00:00
WATD presents John Paul, The Car Doctor, All Things Automotive.
00:08
Call or text 7-8-1-837-4900.
00:14
Now, here's John Paul, The Car Doctor.
00:21
Good Sunday morning everyone and welcome to another edition of the Car Doctor program
00:26
My name's John Paul, The Car Doctor here to help you with your car problems
00:29
and this is where we talk about all kinds of interesting things.
00:33
And we have a very interesting guest with us today.
00:35
We have Charles Sandville, the humble mechanic.
00:38
Charles, good morning and welcome to the Car Doctor program.
00:43
Appreciate you having me.
00:44
Hope everybody's been awesome today.
00:47
It's one of those days in New England.
00:49
It's started off nice.
00:54
It's a good day to be here.
00:56
Let's talk a little bit about you.
00:59
You originally didn't start as a mechanic, right?
01:04
So I have had the fortune or misfortune to have had several terrible jobs.
01:13
Some great ones too though.
01:15
So I actually kind of found my way into being a technician
01:21
after working a series of really crappy retail jobs
01:25
that I think most of us have probably had to suffer through,
01:29
working some pretty bad retail job,
01:31
finding my way into car sales, which was a very short stint.
01:36
But what that led me to was meeting a handful of guys
01:39
that went to an automotive tech school nearby.
01:43
And I was like, well, that's kind of fun.
01:45
I wasn't like a deeply passionate car person
01:49
as much as I was a kind of person and really like growing up.
01:53
The kid that was the kid that took everything apart
01:56
to try to figure out how it worked
01:58
and had medium to poor success putting back together
02:02
at least early on in my career.
02:04
And so, yeah, you know, finding that path of becoming a technician
02:11
was I want to say I stumbled into it
02:13
because it really wasn't that simple, I guess.
02:16
But I did kind of stumble into it
02:18
and found that I really enjoyed fixing things
02:22
and went to tech school, trained with Volkswagen for a few months
02:26
and then packed up and moved to a place that I'd never been before
02:30
to do a job I'd never done before.
02:33
That sounds pretty exciting.
02:35
That almost sounds like when I got married,
02:38
when I was in my early 20s,
02:40
I gave my two weeks notice just before I was going to go on my honeymoon
02:45
to start a new job as a new mechanic somewhere.
02:48
So no stress there, you know, new wedding, new wife, new job.
02:52
So same kind of idea.
02:53
And you worked as a tech for what, 15 or 20 years?
02:58
Yeah, I worked as a dealer for right around 15 years,
03:01
same dealer I had, you know, such a wonderful fortune
03:07
of landing at a really great dealership that was pretty new.
03:12
I think they'd only been open about six months,
03:14
give or take when I started.
03:17
And I started with another group of guys that were all really fresh
03:22
right out of basically the same school that I had just wrapped up at.
03:26
And so there was, I don't know, seven of us.
03:29
It was about half the shop.
03:30
So yeah, probably about seven of us that all kind of came up together
03:33
learning how to fix VWs.
03:35
And this was back in 2004.
03:38
So it was a really cool time in the VW space to be a new guy.
03:43
I don't know about being a veteran might have,
03:45
might have not been quite as great,
03:47
but this was right when the Torag, the Peyton, the W8 Passat
03:54
was still pretty new at the time.
03:56
I think those came out the year, model year before,
03:58
but the Mark IV R32, all these cars were brand new.
04:03
And what that really brought for me was a group of people that worked
04:09
with me that didn't really want to dive into the brand new stuff.
04:14
And me coming along, not knowing like you weren't supposed to not
04:18
want to work on anything.
04:20
You were supposed to only do the things that you wanted to do.
04:23
So I kind of positioned myself as the kid that didn't care about
04:29
what he was working on just wanted to learn and wanted to fix
04:32
the car that was in his day.
04:34
So for a time, really, I was the one working on the majority of the Torag,
04:40
the lot of the Peyton, and at the time it probably was a bit frustrating
04:47
because nobody knew about these cars.
04:50
The clients didn't know how to use the features in the cars.
04:53
The tech didn't know the technology because it was all brand new.
04:56
And even the technical support was pretty limited at the time.
05:00
We were all kind of learning together.
05:02
And as I can now look back at it, it was such an amazing, fortunate
05:07
thing for me because I was sort of trial by fire, right?
