Where did you learn about cars?

peez

Member
Sep 5, 2008
82
0
0
I'm about to be 18 in a month and the only car I've had since I've gotten my license is a 93' Maxima that i haven't done anything more than change a tire and add the occasional oil or coolant, etc.; things anybody could do. But I've been feeling a stronger interest in learning about cars (Not as a career or job, but for personal benefit) and I was just wondering where you car savvy folks acquired your knowledge of cars.
I was thinking Library and google but any other source of information would help <3
 

amdhunter

Lifer
May 19, 2003
23,332
249
106
Not an answer, but I blame my total lack of knowledge on cars on the fact that I lived in apartments all my life.

If I had a garage, I am sure I'd at least attempt many things on my car that I pay others to do now. I bet a lot of guys here with a lot of auto knowledge had some place to take cars apart.
 

skyking

Lifer
Nov 21, 2001
22,764
5,928
146
I learned to turn a wrench on our family farm, before I could drive. I cheated:)
Seriously, your best opportunity for real world learning is to become friends with somebody who does it. Help them out, watch and learn. Soon enough they'll be looking over your shoulder while you work on your own car, keeping you from making major mistakes.
 

Proprioceptive

Golden Member
Feb 27, 2006
1,630
10
81
Nowhere... never learned and regret it. Im slowly teaching myself through youtube, wikipedia...online sources and friends.
 

CraigRT

Lifer
Jun 16, 2000
31,440
5
0
From my dad, from school, from doing :D

It helps when cars are a personal interest... Screw paying someone else for doing any job I can do... And enjoy doing it for the personal satisfaction, at the same time.

You just gotta be brave sometimes and dive in. I've never not been able to finish a job I've tackled.
 

Zenmervolt

Elite member
Oct 22, 2000
24,514
44
91
I've taken anything and everything apart for just about as long as I can remember. Even when I was knee-high to a grasshopper I was taking stuff apart and getting it back together; I remember dismantling my Fisher Price tape player and getting it back in working order and I couldn't have been much more than 7 or 8.

As I got older, I did the same to the lawnmower and the moped I got at 14. Cars just came naturally like anything else mechanical.

ZV
 

boomerang

Lifer
Jun 19, 2000
18,883
641
126
I learned to turn a wrench on our family farm, before I could drive. I cheated:)
Seriously, your best opportunity for real world learning is to become friends with somebody who does it. Help them out, watch and learn. Soon enough they'll be looking over your shoulder while you work on your own car, keeping you from making major mistakes.
A great suggestion.

I might also suggest picking up a service manual for your car and reading it cover to cover. It will tell you everything you need to know about working on anything on your car. The only thing missing will be the hands-on experience. Which you can only get by doing.

I like factory manuals but they can be expensive. Check ebay for used manuals. If they're too expensive for you, pick up a Chilton's or Haynes manual. They do not get into the depth on repairs like a factory manual does, but they should be good for the kind of work you'd want to do as a newb.

My folks tell me I was taking things apart as a child, although I must have been pretty young as I don't remember. I naturally gravitated towards wrenching although as I've stated here several times, my skills are getting rusty. Computers took over as my main interest and we drive new cars that need just minor maintenance.

IMO, the secret to learning anything is to read and read and read to understand what you need to do and how to do it. Then jump in with both hands.
 

peez

Member
Sep 5, 2008
82
0
0
From my dad, from school, from doing :D

It helps when cars are a personal interest... Screw paying someone else for doing any job I can do... And enjoy doing it for the personal satisfaction, at the same time.

You just gotta be brave sometimes and dive in. I've never not been able to finish a job I've tackled.

My thoughts exactly! I figured if I have the tools to do it (My hands) then why not just learn how, especially because it feels rewarding to know something about cars, and it's even more embarrassing when I don't and I feel like i should haha. I just don't want to "dive in" and do something stupid that gets my car fucked up, if i had a backup car then that would be fine but if my Maxima can't drive then i'm walking to wherever i have to go haha.
 

kornphlake

Golden Member
Dec 30, 2003
1,567
9
81
My dad worked on cars a lot when I was little, at some point my parents were able to afford cars that didn't need to be repaired as often and my dad started working on other projects for fun. I'll admit my father and I share some kind of disease where we can't just leave something that works alone until we understand how it works, at least as far as anything mechanical is concerned. I've taken apart just about everything I've ever touched to some degree, just to see how it works if it wasn't obvious without dissassembly. It sounds like a few people here also have the same disease, there is no known cure, fortunately one of the symptoms of the disease is the ability to fix or repair just about anything with the right tools and materials.
 

