Everything posted by nta16
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Škoda Felicia @ Nürburgring
Sorry typos glory tonight. should be - Yes LPG bottle can weight a bit but note the measurement - I took from - that website - for your car - said for - your - car fully loaded - and - (the 5" /12.7cm (claimed) - clearance for my Midget I believe was for car - (Midget) - with liquids but not fully loaded or with driver and passenger (two seats only of course)), Computer mouse and my brain have been playing up today, even more than usual.
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Rear windshield washer fluid tube broken / Removal C pillar component
Hi, welcome. None of the taping on the wires looks great but if the wires are securely joined and protected then OK. The red crimp connector has different levels of indent in the connector so check the wires are fully working before completing the job. There are all sorts of connectors and tubing available on the internet are you sure there is nothing available to successfully bridge the gap on your washer tube connection without having to remove c-pillar cover. HatBoyHarvey's videos are usually very good pity he has not got a Mk3. To take the C panel out it seems to be move the door seals away and a bit of gentle pulling persuasion to get at the clips behind it then squeeze or push the clips a little. It seems it might be one of those jobs that you find out what to do as you go along. Have something to gently raise the panel away to feel by resistance where the clips are, like a plastic trim tool or lever, I use old kitchen spatulas and my fingertips for such jobs (always 'fun' and a 'pleasure'). It's all fantastic-plastic so careful not to break anything. With the combi (estate) there is another panel with clips and hooks to the top of the panel that look like they go into the metal car body frame (oh, the joy of it all). Things will be clearer as you go along with the job, not something I would rush to participate in but probably easy enough after you have done it once. I would sooner fill the gap in the water tube. obviously making it is very secure joints and flexible enough for location and refitting of all for door opening and closing. HTH.
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''Glitters'' inside my coolant expansion tank
A reason, particular for those in more extreme hot and cold conditions, to use better quality gear oils than standard to cope better with the extremes and offer more protection for longer. VW don't care about how longer a gearbox lasts after the longest period of warranty they offer and it's not 25 years. I even use a better quality oil my wife's 2015 Fabia Mk3 (manual) gearbox, even though many, especially mechanics and engineers (sorry T) say it's a waste of time changing the gearbox oil (it's only splash") let alone to anything better but I have had good results from changing gearbox (and back axle) oils and changing to better oils over decades with various cars (of course the professionals say "placebo". 😁 Yet VW have a history of changing oil specification for their gearboxes, 😆 You having changed it once and then again the reason it's so dirty might be because of the changes clearing out the muck, you need to do two (thorough) oil changes to really change the oil because of residue oil and muck left in from any change which to some extent dilutes the effects and cleanliness of the new fresh oil going in. The fact that it is an old vehicle probably makes using a (much) better oil more practical and economical sense if you are keep the car any length of time, especially when using under more extreme weather conditions and arduous use.
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Škoda Felicia @ Nürburgring
10kg isn't much, a good meal for some. 😁 Yes LPG bottle can weight a bit but note the measurement I rom that website said for car fully loaded (the 5" /12.7cm (claimed) I believe was for car with liquids but not fully loaded or with driver and passenger (two seats only of course)), yes 74Ah battery weights a bit more than standard but not that much (you can get the weights from battery specifications and as I said you can forget the difference between 170 and 165 tyres as it's too small and would probably fall in the differences between cars when the cars left the production line I would guess. 😄 Digital camera, these photos were in the early 1990s, taken on film and then cheaply developed on to paper, these were larger prints but still not large. It's raining all day tomorrow so I will have a look then for you and I want to find other photos too (hope I don't get distracted looking at the old photos for too long as I usually do). Losing information of all sorts is an ongoing problem, and was a problem of the past too.
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''Glitters'' inside my coolant expansion tank
So let it lose that every year for a few years then top up. Perhaps it's evaporating because of where you are, the system and seals not being perfect or their wear/tear, age, or even how often you have the cap or other coolant system bits off. 😁 - https://www.kamsauto.com/blog/can-coolant-evaporate-when-it-s-hot-outside And as you like American videos (they can't be wrong, see who they voted as President, twice!). -
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''Glitters'' inside my coolant expansion tank
You were not wrong to suggest possible head gasket failure with your knowledge, experience and ownership of the model, you were quite right to make the suggestion, well done. Even though it seems unlikely to be otherwise I will say you can't say for sure the gasket is fully healthy but it seems that way now and at least has been confirmed as such within the provisos of the test. I'm usually relucent to suggest HGF because I know what a PITA it is to an ordinary owner (all that hassle for a bit of paper) but then previously I've held back or been too relucent and others have correctly suggested HGF. You done the right thing, better to check than not, and this is easy, hands clean , inexpensive work so worth a go. Praise to you, you've earnt it.