05:11
And I think that forced me into being a much better technician
05:17
than had I come in with no new cars, no new technologies,
05:22
just kind of learning the old stuff from the old timers.
05:25
And yeah, I'm thankful for it.
05:27
And it worked out pretty well.
05:28
It got to the point where I was making a ton of money doing mostly warranty work
05:32
on cars that nobody else wanted to work on.
05:34
Well, and I think that's where when we go a little bit further into this,
05:40
the idea that maybe not everyone is getting into this trade,
05:46
but it actually makes the people that are getting into the trade
05:49
that much more valuable and that much more likely to be paid better to do it.
05:53
Now, you said you went to trade school.
05:55
Was it like a UTI kind of place?
05:58
Yep, I went to the UTI campus in Glendale Heights, Illinois,
06:01
which is now the Lyle campus.
06:03
And then at the time, Volkswagen had a specific like VW training program
06:10
that was sort of curated through UTI.
06:13
And so I went right from UTI immediately to Volkswagen Academy,
06:17
which was kind of on the other side of the business park.
06:20
And then it was so funny because I was local, right?
06:24
I grew up like 40 minutes, well, probably more like an hour
06:27
from where this campus was.
06:29
And when talking to the recruiter, I was like, hey, man, like, you know,
06:34
I live here, all my family's here, all my wife's family's here.
06:37
It'd be awesome if we could stay.
06:38
He's like, well, you got about a 50-50 shot.
06:40
And like the Chicagoland area is pretty big.
06:43
So there's a lot of Volkswagen dealerships in the area.
06:45
And, man, I'll tell you, I can remember just so vividly
06:48
the first day of Volkswagen Academy, the instructor,
06:53
you know, you're kind of doing your casual introductions
06:55
and meeting everybody.
06:57
There's a group of like 12 of us, I think, in the class,
07:01
And he's like, all right, so who's local?
07:03
And like me and three or four other people raised our hand.
07:05
He's like, who's trying to stay local?
07:07
And me and one other dude raised our hand.
07:09
He's like, all right, so here's the deal.
07:11
You want to stay in the Chicago area, you can.
07:14
There's exactly one dealership that generally will hire you.
07:18
And there's the downtown Chicago dealership
07:21
where your parts department is like two blocks over.
07:24
Your parking lot for getting cars is two blocks the other way.
07:27
And the advisors are in another building.
07:29
I was like, oh, well, that sounds terrible.
07:31
Not to mention I didn't want to commute to downtown Chicago every day.
07:35
So after much deliberation, my wife and I,
07:39
for lack of a better term, threw a dart at the map
07:42
and landed in central North Carolina, a place we'd never been to.
07:46
The first time I was in the state of North Carolina
07:48
was when I flew down for my job interview.
07:50
I flew down, got the job, rented an apartment,
07:52
and two weeks later, we got a moving van loaded up
07:59
And then you did that for about 15 years
08:02
and then you started the whole social media thing
08:06
and you have over a million subscribers now, right?
08:09
Yeah, yeah, it's pretty cool.
08:11
There was actually a few years of overlap
08:13
where I was doing both as kind of two full-time jobs
08:18
which I don't necessarily recommend in the during period
08:22
but the end result worked out pretty well.
08:24
So the way this all came about was this was probably like 2010, 2011
08:29
and I've been working at the dealership, I guess,
08:33
at this point six, seven years now
08:35
and I'm looking at the terrain
08:37
and we're seeing the emergence of Facebook becoming really popular
08:41
and Instagram is fresh.
08:43
And I'm looking around and I see everything car-related
08:47
and the only thing I'm seeing is,
08:49
hey, come leave this new car on a really good deal
08:52
or here's a coupon for an oil change
08:54
and I was like, man, there's so much more that we do
08:58
than can be whittled down to a coupon for an oil change
09:01
or a lease deal on a car, right?
09:03
So I talked to my boss, I was like, hey,
09:06
I see an opportunity for us to share a little bit deeper
09:11
about what we do as a service department at the dealership
09:15
and I can't stress enough how great my dealership experience was.
09:18
Every day wasn't perfect and it had its frustration too
09:21
but overall it was really incredible.
09:23
We're such a different place
09:25
and it wouldn't be uncommon at all for you to walk through
09:29
any technicians there to walk through the waiting room
09:32
and say, oh, hey, Mrs. Jones, I haven't seen you in a year.
09:35
How are you? How's the kids? Whatever.
