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#15 |
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Drives: 2020 Corvette Stingray Z51 Join Date: Aug 2011
Location: Knoxville, TN
Posts: 1,982
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Chilton's, Haynes... and when all else failed, hang your head and let a garage figure out what the hell you just f'd up. lol. Don't miss those days.
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![]() 2020 Corvette 2LT Z51 2017 ZL1 A10: (SOLD) || 2017 2SS M6: (SOLD) || 2014 2LT Convertible: (SOLD) || 2010 2LT M6 Supercharged:(SOLD) || 1987 IROC-Z 5.0 M5: (SOLD) |
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#16 | |
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corner barstool sitter
Drives: 08 Mustang GT, 19 WRX Join Date: Jul 2012
Location: Eastern Time Zone
Posts: 6,990
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Norm
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'08 GT coupe 5M (the occasional track toy)
'19 WRX 6M (the family sedan . . . seriously) |
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#17 |
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OP - I am / was in the same boat, though at my age now I have no excuse. I grew up without any kind of wrenching knowledge.
Like everyone has said, with forums like this one and youtube vids there is plenty available to accelerate your knowledge. you're missing the experience and built up skills, which will take some time to accumulate as you tackle new things. I think a large part of what you are asking about is not just mechanical skill with cars, it's knowing what works, what doesn't work with regard to modifications. That's where sticking around the forums and just gleaning knowledge as you read various posts will help. I've learned a lot that way over the years in various forums. Unfortunately there is a lot chatter, and not always good information in forums, (and a lot of "just search for it!" which doesn't help really). Initially you have to take the information with a grain of salt until you can discern the truth of what works over time - you'll identify the consistent patterns from those that know, and have proven results. Some people are not at all mechanically inclined, even if they have been around it. No shame in that. Me, I've only tackled basic maintenance, bolt-ons. Oil changes, spark plugs, brake jobs, suspension R&R, timing belts (Audi), turbo installs etc. I have never disassembled/reassembled an engine. I think I should just get a spare/junk engine for cheap and start learning with my hands for that level of work. I spent a few years wrenching on F-16s, which helped get over the fear of the unknown when working on a car. Though I think the jets were almost easier to work on (they are incredibly complicated but you have very explicit job guides for every step + a lot of experienced folks working along side), you start as an apprentice and get hand-held for a bit, then work your way up to journeyman etc. |
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#18 | |
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Drives: SUMMIT WHITE 2SS/RS CAMARO Join Date: Feb 2008
Location: 2018: Lakewood Ranch, Fl.
Posts: 8,167
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or an antique car today..... My Camaro, I let someone else do it.
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#19 |
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Just an average Dude
Drives: 2015 1LT Grey w/Orange Rally Stripe Join Date: Mar 2016
Location: Hickory, NC
Posts: 391
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I learned a lot when I was a kid by tearing things apart and putting them back together. I grew up on a farm and had lots of machines to fix all the time. When it comes to these cars I know very little because I have not taken my Camaro apart - yet..... and don't plan on needing to. When I was a kid I also learned a more important lesson to not ever need to repair stuff - drive newer cars that don't break down like old stuff.
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So far I like my car the way it came from the factory.
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#20 |
![]() Drives: 2010 Camaro 1LT Join Date: Apr 2017
Location: Philadelphia
Posts: 8
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I'm always on YouTube watching car videos and searching up the terms that I don't know on google
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#21 |
![]() Drives: 2013 Inferno Orange Camaro SS Join Date: Mar 2017
Location: MidWest
Posts: 55
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I grew up helping or watching other people work on cars. That's somewhat helpful, but doing things yourself is when you really learn. Unfortunately, I have the habit of breaking stuff on newer cars. I liked working on my 83 Camaro. It had screws that you could visually see on the dash and almost every part. Now everything has to be hidden and has plastic snap in stuff that is easy to break.
