5 months ago

If you substitute *rich people's yacht money" for economy, then his statement becomes correct

[–] Crostro@lemmy.world 1 points 6 months ago

Piece work. Typically make $130k. Hcol (literally anywhere in Canada now) and I am poor. I have my own house, can't really afford to fix it and it needs work. It's small and the taxes are $6k/yr. I have all my bills paid, money set aside for school and retirement, not enough for either thing by the time they will be needed. I haven't bought clothing for myself in 10 years. It's what I ask for when getting gifts. Everyday the same worries, the same stresses and nothing seems to get better. Just letting the timer run out at this point. Not going to date again most likely so I'll remain alone until my body breaks down from being an ast, then probably die from the all the unknown cancer ravaging my body because I can't get medical care. At least I should be done before climate change gets really bad. Might live to see the water wars though.

 

I don't have have people that aren't family in my life. I actually don't even have that much family I speak to on a regular basis. She made this when she was 8 years old. Part of a group activity her mom took her to. A group of anyone who wanted to follow along to a Bob Ross video, we all know "the joy of painting". Anyways, she wasn't thrilled with the result. She said she needed more time to get it right. But she was 8. She wasn't in control of the environment, was using someone else's paints (acrylics) with a non prepped small canvas, nobody that day used wet on wet, no pauses allowed, real classroom setting. Anyways, she surprised me the other day when she was home sick from school. Her mother and I, no longer together. I was at work and got a snap notification. She had sent a picture, one she just painted. It was the same painting, done again that day. She controlled everything, the pacing, the canvas, the right oil paints. She didn't say anything, just sent the picture. Her updated and self taught follow up to the same Bob Ross tutorial. And I couldn't have been prouder. She's much like me, doesn't like to do things for performance, doesn't seek recognition or approval from people. Hates people commenting on what she likes to do. I know when I was in piano, I have recitals for that reason. I loved what I loved specifically because I loved it, I didn't need to prove it or show it off. If people commented, even positively, it would make me not want to do it anymore. I know she's exactly like me. So I never pushed her, never told her to pursue it and get better. If she liked it, she would motivate herself. But I, as her dad, can't help but feel proud of how far she's come (she only startedd painting again this year) after that fiasco at 8. But I felt like people needed to see this. I think it's the best thing ever. (I'm new at this so hopefully I get the new one posted here as well)

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