Sumguy

Golden Member
Jun 2, 2007
1,409
0
0
My dad was a mechanic. His bosses were all awesome and saw no problem with having kids walk around the shop.

It was interesting to see a car come in totally FUBAR'd by an accident and see, step by step, how they repaired it.

Edit: Unrelated, but sometimes customers would let me drive their cars (VERY rarely). Never drove stick since that ran the risk of me messing up their newly un-messed car. One dude came in with a lambo that needed a simple fix (someone tried to steal it, door handle was broken). He was really nice, let everyone take it for a drive on this desolate road behind the shop...if they could drive stick.

/facemelt
 
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Howard

Lifer
Oct 14, 1999
47,982
11
81
My dad was a mechanic. His bosses were all awesome and saw no problem with having kids walk around the shop.

It was interesting to see a car come in totally FUBAR'd by an accident and see, step by step, how they repaired it.
Awesome until the shit hits the fan when the kids get hurt or cause somebody to get hurt.
 

CrackRabbit

Lifer
Mar 30, 2001
16,642
62
91
Necessity, I was dead broke at the time and had to keep the car(s) I had running.
The ones I managed to keep running the longest was an 86 Chrysler followed by a 91 Infiniti.

I still try and do what I can to my cars myself, it keeps things cheap and I kinda enjoy doing it now.
 

JulesMaximus

No Lifer
Jul 3, 2003
74,580
982
126
I've taken anything and everything apart for just about as long as I can remember. Even when I was knee-high to a grasshopper I was taking stuff apart and getting it back together; I remember dismantling my Fisher Price tape player and getting it back in working order and I couldn't have been much more than 7 or 8.

As I got older, I did the same to the lawnmower and the moped I got at 14. Cars just came naturally like anything else mechanical.

ZV

Same with me. Having a Grandfather who was into wood working also helped. They always bought my brother and I tools for Christmas and every time we'd visit them my brother and I would spend a lot of time in his wood shop making things. I always did well in shop class too (along with Biology, Chemistry, and Physics) so when it came time for me to own my first car I naturally bought a manual and started doing small repairs on it myself. Fluid changes and brake jobs at first, by my second car I was removing the intake manifold, rebuilding carbs, and doing suspension work.

All you really need is a little patience, the right tools for the job, a decent shop manual for the vehicle you are working on, and a place to work on the vehicle...oh, and time.
 

Sumguy

Golden Member
Jun 2, 2007
1,409
0
0
Awesome until the shit hits the fan when the kids get hurt or cause somebody to get hurt.

Thankfully never happened, even a kid knows better than to act like an idiot in a shop full of other peoples' cars and dangerous equipment.

We would stay in the lobby if any huge job was going on anyway, the noise was unbearable.
 

StageLeft

No Lifer
Sep 29, 2000
70,150
5
0
Internet and working on my own and that's basically all of it. Nobody I know, save one friend who knows about cars from magazine reading only, knows anything about cars. I never knew any adult male in my life who could even change his oil (I am a broken person)

Oh, and I learned a lot from fleabag.
 

BW86

Lifer
Jul 20, 2004
13,114
30
91
from my dad, my uncle (mechanic), TV, books, magazines, radio, internet, etc...
 

exdeath

Lifer
Jan 29, 2004
13,679
10
81
Grew up with a mechanic father and spent many hours as a little kid watching and helping build/restore all his cars and repair family member's cars all the time. Basic maintenance like oil changes I just knew how to do like an infant learns to cry. I&#8217;m just an engineer type personality through and through; favorite toys for years where legos and this 160 in 1 electronics kit, I was a DOS 2.11/GWBASIC wiz around 8 and I always took everything apart (fondly remember trying to run dual processors on a 8088 XT board by sticking a second 8088 in the empty 8087 slot, hey I was 8).

I remember being given a junked 4 bbl carb one day when I had to stay with my dad at his work in an attempt to keep me occupied, about 6-7. Had it completely apart and back together in an hour much to their dismay. Pretty much grew up around grease, garages, and gasoline fumes, even though I wouldn&#8217;t tap into that experience until much later.