09:37
You see parents come in with the baby
09:39
and the next thing you know, they're seven
09:41
and then the next thing you know,
09:43
their older sibling is getting their first car.
09:45
So it was really cool, really special building that I worked on
09:49
and what that led me to was this mindset that we were different, right?
09:56
Everybody, every single person on the whole planet
09:58
that has ever known anyone with a car
10:02
probably has a bad mechanic story, right?
10:05
Got ripped off, got taken advantage of.
10:07
They didn't do the job that they said they were going to do all that stuff.
10:11
So because that was so different from what I was experiencing,
10:18
I was like, hey, we need to share this.
10:20
Like everybody that I worked with was a good dude, honest person.
10:25
Did we make mistakes? Of course we did.
10:27
Did stuff get broken? Absolutely.
10:29
Because that's what happens everywhere.
10:32
But at the end of the day, all of us really wanted to come in,
10:35
do our job, fix cars, get paid and go home, right?
10:39
And I wanted to share that story.
10:42
I wanted to share that not every tech is out there to rip you off.
10:45
Not every service department is out there to rip you off.
10:48
And I wanted to do it for the dealer
10:50
because I thought that just made sense, right?
10:53
So they let me do it.
10:55
They let me do it for like three weeks,
10:57
set up the Instagram account, set up the Facebook,
10:59
post some cool stuff that we're doing in the shop,
11:02
random tidbits about whatever just happened to be going on,
11:07
things that were great about a certain car,
11:09
things that maybe you wanted to be mindful of on a certain car.
11:13
And then, yeah, it was like two or three weeks later,
11:16
they called me in the office and they're like,
11:18
hey, we hired a company to do this.
11:20
So, you know, don't worry about it.
11:22
Give us passwords. I was like, wow, all right.
11:26
And so, you know, I sat on it for a while, man.
11:29
And like the thing that drove me nuts is that
11:31
everything I had said to them, I truly believe,
11:34
I still to this day believe that.
11:37
And it felt like there was still a story to tell, right?
11:40
There's still something to share.
11:42
And so I decided to just do it for myself.
11:46
And part of it was like, when someone tells you,
11:49
oh, you know, you'll never be successful at anything.
11:53
That was sort of a bit of motivation,
11:55
but I really just wanted to share with people like, hey,
11:58
here's some stuff I know about your car that you may not.
12:02
And I wanted to show people that there are good shops out there
12:06
that genuinely do care about you, care about your car,
12:10
and want to do a good job for you.
12:12
And so for, I don't know, two years probably
12:17
before I started making videos,
12:19
I was trying to figure all this stuff out, right?
12:22
Because, man, I didn't know what I was doing.
12:25
I didn't know, just like when I went to tech school,
12:28
I didn't know a single thing about fixing cars.
12:30
When I started on this journey,
12:32
I didn't know anything about anything internet related.
12:36
I didn't know anything about how to work a camera.
12:38
I didn't know anything about how to edit a video
12:40
when I eventually mustered up the courage to hit record
12:44
and watch myself talk to a little box in front of me.
12:49
And so it was a long journey at that point
12:52
because I legit had to learn every single piece of piece
12:57
because I didn't know anything.
12:59
But what that did for me is it allowed me to really suck
13:03
at all of it while nobody was watching
13:06
and nobody was paying attention.
13:08
So I'm thankful for that part of the journey
13:10
even though much like learning how to fix cars
13:12
on the hardest cars Volkswagen had had had at the time,
13:16
it was a lot of trial by fire there too,
13:21
And I think that helped me really hone my skills
13:26
without the pressure of needing to be perfect.
13:31
Yeah, well, I mean, is that saying,
13:33
don't let perfection get in the way of good?
13:37
Yeah, well, that's never been a problem for me
13:40
because I think this is good enough
13:42
and as long as the information is accurate,
13:44
I don't mind if I stumble or stutter
13:46
or maybe didn't get the color grading cropped quite right
13:51
As long as the message is clear, I was cool with it.
13:55
Yeah, I mean, people have said to me,
13:57
well, you're a broadcaster and a journalist.
13:59
I'm like, no, I talk about car stuff
14:02
and write about car stuff and used to fix broken cars.
14:06
But let me stop for a second.
14:11
And you ended up building a shop at your house
14:14
to do all this fun stuff, right?
14:17
Yeah, so a bit of the timeline is in late 2014,
14:22
I had met some other guys that like did car videos
14:26
as their full-time job.
