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melkore @lemmy.iwentto.science
Posts 1
Comments 18
Brakes feel weird after new front calipers installed?
  • Air could be in the lines or in my case, my front pads were new with 10+mm of pad but glazed smooth. Whoever did my brakes before I bought it either did not do the break in process or rode the brakes all the time. I ended up replacing the pads and rotors to be safe. After the install it took my brakes from needing to start slowing down a block away standing on the pedal to pulling me out of my seat in my truck.

    I still need to service my rear brakes but those are drum brakes which I haven't had to deal with before.

  • Why bands are disappearing: "Young people aren’t excited by them"
  • Our local scene was decimated by pay to play promoters and it's never really recovered. We would have to pay in to presell tickets and then try to sell them just to try to break even when opening at 4:30 on a Wednesday. Not exactly a good way to gain new fans.

    The actual promoters did nothing to really promote the gig since they were preselling to local bands they made their money that way.

    If you're popular enough it's not tough to sell tickets once and awhile but if you want to play monthly, your pool of potential ticket buyers shrinks since not everyone can go to a show that often.

  • Clueless guy looking for family car (EU)
  • I'd second the Mazda recommendation. Depending on your family size now and in the future I can't recommend the CX-5 enough if you need more space than a 3 hatchback.

    If you can't charge a phev at or work it it's more of a lead weight than a benefit since you would have to take it somewhere to charge. I am jealous you are getting the MX-30 R-EV which would have been my pick for a new commuter Mazda.

  • Should I just wait another year or two?
  • If I waited until printers were completely fool-proof, I would never have gotten one. Instead I jumped in 6yrs ago and I've printed so many useful things and a lot of toys. Most rooms in my house have at least one printed item in them because of how useful it is.

    Yes I've had my share of failures and have had to rebuild a printer a ton of times while learning how it worked, but I also learned a lot of new skills.

    • Soldering used to be scary and now it's no big deal.
    • I can de-pin connectors and build new adapters instead of spending $8-10 for someone to ship me one from Amazon.
    • With TinkerCAD I can knock out roughly designed parts that are ready to go in a few hours instead of waiting days/weeks

    From learning all of those skills I've swapped the motherboard and rewired my first printer to have bed levelling and be whisper quiet, 3d printed an RC car, designed parts for my vehicles, completely overhauled my sim racing setup, the list goes on.

    If you want to get in to it and have the money to get started, go for it. I started with something like an Ender 3 and still use it today. You don't need an expensive machine if you want to learn how to maintain it. It all depends on what your goal is with 3d printing.

  • Let filament hell begins
  • I hope you aren't running abs in an area you will spend time in. It stinks and is very finicky to print. I switched to petg and never looked back. I still have two rolls in their boxes I'm never going to use.

  • Are there really so few car enthusiasts on this site? This sub seems to have such little traffic. What gives?
  • Back home, I could own more than an acre of land, not be told what I can and can't build on it and pay less than what I bought my house for with .25 acre. I would have to drive an hour and 40 min to get to anything I'm personally interested in if I still lived there though which is why I moved to a city.

    Growing up I was on a school bus for 45 min to 1hr each way and my parents drove 40+miles each way to work. Now my kid can walk to school or a park, we have non-white neighbors and it's a short distance to so many experiences. The opportunities here heavily out weighed having more land but as I get more in to cars, I can't help but wish we had a double lot for car storage

  • Lets kick this off, what should I pay for a non-running Anniversary Edition?
  • That is where I landed a week or so ago but it's still there and I keep thinking about the what ifs. Everyone I've talk to around me has said go for it, but don't have any rotary engine experience. So hearing someone saying avoid makes me think I'm not crazy for not picking it up.

    Your estimates aren't far off for a complete rebuild. Those prices are also around just buying a remanufactured engine from Mazda. Interior would be tough to get back to OEM and I could get it wrapped if I wanted to make this a show car/daily driver but I already have one of those.

    There's too many unknowns to for sure rebuild this engine. To me, it's really only for sure worth it for the wheels. If I could get away for $500 and rent a uhaul car trailer it might be worth it.

  • Mazda RX8 @lemmy.world melkore @lemmy.iwentto.science

    Lets kick this off, what should I pay for a non-running Anniversary Edition?

    I'll start by saying the ad caught my eye for the wheels. I have a nicely running 2011 GT with ugly aftermarket wheels and I prefer the OEM look. I unfortunately can't find S2/Mazdaspeed 3 wheels in my area in decent shape without driving to the next state.

    It's cosmetically rough with 92k miles, the interior isn't the best, paint is toast, driver side door handle is broken. Not counting the paint I could make the interior better and fix the door for $200-ish. Some of the paint might come back with polish but the clear is coming up.

    When I first talked to them, I asked about the wheels, even offering to trade the wheels with wheels I had plus cash, but they want the car gone. They immediately dropped the price from $1400 to $900 without prompting them for a lower price so I think there is room to go lower.

    I could only get out of them that the engine lost compression, but no real details. It's an S1 so it could just be bad coils/plugs/starter/flooded. I need more details on what happened to make them think compression loss.

    If I did keep it and get it running again it would be a decent auto cross car to get started with or use for practice doing engine and body repair.

    Upsides:

    • I get another RX8 to drive and my wife could drive it too being AT
    • I get to put the wheels on to my S2
    • S1 parts are easier to find than S2
    • It might be an easy fix
    • Could potentially flip for a profit

    Downsides:

    • Finding room for it would mean I lose most of my shop space
    • If the coolant seals are toast, I don't have an engine hoist or stand for a rebuild
    • It could become a parts cannon project if it was never taken care of
    • Rebuild Cost
    • Unknowns as I haven't seen it in person
    • I don't have a trailer+winch to make moving it around easy
    • My driveway has a sharp incline so backing a trailer in isn't the best on the truck's transmission

    If I just take the wheels and call a car haul away company they would give me less than $400 for a non-running RX8 and I feel bad for sending an Anniversary car off to be broken/scrapped.

    ! !

    4
    What to buy?
  • I have two i3 clones and fully agree the first month or so was just tweaking the machine and printing parts to improve quality.

    My Monoprice Duplicator i3 Plus from 2017 is still going after a LOT of tinkering. My Anycubic Chiron is more or less stock for better and worse. The z-wobble on both is about that last thing I need to do for quality improvements but I'm lazy.

  • Hardware recommendations
  • What are the specs of the machine? How hard is it working to run those services? Both of those could be run on a raspberry pi for low usage but then you need to learn linux if you aren't already using it.

    If it's under powered and working hard all the time it will draw more power and generate more heat.

    Does it need to live in your office?

  • Experiences with CX-5?
  • I bought our 2016 CX-5 new since I needed something bigger than my abused 2004 Mazda 3 sedan. It's been amazing for us. There have been no major issues in 63k-ish miles. Outside of some early infotainment upgrades it's just been oil changes and standard maintenance.

    Front passenger leg room is a bit cramped with a rear facing child seat but you can look for more narrow seats to help with that. We found a compact seat that allowed me, at 6', to comfortably sit in the front passenger seat.

    The newer CX-5's have a turbo so they have a bit more pep than ours and really nice interior.

  • What to buy?
  • What is your use case for the printer? That might help inform your decision.

    A Prusa is a pretty safe pick and more or less fire and forget from what I've seen.

    I have older printers that are reliable after numerous upgrades (including a new board and adding auto-leveling) for larger parts and a resin printer for detailed stuff.