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That is a great video.
I only cringed at the dirty gloves.
I would be so afraid that dirt gets between the bearings and the gears and wears ‘m out.Eric,
Would it be possible to cut the old lines and show what is inside?
I’ve heard all brake lines have braided steel in them, but perhaps the OEM ones have less steel or another pattern?TIA, Jaap
Please please take off the dirty gloves before driving the car / touching the interior.
This video is MUCH better than the previous sponsored video. It actually contains useful information 😉
Good work, Eric.Hah i love how you can’t believe it’s actually working 😉
Whenever i try to pull apart something like that i break all sorts of little plastic tabs and break some o-rings and what not.Good job sir.
Great video.
Would it be an idea to find the airleak by using grease around all of the leak-candidates and see where the grease is sucked in?Great video.
Would it be an idea to find the airleak by using grease around all of the leak-candidates and see where the grease is sucked in?Watching this video makes me rethink all of the other “tool review” videos you have made.
Please announce that it’s an advertisement IN the video.
Why not just be honest to your viewers.Think about it: if you keep your viewers loyal, there are very many ways to make income on that: ask for money, paid subscriptions, ads, whatever.
If you keep your loyalty to the advertisers, your viewers will leave you and you’ll have less ways to make money.
Watching this video makes me rethink all of the other “tool review” videos you have made.
Please announce that it’s an advertisement IN the video.
Why not just be honest to your viewers.Think about it: if you keep your viewers loyal, there are very many ways to make income on that: ask for money, paid subscriptions, ads, whatever.
If you keep your loyalty to the advertisers, your viewers will leave you and you’ll have less ways to make money.
Kinda sad that they call it 12V when it’s really a 10.8V.
I think i’ll stick wih Makita. They have a 325 ft.lbs. version as well (440Nm)
http://www.amazon.com/Makita-BTW450-18-Volt-Lithium-Ion-Cordless/dp/B0014Z0MUI/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1389288386&sr=8-1&keywords=makita+btw450Kinda sad that they call it 12V when it’s really a 10.8V.
I think i’ll stick wih Makita. They have a 325 ft.lbs. version as well (440Nm)
http://www.amazon.com/Makita-BTW450-18-Volt-Lithium-Ion-Cordless/dp/B0014Z0MUI/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1389288386&sr=8-1&keywords=makita+btw450Hey Eric,
I totally love your video’s.
It looked in this video as if you overtorqued the lugnuts with the full force of the impact tool.
These lugnuts usually need something like 100Nm/70ftlbs.Keep up the good work!
Hey Eric,
I totally love your video’s.
It looked in this video as if you overtorqued the lugnuts with the full force of the impact tool.
These lugnuts usually need something like 100Nm/70ftlbs.Keep up the good work!
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