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Dash Light Help 😵💫
12.4v isn't bad or too low really but it does depend on how and when you took the reading (see below) but as I put fully recharging the battery with a battery charger following the notes I put before is a good idea when you have electrical issues and particularly if you might have alternator / generator battery charging issues. Sounds like you might have a wire/connector, to the alternator, issue perhaps, worth having a good look and check in case, perhaps you'll find some gold coins rubbing against a wire down there. 😆 Best to take a reading of battery voltage as many hours after last use of the car as possible otherwise it can give a higher reading from the alternator charging when the car was being driven. From VW gawd bless 'em themselves - VW Charge level No-load voltage 1.28 g/cm3 100% 12.7 V 1.21 g/cm3 60% 12.3 V 1.18 g/cm3 40% 12.1 V 1.10 g/cm3 0% 11.7 V From my ex-neighbour's (semi-pro) Ring battery charger/tester - 12.7v - 100% 12.5v - 90% 12.4v - 80% 12.3V - 70% 12.2v - 60% 12.1v - 50% 11.9v - 40% 11.8v - 30% 11.6v - 20% 11.3v - 10% HTH.
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Fabia brake pads and discs
I can give some info. In September 2021 our local VWŠkoda Dealer quoted my wife £357.65 inc. VAT to replace the front discs and pads. Even though I'm not a mechanic and I don't like VW or my wife's car and very reluctant to work on it but as the Dealership had took advantage of having such a late MoT (my fault) and charged £415.38 to replace the poor quality front dampers (shocks) (with poor quality replaces, but that's another story) I decided to do the work myself. I decide to use Pagid discs and pads which have been good but wearing a bit quicker than I expected but not too bad, IIRC the discs and pads were about £80-90 (I forgot to keep the paperwork) and the job was the easiest brake change I've ever done, not that I've done many, and when later I replaced the rear discs and pads second easiest brake job I've ever done. I put up threads for front and rear with tips, notes, below front then rear.
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''Glitters'' inside my coolant expansion tank
I think you can say you have done more than enough to confirm that test at that point of time! Bit wasteful over filling the tube-thingy though. 😆 Now you could perhaps try letting the coolant drop in the tank until it seems to have stopped dropping then mark the coolant level at that level and see if it drops further and if so by how much and over how long. A very small coolant leak is hardly noticeable on the tank over a good period of time/use. On the Midget the heater tap (tap not valve as such) leaked a little and I've had thermostat housing / gaskets leak a little, both are on the top face of the cylinder head and you couldn't tell a drop of level in the tank (solid metal tank so no marking and measuring by dipstick method would be a waste of effort for tiny amount lost). Thermostat housing / gasket would seal by using Hylomar Hylotyte Red 100 but tap was internal leak which was very annoying as it was only 10 years old and didn't come apart for repair like previous versions - such is progress.