14:28
And me being so naive about it,
14:30
I didn't even know that was a thing you could do, right?
14:33
And I was like, wow, that's awesome.
14:35
Like I'm writing all of this stuff down
14:40
in blog posts or whatever.
14:41
And I had been wanting to do videos for a while,
14:45
but the truth was I was scared to hit record.
14:48
And I didn't know what I was doing
14:50
as far as camera work or editing.
14:51
So it took me a while to get there.
14:53
But then I meet these guys that are like, yeah,
14:54
this is what we do full-time.
14:55
I was like, holy crap, that's awesome.
14:57
And so I took a couple stabs at it
15:00
and realized I could convey a message
15:02
that I was trying to convey so much faster
15:07
with more clarity and more contact in a video
15:12
than I could trying to write a coherent statement
15:18
on a website or whatever.
15:20
So late 2014, I kind of committed, okay,
15:23
we're going to give this video thing a crack
15:25
and see where it goes.
15:28
And it didn't go anywhere for a while.
15:34
And so it was so cool because I remember getting
15:37
like a random email that somebody saw the video that I did
15:42
and to give context of how long ago this was,
15:47
even though it doesn't feel like it was this long ago,
15:50
this video that I shot on how to use the Volkswagen jack
15:55
in the jack kit that comes with the car to change a tire,
15:59
I shot with my iPhone 3GS.
16:04
And this was before you could just jump on Amazon
16:07
and get like a little phone tripod mount.
16:11
So it's sitting on a tripod.
16:13
My wife is holding it on the tripod.
16:15
And it doesn't have audio enhancement, no microphone.
16:17
So I'm yelling as I'm trying to explain how to use this jack.
16:22
You know, like from a production standpoint,
16:24
the video is terrible.
16:26
But it delivered what it had intended to do, right?
16:28
It had intended to show people how to use this thing safely
16:31
because if you don't do it right,
16:33
it's a high risk piece of equipment.
16:36
And I got this email and it was like,
16:37
yo, I was, it probably didn't exactly say this.
16:39
It was just my memory of it.
16:41
Hey, I just want to tell you how much I appreciate that video.
16:43
I was stuck in a parking lot and I didn't know how to use everything.
16:46
So I YouTube it and your video came up
16:49
and I watched it and I was able to change my tire.
16:51
And I was like, holy crap, like something I did made
16:54
like a direct in the moment impact for somebody.
16:58
And that's incredible.
17:00
And so I then go look at the video and you know,
17:03
there's, I don't know, 50,000 views,
17:05
which was mental to me at the time
17:08
that that many people would watch the video of mine.
17:11
Maybe maybe it was 5000 views.
17:13
Honestly, it could have been could have been 12 views
17:15
and I would have been just as excited about it.
17:17
And I was like, okay, there's something here.
17:21
And I hammered the gas.
17:23
And so from late 2014 until early 2017,
17:29
I basically worked two full-time jobs.
17:32
I worked my dealership job.
17:34
And then I worked my internet job while having a newborn daughter
17:39
who was born in early 2015.
17:41
So it was, it was a full plate, right?
17:43
It was, it was a lot.
17:44
But the winding through that year and a half
17:48
or whatever period allowed me in mid 2017
17:53
to step away from my dealership job.
17:55
And I'm getting, I'm getting around to your question
17:59
It allowed me to step away from my dealership job.
18:01
So what I did was I was just working out
18:03
of the garage at my house,
18:04
which was an unconditioned,
18:08
like just a normal house garage,
18:10
a small two-car garage with a mid-rise lift.
18:14
And I did hundreds of videos out of this garage
18:17
just because that's what I had access to.
18:20
And then in 2019 it got to the point where I was like,
18:22
okay, we need to, if I want to do anything bigger
18:26
than I'm doing, I need more space.
18:28
And we looked at a ton of different stuff, right?
18:30
We looked at moving to a place
18:32
where we could build a giant shop.
18:34
I came dangerously close to renting a facility.
18:38
Not far from my house, which would have allowed me to do
18:41
everything I wanted to do.
18:43
But the main thing was they wouldn't allow me
18:45
to ever put like an open for business sign.
18:48
And with the forever unknown internet space,
18:54
I didn't want to commit to spending thousands of dollars
18:56
a month and not be able to work on client cars, right?
19:00
So paused on that, decided,
19:02
okay, we're just going to build a shop at the house
19:06
and they broke ground to add this shop
19:12
in late February of 2020.