Almost everything I've done recently I've found online or on YouTube. Sent from my ONEPLUS A3000 using Tapatalk |
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#22 |
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Drives: 2020 Corvette Stingray Z51 Join Date: Aug 2011
Location: Knoxville, TN
Posts: 1,982
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I'm assuming that was when it was relatively new? Everything on my '87 is about as brittle as Larry King in a dryer.
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![]() 2020 Corvette 2LT Z51 2017 ZL1 A10: (SOLD) || 2017 2SS M6: (SOLD) || 2014 2LT Convertible: (SOLD) || 2010 2LT M6 Supercharged:(SOLD) || 1987 IROC-Z 5.0 M5: (SOLD) |
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#23 | |
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Love me some Tacos
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I changed items on my first 5th gen Camaro here is that thread, http://www.camaro5.com/forums/showth...=160428&page=1 Then moved to my 1LE after all that work. Miss the car it was fun and now enjoy the 1LE. As others have said there is allot of information here and depending on what you want you can pretty much do what you want. |
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#24 | |
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Account Suspended
Drives: Camaro V6 Join Date: Oct 2016
Location: U.S.
Posts: 1,722
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#25 |
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Lots of reading... and Murphey's law.... Spend money to mod your car.... Then research what to do to compliment that mod - ONLY to find out your first purchase was a bad purchase.... Nothing teaches quite like the burn of wasting money.
Seriously - Set a goal and start researching the ways to achieve it. Your research will teach you many things along the way.
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2014 L99 2SS. 595HP/571ft-lbs
Mods: LSA Conversion 2.5" Upper Pulley, 65# injectors, GPI SS1 Cam, SP Long Tubes, ADM Race Scoop & CAI, NPP exhaust (DIY control), BMR 1" lowering springs, ZL1 Rear Differential / Axles, CF Side Strip / Hood Spear, Tint - Windows / Tails / Sidemarkers, Splash Guards, ADM Boost Gauge, ABL Dashkit, '68 Script Badges, ACS T4 Splitter, ZL1 Rockers from Gary's, Z28 Spoiler, Carbon Fiber Hood Vent, Summer - MRR FS01 Satin Black (10" Front 11" Rear) Winter, pictured-Drag DR 64's Satin Black (9" Front-10" Rear.) |
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#26 |
![]() Drives: 2013 Inferno Orange Camaro SS Join Date: Mar 2017
Location: MidWest
Posts: 55
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#27 | |
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Yes... cars were simpler back then, but every time you turned around it was time to change the points, condenser, distributor cap and rotor, (you young guys/gals can Google those terms to see what they are), spark plugs, brake shoes (and don't forget to get the drums turned). Hell, if you lived up north you even needed a new muffle every other year. With today's car you need much more information, special tools, and money to fix your own vehicles. Fortunately, the routine maintenance is much less frequent (i.e. used to get new plugs every 10-15K miles... now you don't touch 'em before 100K miles).
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2013 1SS/RS Coupe L99, Stainless Power Works LT Headers, SCT X4 Custom Tune from RDP, CAI Inc. Air Intake w/ Apex Scoop, VMAX CNC Ported Throttle Body, Solo Axle-Back Exhaust w/ J-pipes, Apex Catch Can, Husky Splash Guards, Heritage Grille, 3D Carbon Rear Spoiler, Oracle Chrome Turn Signal Bulbs, GM Reverse Light Trim Billets, Gorilla Black Locking Lugs, Emblem Pros Retro SS Badges/Custom Retro SS Kickplates/Under-hood Bowtie, 35% window Tint, Nitto Motivo Tires (6-8-18)
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#28 |
![]() ![]() ![]() Drives: 2011 Camaro 2LT/RS Join Date: May 2015
Location: Farmville, Virginia
Posts: 1,030
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32 years working in new car dealerships taught me. I'm an assistant service manager, not a tech. But seeing all the repairs and reading all the bulletins over the years has taught me a thing or two. But I'm not a hands on guy, so I choose to remain silent for the most part.
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