• @[email protected]
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    5010 months ago

    This is what we get when people buy things they barely understand, and refuse to learn about. Bluntly, I don’t understand how someone can buy, own, and use something that they continually rely on with nearly zero knowledge of how it works, how it fails and what pitfalls you may experience in extreme operating conditions. Additionally, how to recognize when things are going sideways and what to do about it.

    It reminds me of the last time I had a car overheat on me. It was just as cold as this (around -25C or -30C), and I was driving to work. The vehicle was a beater, so it was in some state of disrepair. As you can imagine, it was an ICE vehicle. It started just fine, or at least as fine as I can expect from the conditions, and I hit the highway. I was headed to work and didn’t have enough time to just let it warm up before heading out. I’m driving down the highway, waiting for the heater to start working. It didn’t. The temperature gauge on the dash stayed pinned to “cold”, and no heat from the heater core… After a few minutes on the highway, I knew something was very very wrong. I pulled off the highway and to the first gas station I saw. I turned off the car as quickly as I could. I checked and there was no coolant in the engine I went in to the station and picked up some premixed coolant, refilled the vehicle with coolant, and the first few short pours vaporized as soon as they went in. Once it stopped vaporizing coolant, I filled it up. I made it to work, a little late, but with a working car.

    You don’t need to know every fucking detail about how the vehicle does what it does, just the broad strokes about the basic systems that keep the vehicle working and how they fail and how they’re maintained. If you don’t, well… Just look at the OP.

    • @[email protected]
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      2710 months ago

      Speaking of knowing the pitfalls, how did you manage to run out of coolant my friend? That’s day one of owning a beater.

      • @[email protected]
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        1410 months ago

        The coolant situation was fine until the deep freeze. My theory is that the coolant that was in it was not capable of being liquid at -20C, and when the vehicle was started, the heat couldn’t move because the coolant in the rad was frozen. Causing it to exceed the maximum temperature and vaporize. As the hot vapor penetrated the system, the rad slowly melted, causing the now liquid coolant to flow into the engine. But the engine was so hot that the coolant vaporized on contact.

        This process continued until all the coolant was vapor and that vapor exceeded the pressure limits of the system and that caused it all to escape the system through the pressure cap on the rad.

        I believe that the continual vaporization of the coolant was the only thing that kept the engine from overheating to the point of a complete failure.

        I swear, it had coolant in it before the deep freeze.

        • @[email protected]
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          910 months ago

          Yeah, that happens. That’s why they make block heaters. The moral of the story is don’t be a dick about people not knowing everything about their vehicle. I still argue with some of the smartest people I know about filling their tank before severe weather hits. We’re not all on the same level, most people just expect it to work.

          • @[email protected]
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            510 months ago

            Oh, I’m not trying to be a dick about anything. I’m just saying I don’t understand the mindset of being okay knowing next to nothing about the things they own and rely on every day.

            That’s it.

            Sorry if that was not clear.

    • @[email protected]
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      10 months ago

      Would you learn things that can go wrong with your washing machine, and how fix them? Probably not, you would either send it in for warranty, repair or buy a new one.

      The people do not care about their car on a fundamental level. Cars are just another appliance to them. That’s why Prius drivers are so notorious. They do not give a fuck about anything but getting from point a to b, and doing so as cheaply as possible.

      EV’s seem to share a similar fate. I’d even go as far as to say these people might have bought the vehicle BECAUSE it requires less maintenance. It’s just another dollar number in a spreadsheet for them.

      • @[email protected]
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        510 months ago

        I would and have actually. I have the basics of how a washing machine works and even how to properly clean it and the broad strokes of various components in the machine and what those components do. It goes the same for everything. This is my mantra. If I use it, and rely on it, I want to know how it works and how to fix it when it stops working. I go to vendor support only when I know I’m still covered by support (it hasn’t expired), and it’s a clear warranty issue. If not, I’ll usually make the attempt to fix it myself, failing that, I will call a support person, and if they can’t fix it, I’ll buy a replacement. In the case of a washing machine it’s not urgent enough to push for calling someone right away, who can fix it faster than I have time to. I’m somewhat unique in that, since my home has two washing machines (only one is connected right now because I’m still working at getting power, ventilation, water, drain/downpipe, and everything set up for the second set), so in a pinch, I can simply swap to the working one and move on, getting to repairing the broken one when I have the time. In this case, not a good example, but I gather your point.