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2010 Superb 2 Xenon Headlight aim codes 00496 00497 01537
Check what you can with your scan tool - but do ensure your scan tool has the (correct) program for your model and year of VW and that the program is fully up to date before you use it on the car, check the car and if appropriate scan tool batteries are not in a lower state of charge. Then the basic old fashioned unsexy diagnostics of checking the supplies, live, return, computer, the wires, connectors, fuse(s), etc.. with multimeter, tester load bulb, eyes, ears, touch. Some info to check out below, but first do tests to confirm things, that is doing diagnostics rather than trying to fit a solution to your issue plus always considering there might be more than one issue or more than one cause of issue(s). Good luck. http://wiki.ross-tech.com/wiki/index.php/01537 https://forums.ross-tech.com/index.php?threads/37797/ http://wiki.ross-tech.com/wiki/index.php/00497
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Škoda Felicia @ Nürburgring
As said the the seller might not have fitted good quality parts and I would add he might not have fitted the correct parts and/or fitted the parts correctly, or even parts missing or really worn parts not replaced. I don't know the details of the model and my memories of my wife's Favorit (hatchback) back in the day are very sketchy but I can't think ground clearance would ever be an issue, in the UK anyway. I would have thought that the estate version might have uprated springs and dampers perhaps over the hatchback version. My MG Midget was a reasonably low car (not as low as some, I could look down on a Lotus Elise as it passed) but that was claimed to have 5" / 12.7cm ground clearance, though I have no idea where they got that figure from. Found this, I have no idea if it's correct but sounds reasonable - Ground clearance full load: 125 mm / 4.9 in. - https://www.automobile-catalog.com/car/1989/60140/skoda_favorit_136_l.html#gsc.tab=0 If you look at videos or photos of when the model when they were new I think you will see the ground clearance, in the UK there would be no need for a skid plate unless you were taking the car offroad. A measurement we used to use to check ride height was to measure from the centre of the wheel hub to the underside of the wheel arch and compare with another owner's car of the same model and year, of course both had to be factory standard and all components in reasonably good condition. With yours the very small difference in tyre size can be forgotten as being well within margins of difference. You could put up a thread here asking other owners if they could measure their cars to compare or if you have any data on the car or drawings you could compare. Or you could perhaps put up a side on photo of your car sitting on solid level ground to give some idea of your car's stance and ground clearance. If I can find a photo of my wife's Favorit from back in the day I can let you have a jpg (my wife has kept hundreds of photos but they are all mixed up and in a drawer in the garden shed, they may have faded a bit by now. On a side note, all specifications I have looked at show tyres as 165/70 r13 which sounds correct to me as this was the (wider) low profile tyre size for 145 or 155/80 r13 back in the day. So this size might give you an alternative or wider selection of tyres to chose from. HTH.
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Škoda Felicia @ Nürburgring
Sounds like there might be something (very) wrong with your springs, and perhaps dampers, broken or aged or perhaps wrong size, rating or quality. 100kg isn't heavy for a passenger, well not in the UK and certainly not in the USA and elsewhere. I assume you aren't riding at too higher tyre pressures. Models and sizes do go out of date and unavailable and the replacements aren't always better than the previous model(s). I forgot to put I take little notice of the EU tyre label ratings, I believe they are done by the manufactures and will be set to pass the test point which doesn't necessarily mean they are that good outside that point. When the EU tyre labelling first came in it showed lower figures for the Yokohama a-drive tyres I previously had but became unavailable 13" and higher figures for the tyres I bought to replace them, this was rubbish the a-drives were far superior, best 13" tyres I had had. I didn't realise just how good the a-drive were until all the set of tyres after where none matched them, unfortunately Blockley did have the tyre size available at the time. If I remember correctly(?) I had a set of Eco Contacts 3 and I wasn't over impressed with them but that was on a small lightweight "classic" sportscar, that is not to say they were bad, very comfortable ride IIRC but not very great handling and road holding which is what is wanted with a sportscar but they might suit your needs and may have changed since the model number I had. As a generalisation Kumho seem to be good for lower priced tyre and Nankang with the sport drivers I think, obvious the usual provisos apply.
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''Glitters'' inside my coolant expansion tank
Yes. In that tube device (no doubt there's a name for it but I don't know or forget) if it's the same size as other available there's 2ml of fluid. - https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/123735248113
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HEX + CAN Upgrade?
I don't know but if no one else is along then have a look or search on the rest of this forum or have a look at Ross Tech link below, I thought the VCDS system was all fully loaded all singing and dancing already. To me it's a horrid looking computer or car tech nerd retro system, but I've never used one. If you can sell your lead then you could put your money towards a scan tool for more than just VW cars there's loads of choice and loads of info and videos about them on the internet. I would always go for a UK version, paying the extra may get you life updates rather than subscription renewal plus an authorised UK supplier is hopefully less potential of being dodgy. The models change all the time so you need to be careful the model number or name is exactly as any you get info about. Models that are soon to be replaced or have just been replaced can be at good prices or deals to replace stock, but not always. https://store.ross-tech.com/shop/cat/VCDS/ HTH, good luck.
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''Glitters'' inside my coolant expansion tank
ETA: I posted without seeing your last post. Note - "No C02 detected in the system" is not the same as there isn't any, just as it says not detected or that there are no issues with head, block, engine - but there might not be any issues anyway you are just ding one test at one point in time.
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''Glitters'' inside my coolant expansion tank
So pre-warm the engine to about halfway between cold and normal and then follow the instructions above. I've put the hyperlink for further info or checking. I've just noticed the American spelling in that as they have been highlighted as misspelt for UK English.