It was because of that I wasn't interested in cars at all when I got older, I was into electronics, computers, programming and didn't really care for car stuff because I was around it so much that I took it for granted. But after I was older and had been driving for a while in a plain jane car and realized how much of a douche people can be just because their car is faster or more nicer, I started yearning for some something shiny myself, and muscle like the cars I rode in before I could drive (or reach the pedals even) became first on the list.

On top of that, my interest in computers for the sake of computers faded, as I wanted to DO SOMETHING USEFUL *with* computers (eg: embedded control systems), and cars today are all computer.... thus a convergence occurred. And as always what started out as a simple material obsession or envy turned into a legit money eating personal passion.

Manuals. I always had my nose buried in manuals to something, whether it was a repair manual for an engine or those boxed MS/IBM binders with DOS manuals that came with old computers back in the day. I always loved the exploded diagrams of the internals.

Pretty much once you learn ONE of ANY kind of engineering discipline, be it computers, cars, whatever, learning others is pretty easy when you have a natural tendency to understand how things work. Think about how you learned how to use a computer. The biggest thing that holds people back is fear. Fear of breaking it, fear of not being able to put it back together, fear of getting dirty. Screw it, dig in and figure it later.

I think many people see stuff they don't understand as some kind of fragile princess and they don't want to risk making a mess of it or getting things ugly. Trust me, no matter how ghetto you think are trying to work on your own car for the first time, or how scared you are of beating on something with a big f**king hammer on your pristine clean shiny pride and joy, or how wrong it seems to use a nasty 2x4 to pry on the engine or suspension in your delicate $30,000 piece of "advanced technology": It's already been done somewhere in a profressional shop by someone with 30 years experience and every tool known to man. That includes YOUR car at some time when you pay someone else, and what you didn't know didn't hurt then, and it won't hurt when you do it yourself. Anything can be fixed if you break something; it just might cost a little more money for a lesson learned, that's all.
 
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StageLeft

No Lifer
Sep 29, 2000
70,150
5
0
The biggest thing that holds people back is fear. Fear of breaking it, fear of not being able to put it back together, fear of getting dirty. Screw it, dig in and figure it later.
I agree with this. And I try to remind myself of it constantly when working on the house and doing things well above tasks like repainting the living room.
 

BlackTigers

Diamond Member
Jan 15, 2006
4,491
2
71
lack of funds, and a wrench is what showed me how cars worked.

i couldnt afford to have shops fix my car, so i dove into it myself.
 

exdeath

Lifer
Jan 29, 2004
13,679
10
81
The way to overcome that fear is to understand what you fear and realize that fear in and of itself *is* the knowledge you don't think you have. Many people might brave doing brakes or oil changes, but a timing belt intimidates them. Why? They know it can damage the engine if they don't have it timed right. Well there you go. By knowing what happens when you do it wrong, and why, you know how to do it correctly. ;)

When in doubt do it anyway and just double check everything by hand first before you crank it. If you put it back, it's back, and not going anywhere. It's not going to just mysteriously fail because you disturbed it or left a clean spot where you touched it. Machines are made to come apart and go back together, it's not like you're breaking a piece of china and gluing it back together and it won't be the same again.
 
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exdeath

Lifer
Jan 29, 2004
13,679
10
81
Some people are also put off by some of the... shall we say "techniques". I mean who thinks about going to town on the engine bay of their new BMW with a rotted 2x4 and some rusty bailing wire? It's unimagineable, and lack of imagination and will to get it done results in "I don't know how to do it". The mechanics at the dealer do the same thing, they don't have a silk coated levitation device either; whatever gets the job done, esp. if it saves a few hours off the book. It's a dirty job.
 
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zerocool84

Lifer
Nov 11, 2004
36,041
472
126
You guys that had someone to teach you are lucky. I learned from reading manuals and the internet.
 

jlee

Lifer
Sep 12, 2001
48,518
223
106
I learned some from my uncle, some from Haynes manuals, and mostly from the internet.

Some people are also put off by some of the... shall we say "techniques". I mean who thinks about going to town on the engine bay of their new BMW with a rotted 2x4 and some rusty bailing wire? It's unimagineable, and lack of imagination and will to get it done results in "I don't know how to do it". The mechanics at the dealer do the same thing, they don't have a silk coated levitation device either; whatever gets the job done, esp. if it saves a few hours off the book. It's a dirty job.

Heh I couldn't get the axle nut off my MR2...I asked a shop about it and said they only thing they would do is put a bigger bar on it.

So I did. Two broken 1/2" breaker bars and a nice 3/4" (which didn't break) later, I was in business. :D

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