        To speak to the point: I’ll likely go through the same process above, and depending on how important it is for me to get up and working again quickly, will factor in to how quickly I progress from trying to fix it myself, to paying someone to do it, to replacement. Another factor is the cost involved with the item or a replacement, if it’s very cheap and readily available, I may simply replace it and move on because it’s not worth the time/effort to try. With appliances like washing machines, oven/ranges, even the furnace and air conditioning, I’ll usually give it a try. Last year over summer, the air conditioning at my home failed and I performed diagnostics and found the issue to be related to the electrical systems in the outdoor unit, it needed a new contactor and capacitor, which I replaced and we enjoyed air conditioning all summer on about $50 of parts and a bit of effort.

        This is simply my own personal philosophy. The fact is, very few people tend to subscribe to this, sticking to a fairly old philosophy of, you earn money doing the thing you’re specialized at, and pay people who are specialized at other things (like mechanics, appliance repair people, HVAC technicians) to do whatever else you need.

        Simply put, I’ve never made enough money as a working adult to indulge myself in this manner of thinking. I’ve reaped so many benefits from it that even though I’m making more money as time goes on, I continue to return to this philosophy.

        The thing I don’t get is why people continue to accept the older know-nothing philosophy that seems to common. The only explanation I can imagine for this is that my philosophy requires significant mental work to understand enough about the things you use, to be effective. As simply put as I can, most people are too mentally lazy to try. I don’t really hold this against anyone, especially considering it’s so common.

        The risk, to me, is if you’re entirely reliant on others to maintain the things you use all the time, then you’re entirely at their mercy for what they tell you needs to be done and what they think that’s worth. You’re also working at whatever pace they choose, and on whatever timetable they want. Simply, it is much quicker to reach a solution if you have the ability to fix things yourself, and you can obtain the parts needed in a timely fashion. It’s generally a lot cheaper as a benefit.

        I work IT by day and I’ve given people scripts with commands they don’t understand to fix common repeating problems that I can’t find a way to permanently repair. One such example is a client ended up in a situation where if a program didn’t exit correctly (a fault of the software that I have no way to fix), and they tried to use a plug in to view a specific file type as a preview, it would not work. The solution was to close all of the running instances of the program and the functionality would work again. The script, which I think was only a single line, basically just ran a command that would tell the OS, to close all running versions of that program. The client running that application didn’t need any specifics, just run this and it should fix the problem. It was really basic. They were able to fix their issue without waiting for me to remotely log in to their PC to do the same thing by hand, and it worked really well. I empowered them to fix it themselves. Of course, if that didn’t fix the problem, they could call, but I can’t recall them calling about it again after that.

        With vehicles, there’s a basic knowledge set to know when performing the most basic maintenance on the motor. Does it have oil? Is the oil black or have a bad smell, indicating it may be burned or starting to break down. Does it have coolant? Brake fluid? Power steering fluid? Fuel? Are there any obvious leaks, or broken piping or parts that appear mangled and/or have holes where there shouldn’t be holes?

        This is obviously regarding an ICE engine more than anything though diesel may also be applicable. Regarding diesel, when it gets too cold, the knowledge of what temperature the fuel starts to gel up and become unusable… That sort of thing. Just the basics.

        The same basics can be applied to EVs, like charge level, the correct process to start and warm up the car in extreme cold (keeping it plugged in and getting the battery system heaters working), how much the cold will affect expected range. How the features of the vehicle affect range and power use. Also, importantly, how to recover the vehicle from a complete power loss (dead main battery). Most of this is surely in the owners manual, which people neither read, nor look to when things go wrong.

        It’s a compounding problem of willful ignorance and my disconnect is how people are okay with being willfully ignorant in a golden age of information. The knowledge is at your fingertips, accessible from any device that can show you this text, and yet, there’s not only no desire for that information, but there also seems to be an active effort to reject it.

        I am a child of the digital age. Cellphones, marketed as “PCS” phones became available when I was partway through highschool. The internet has existed since before I was a teen. I want the information. I actively seek it out. I work in technology and I use that technology in every way I can to improve my life and the lives of those around me. I can’t imagine not wanting to help yourself and the people you care for by using that technology and vast information to your advantage. Yet, that’s exactly what people are doing. I just don’t get it.

      • @[email protected]
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        210 months ago

        I’m not sure, but if you draw the ven diagram of people that can recognize an issue with their cars heater core (and know what that is) stop and fill the radiator with coolant and the ven diagram of people that would understand what’s wrong with their washing machine and attempt a repair themselves is just a circle.

        I know the people outside that circle exist, but they really should spend a few minutes learning how things they depend on work, to save a few dollars in their spreadsheet.

        • Tar_Alcaran
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          10 months ago

          I’d give it a shot, but 90% of the time it’s “broken electronics, buy a new circuitboard for 70% of the cost of a new machine”.