2004-z06
2004_Z06
2004-z06

In summer 1973 between high school and college, I worked for minimum wage in a hot factory that converted big rolls of paper into computer punch cards. Later while an undergraduate college student, I worked part-time for IIRC $2.30/hour for a very small electronics company. I was an electronic technician while

I get the impression that 261 200 reflects the PCB and related hardware which is used on multiple vehicles, and 352 is the firmware release for a particular application.

That’s an interesting combination of surface mount and through-hole components. What is the function of that module, and about what year was it produced?

Are those some species of non-USA duck?

1) Many local municipalities in Ohio have laws making non-seat belt use a primary offense, and have road signs stating so.

Having the message in plain English will tell you how urgent the issue is (“Zero oil, pull over NOW” vs “hey your gas cap might be loose”) without distracting the driver too much, and adding the QR code gives the driver more tools for resolving the issue...

At least it’s not Sbarro.

...the term just used to mean “bad tempered woman

And then you have to contrast the dirt-simple mechanics of a 1960s points-ignition car to a 2021 vehicle in terms of emissions and MPG. My first winter beater which I built in 1977 was a ‘67 Firebird where I swapped in a ‘65 Chevy 230 CI inline-six to work with the Firebird’s OEM Muncie 4-speed. I am environmentally pr

Ah, that explains it. I’ll bet a Sienna is a lot more comfortable than, say, an 86.

I was a voracious reader as a child, going with my Mom to the library every two weeks to sign out books, many from the adult science fiction section, as well as history and technical books. Then in late Middle School and High School I was compelled by my public school teachers to read bullshit “classic novels”

Toyotas have always been popular and I like being on top.

The analogy still stands, even if it isn’t reality.

It’s like if GE stopped selling coffee makers.

I worked as a new product electronic hardware designer for the Allen-Bradley Company from 1978-1985, and then Rockwell Automation from 1985-2017, and this video never gets old ;-)

I know it’s childish, but every time I see the name “Niedermeyer” I flash back to the Neidermeyer character in Animal House.

...a mm here, a mm there, eventually you’re talking real gaps.

The Andrew Collins photo shows the main gauge at Empty and the sub-gauge at ¼. One of these is wrong. Either they should both read empty, or both read ¼ on their respective scales.

OK, seriously, what is the story behind that photo? It looks like “Annoyed mom and dad with intrigued teeenage daughter”, but I could not “Search Google for image”. From some movie or TV show, yes?

If you want to stick it to richie rich then you should just tax the shit out of exotic cars.