chambezio
22nd June 2014, 05:55 PM
Usually in "my kingdom" the stuff I do in my shed is only ever worked on by me because to ask for assistance is like asking for the keys to the treasury. Well we have a VS 1995 Commodore which my youngest daughter pretty well drives all the time. [She is 24 and still lives with us while she hunts for a job in computers. She wants to get into the hardware side of computers, you know trouble shooting or assembling a computer to suit some ones needs. (Alas no jobs around).]
She came to me weeks ago and said that the trip meter/odometer was not working. I told her that being the age that the car is, spending anything on it needs to be weighed up. She went on line and found a "How To" on pulling apart the instrument cluster and replacing a plastic gear that commonly fails. She also found said gear on Ebay. She was a little insistent that the job needed to be done so I made her a deal, that she would do the job with me as an assistant.
Well the gear turned up....on the computer it looked the size of a 50c coin but in reality it is half the size of a 5c coin.
Today was the day for surgery. She can out to the shed with her lap top, to follow the how to and away we went. She has her own tool kit for such things (instruments) that she uses on her computers. I supplied a big screwdriver and long nosed pliers. The operation took a couple of hours and we are both still talking to each other. There was a lot of small fiddly bits that she handled easily (my fat fingers would have been struggling).
A couple of plastic lugs snapped during disassembly so I piled on some silicone during reassembly, trying to avoid any squeaks while driving. the test drive showed that the job was successful.
We were able to effect a repair that could easily have been $200 and I had the experience working with my daughter. OK so what you may say......well for me I thought it was a special time
She came to me weeks ago and said that the trip meter/odometer was not working. I told her that being the age that the car is, spending anything on it needs to be weighed up. She went on line and found a "How To" on pulling apart the instrument cluster and replacing a plastic gear that commonly fails. She also found said gear on Ebay. She was a little insistent that the job needed to be done so I made her a deal, that she would do the job with me as an assistant.
Well the gear turned up....on the computer it looked the size of a 50c coin but in reality it is half the size of a 5c coin.
Today was the day for surgery. She can out to the shed with her lap top, to follow the how to and away we went. She has her own tool kit for such things (instruments) that she uses on her computers. I supplied a big screwdriver and long nosed pliers. The operation took a couple of hours and we are both still talking to each other. There was a lot of small fiddly bits that she handled easily (my fat fingers would have been struggling).
A couple of plastic lugs snapped during disassembly so I piled on some silicone during reassembly, trying to avoid any squeaks while driving. the test drive showed that the job was successful.
We were able to effect a repair that could easily have been $200 and I had the experience working with my daughter. OK so what you may say......well for me I thought it was a special time