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''Glitters'' inside my coolant expansion tank
You might not need to depends on the size of the adapter, you have a new plastic tank so more pliable for the rubber adapter, you could also warm the adapter just before fitting to make that more pliable, and yes I do know what it's like farting about outside with cars in cold winter weather. There's usually enough in the kit for three or four uses or you can buy a good size bottle of the fluid for not too much, more than you would ever want to use, just seen and been reminded we used to refer to it as block tester, I have no idea if the "sniff tester" name came later or used elsewhere at the same time or the term was used before block tester. The name or term doesn't matter and as we know things change with time. To often go in a circle and return to how things were before but new to a different generation. The wheel turns you just have to ensure it doesn't run you over. 😆 That's good, that's the false negative, which can also arise if things aren't done correctly, though with this simple test it's difficult to do much wrong. Good luck.
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Skoda Fabia 1.2tsi auto 2010 pa0068
Lots of things can trigger waring lights and error codes for lots of reasons with the engine but given all that tape and that things get better when you pushh the pipe see the link below. You might already know and be practicing the following, when using a scan tool it does need to have a program for your model and year and that program does want to be fully up to date before you use it on the car and you want the car's battery and scan tool battery if appropriate to be at a reasonable level of charge for all the testing period (and beyond for car). As for slip light (?wheel traction?) that could be an entirely separate fault or the VW computer programs getting their panties twisted. http://wiki.ross-tech.com/wiki/index.php/16452/P0068/000104 HTH.
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O ring part number 1.2 tsi
You might be better asking on the model forum or at the parts department of a Dealership or you could try here if you've not already done so. - https://www.skoda-parts.com/online-store.html
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Grinding metallic noise from front wheel
The smallest bit of grit or stone can sound really bad but do no damage, [ETA: many more times than not] you will clearly see on the brake disc if it has been damaged to any great extent if not then forget about it. You done the right thing to get the bit out. I have to do the stop and reversing and add in braking because it didn't work first two attempts to get something off my front disc on a car before (not a VW) no damage at all.
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Škoda Felicia @ Nürburgring
Take the stuff on Wheeler Dealers with a pinch of salt, it got slightly more realistic costings in more recent years but not all of the work done is listed or shown in the program, Mike became the patron of or car club a few years back but he's known the club and promoted it at the NEC shows for more years. I did wonder what restrictions you might have but you can have a look at that list as they are widely available brands and I would guess models, but different markets have different availabilities of models and sizes. Those tyres are for road use, they will of course vary in price and quality but I doubt any will be lower quality as they are for motorsport use. Don't mix up the extreme (and over pampered, monied, politicked) high level motor sports with the low end stuff that many do in the UK winning at best a plastic cup at the end of a season. A decent F1 owner would also be interested in your car.
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Adding Coolant + airlock
Thanks for your reply, as you say cars are far too complex and particularly the German marques this century, Heater on then if the coolant temperature is rising more than normal on jimbomcmxc's top-up / refill.
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''Glitters'' inside my coolant expansion tank
It depends on the size of the rubber adapter how well if fits and seals, if it's not big enough you could wrap it with something like Gorilla/gaffa/duck tape it's just important to get the seal so the fumes go through the hole in the centre and up to the fluid. I've no idea about chemistry but I'd guess the kit wants the fumes.
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Škoda Felicia @ Nürburgring
My choice would easily be the independent manufacturer supplier I mentioned before one chap runs the business and he's a character so doesn't work in the same way as other manufacturers, his tyres are very highly thought of by those that know old cars. UK prices might be a surprise to those not living here, don't worry about the high speed rating he would have introduced that because that was required in that size by customers and he has now run out of the ones he made at lower speed rating, at the same price, and tyres are already at excellent value. These are proper road tyres that can also be used in motorsports, high performance and rugged. The chap runs the company so he can sort things out for individual customers. Blockley Tyres - https://www.blockleytyre.com/product/175-70vr13 Below is the 2024 list for production tyres approved for UK motorsport, I don't know what is available in your country or which sizes are available in each model tyres, don't dismiss a make just because it is not a popular brand or not well known to you. - Motorsport-UK-Yearbook-2024.pdf Good luck.
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Leaking coolant
You might know is there such a thing as T41 (female socket - male driver), I think I might have seen a T47 but not T41 but of course I'm never sure?
- 25 replies
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- 1.6
- 2015
- coolant leak
- diesel
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