Disclaimer: Links on this page pointing to Amazon, eBay and other sites may include affiliate code. If you click them and make a purchase, we may earn a small commission.
What in tarnation? Whale Oil?Bob Is The Oil Guy is an entire forum dedicated to armchair engineers arguing about which dinosaur juice is better, and its absolutely insufferable. I second the motion to return to whale oil.
What in tarnation? Whale Oil?
We do this at a transfer station. Our 5 cans cost $20 and it takes about 2 months to fill them. Trash service is $75 a month for 1 can.Many decades ago used to take stuff directly to the dump, they'd let you in with your pickup truck, trailer, etc. No idea if they still do that. You drive right up on top of the hill along with all the garbage trucks, earthmovers, etc. and offload your crap. Really unpleasant. Gives you a different perspective on waste.. what you purchase/consume/use/throw out.
Richard
I used to work GSE for the Navy as a contractor. They'd bring in a full lav cart for us to work on, and we'd turn them right around. "Go empty that $#!+!" They still stank to high heaven, mostly of funky blue chemicals. The most common failure was that they would leave it outside in 20*F weather and the brass pump for the blue water would crack, leaking fluid everywhere. Of course, it was 20*F outside, so you had to bring it into the shop to make the repair.A similar position I occupied for 18 months, while working in the Ground Support shop at United Airlines. We worked/ serviced... the lavatory service trucks.
1970 Datsun 240Zs had fish oil in the front shocks to save a few bucks. Apparently they were nasty funky when they leaked.Maybe we ought to go back to ***** whale oil.
I've also heard of people putting old Ford Type F into a GM transmission to tighten it back up for a last thousand hundred miles. I've never dared to try it.Ive used cheap "303" hydraulic fluid in a ton of TH400s and Powerglides. It works plus it can tighten up the torque converter some too.
Anymore they're the same stuff. My wife's '15 Escape uses the same as I put in my '88I've also heard of people putting old Ford Type F into a GM transmission to tighten it back up for a last thousand hundred miles. I've never dared to try it.
B&M used to spec Type F with either their shift kit or their converters if "B&M Trick Shift fluid wasn't available".I used to work GSE for the Navy as a contractor. They'd bring in a full lav cart for us to work on, and we'd turn them right around. "Go empty that $#!+!" They still stank to high heaven, mostly of funky blue chemicals. The most common failure was that they would leave it outside in 20*F weather and the brass pump for the blue water would crack, leaking fluid everywhere. Of course, it was 20*F outside, so you had to bring it into the shop to make the repair.
We always made sure we had the parts lined up before we started. We'd pull the cart in, slam the pump, and roll that $#!+cart right back out.
1970 Datsun 240Zs had fish oil in the front shocks to save a few bucks. Apparently they were nasty funky when they leaked.
I've also heard of people putting old Ford Type F into a GM transmission to tighten it back up for a last thousand hundred miles. I've never dared to try it.
Cliff Ruggles explains this in his TH350 book. Not so much to prolong the life of a failing tranny but to firm up shifts.I've also heard of people putting old Ford Type F into a GM transmission to tighten it back up for a last thousand hundred miles. I've never dared to try it.
Yeah,I think type F ended with the AOD's and E4OD'sAnymore they're the same stuff. My wife's '15 Escape uses the same as I put in my '88
www.amazon.com/Valvoline-Synthetic-Automatic-Transmission-883572-EA/dp/B08HL854ZX/ref=asc_df_B08HL854ZX?tag=bingshoppinga-20&linkCode=df0&hvadid=80264458940010&hvnetw=o&hvqmt=e&hvbmt=be&hvdev=c&hvlocint=&hvlocphy=&hvtargid=pla-4583863989950178&th=1
xc_hide_links_from_guests_guests_error_hide_media
Hmmm we're having that message again for htts:// prefix.