Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

a cat? japanese spitz. end animals after that.. hate cats

i love cats, and the japanese spitz are awesome low maintenance dogs, of course my pets will all be indoor animals, cbf letting them roam and picking up weird diseases.

i love cats, and the japanese spitz are awesome low maintenance dogs, of course my pets will all be indoor animals, cbf letting them roam and picking up weird diseases.

yeh ive always wanted a staffy.

perhaps a bull mastif if I could be bothered..

but still living at home with the parents.. they dont furry pets. hence the axolotls.

You can, just don't use names or use X and Y in place.

nah I cant. the only place i can copy and past a script is into our emailing system, or by saving as pdf.. anything else it will either not paste, or paste in code.

dont know why.and screw re writing it.

yeh ive always wanted a staffy.

perhaps a bull mastif if I could be bothered..

but still living at home with the parents.. they dont furry pets. hence the axolotls.

staffys are nice and compact, the bull mastif is too big man, and they f**ken drool all over the place. that's the problem with big dogs, drool.

staffys are nice and compact, the bull mastif is too big man, and they f**ken drool all over the place. that's the problem with big dogs, drool.

yeh. staffys are also really obediant and train easily..

but my parents think because they look like a pitbull , they'll act like one.

yeh ive always wanted a staffy.

perhaps a bull mastif if I could be bothered..

but still living at home with the parents.. they dont furry pets. hence the axolotls.

i have an american staffy.. hes only 4 months old.. massive cutey!! lol

tumblrlrr3p0hfwl1qberw4.png

Do you know how many kebabs you can buy with 25k?

Have you worked out yet?

You shouldn't have issues working it out since you're a recent school leaver.

he is so smart but everyday he grows bigger and bigger!

haha yeh but when they are at their peak they arent big..

another member on here has one ScottyNM35 or something. i looked after it for a couple of days while he went camping.. such good dogs.

haha yeh but when they are at their peak they arent big..

another member on here has one ScottyNM35 or something. i looked after it for a couple of days while he went camping.. such good dogs.

i think they are the perfect sized dog

and yes they are very good, he follows me everywhere i go :)

Birds your customers make my brain hurt.

I get enough of it from my clients/workers

lol.

but you asian mang, when the machetes come out, any price is OKAY!

And not just asian, I'm Viet mang. Us Viets are crazy m**fckers.

Also my gf is Cambo so she'll slit your face aka Cambo Clowns styles lol

darkknightwallpaper5yn2.jpg

Guest
This topic is now closed to further replies.



  • Similar Content

  • Latest Posts

    • Next, remove the upper and lower radiator hoses, both are held with a spring clamp. While you are under there, tackle the Auto Trans cooler lines.  Again both are held on with spring clamps, and as mentioned above you should cap them on the radiator side with an 8mm cap, and on the car side loop them with a length of 8mm pipe - this will stop you losing a dangerous amount of AT fluid during the rest of the job If you've been meaning to add a sender for AT trans temp, this is a great time to do it; put a sender fitting into the passenger side line as that is the inlet to the cooler/radiator.
    • Next you need to remove the intake duct (as with pretty much every job on these cars), it is a series of clips you gently remove with a flat bladed screwdriver. They do get brittle with time and can break, and I have not found a decent quality aftermarket one that fits (they are all too soft or flimsy and don't last either) but the nissan ones are a couple of bucks each (ouch).  Once the clips are off (either 8 or 10, I didn't check) you lift the intake duct out and will see the reservoirs Undo the line into the radiator side cap (some bent needle nosed piers are awesome for spring clamps) and then remove the 4x 10m nuts that hold both in place.  I didn't get these pics, but remove the line under the radiator reservoir (spring clamp again) then remove that reservoir. Then you can get at the intake reservoir, same thing, spring clamp underneath then remove it. BTW This is a great time to put in a larger (+70%) combined reservoir that AMS makes..... https://www.amsperformance.com/product/q50-q60-red-alpha-coolant-expansion-tank/ They also make an Infiniti branded and part# version if that is your thing
    • To drain the Intake Heat Exchanger, there is a crappy drain plug in front of the driver's side front tyre: You should use the largest headed phillips screwdriver you had, and in my case I needed vice grips on the hose above as the plug was tight (tighter than it needed to be, since it has an o-ring seal).  After you have a tray down and open the drain, open the intake heat exchanger reservoir cap (drivers side one) and you should get a couple of litres of coolant To get to the radiator, you need to remove the plastic engine undertray. It is held on with a series of 10mm headed bolts and some clips. For the radiator, there is another type of crappy drain (kind of like a plastic banjo bolt) and you should attach a length of hose to direct the stream of coolant per this pic (otherwise the coolant hits the rad support and goes everywhere). The drain is on the rear of the radiator on the driver's side and a bit hard to find. Put a big tray or bucket down (5l won't be enough) and slowly unscrew the fitting by hand. You only want to remove it far enough for coolant to flow, it you unscrew it right out the whole fitting and direction pipe will come off and you will get a coolant bath (yum!). Undo the radiator reservoir cap and it should empty about 8l
    • So, this shouldn't be such a mission, but there were a few tricks so I thought I'd post up a DIY for it. This was on a Q50 Red Sport but I doubt any other V37 model is very different (maybe just less steps for the intake heat exchanger hoses) I pulled the radiator out to flush it because the car was running hot at the track, but obviously the same steps apply for changing a radiator for any reason including an upgrade. If you are removing the radiator, you of course need to drain and refill, so have 5+ litres of blue coolant ready. You also need to drain the intake heat exchanger to remove the radiator so you will need a couple of litres for that as well. You will also need something to deal with the auto transmission lines, I used 2x 8mm rubber caps on the radiator side, and a short length of 8mm pipe on the car side.....unless you can block these lines quickly you will loose AT fluid and it may be enough to hurt the transmission if you don't refill it. 2 other tools that really help dealing with coolant lines and spring clamps are Bent Needle Nose pliers Hose pliers Between them they will reduce the frustration (and injury) potential by about 1000% Other than that....lets go... "First, jack up your car". Yes really, and put it safely on stands. If you are not confident doing that you need to give this job to a mechanic
    • If the forester is anything like our old 2007 GTB Liberty, I could near on run ling Long's and "rate them", as no matter what, it just hung to the road, even when abusing it in a hard launch in the wet, or throwing it at corners.
×
×
  • Create New...