19:16
And so two weeks after they start, world shuts down.
19:22
And it actually worked out awesome
19:25
because I had a catalog of travel on the books already
19:29
that I was going to be going a lot of this build.
19:32
And so thankfully I didn't travel.
19:35
So I was home for the whole thing,
19:37
was able to make some decisions.
19:39
The kind of decisions you don't know are like
19:41
challenging decisions until you're faced with making them
19:44
like, where do the light switches go?
19:46
Where are the outlets?
19:48
You know, which way do you want this door to open?
19:52
Do you want your office to have two windows or one?
19:55
I'm sitting in my office here.
19:56
The answer is two, by the way.
19:58
Do you want a bathroom with a shower
20:00
or do you want just a bath?
20:01
Like all these random decisions that are vital to the shop.
20:08
So I was home for the whole thing.
20:10
We had almost no disruption or delay in building.
20:14
There was one thing with the HVAC company,
20:16
but it was like a day late.
20:19
So it was no problem.
20:21
Talking to the contractor later that year,
20:24
so it was like October of 2020,
20:26
he's like, had you waited,
20:30
it would have cost you about 40% more than it did.
20:33
I'm sure everybody remembers that late 2020
20:37
and prices of everything skyrocket, right?
20:39
Home Depot, everything at Home Depot tripled in price,
20:42
especially things like lumber.
20:43
So we really hit the jackpot.
20:45
And yeah, now I have this really nice shop with two lifts,
20:48
air conditioning, all the tools that a fellow technician
20:54
could ever dream of adding to that collection
20:57
sometimes more than I care for.
20:59
But yeah, it's great.
21:01
Now I have enough space.
21:04
Before we let you go, a couple more questions.
21:07
Is it worth becoming a mechanic technician these days?
21:12
So only you can answer that for yourself.
21:15
I do genuinely believe, though, for the right people,
21:19
there is insane opportunities in the automotive industry.
21:22
It's in a constant state of flux.
21:24
It always has been, it always will be.
21:26
There's always going to be opportunities.
21:28
It may look different than, I won't say may,
21:31
it will look different than it did for me when I started.
21:35
But you can have a great career, make a great living.
21:39
And truly one of my favorite parts is actually help people.
21:44
And this industry is not for everybody and that's okay.
21:49
And there are plenty of places where I would tell you
21:52
you shouldn't work, but there's a lot of really great shops
21:56
and that's just in the being a line mechanic space.
21:59
There's opportunities that I'll tell you,
22:01
I don't even know about that would be incredible for a lot of people.
22:06
Yeah, no, I totally agree.
22:08
And you did a video about a tool cart
22:13
and basically not having to mortgage your life away to the tool truck guy.
22:18
You don't need to spend, you don't need a wall of tools
22:23
to be a working technician.
22:27
So 100%, one of the negatives about starting as a technician is
22:32
unlike every other job in a shop or in a dealership,
22:36
they only have to come in like with a smile on their face
22:39
and maybe a pen, right?
22:41
As a technician, you're expected to come in
22:43
with every tool you need to do the job.
22:45
And so the dealer I worked at had asked me a couple years after I left
22:50
like, what can we do to stand out to recruit these young technicians?
22:53
I'm like, why don't you guys put up 1500 bucks, give them a tool cart
22:57
that if you want to put a, hey, you got to work here for six months
23:00
stipulation on it, fine.
23:02
Give them a tool cart.
23:03
They're not going to remanufacture a new Volkswagen with it,
23:08
but they're going to be able to come in
23:10
and do some basic stuff on day one
23:12
and you're to a dealership to recruit or hire someone $1,500
23:17
is pickle to a kid that just got out of tech school
23:20
and spent $30,000 or whatever it even is today
23:23
and is making the least amount of money in their career
23:26
as they probably will $1,500 is a ton of money.
23:29
And so that kind of kicked off a like,
23:32
a really interesting trajectory for me of like,
23:35
you can spend a limited amount of money
23:38
by tools that are good enough with a lifetime warranty
23:43
And then you can do kind of what I did.
23:45
I started off with all craftsman tools from like the 90s
23:49
and then upgraded when I went and where I either wanted to
23:52
because buying tools was fun or where I needed to
23:55
because the craftsman wasn't good enough.
23:58
And then I just brought those tools that I didn't use home
24:01
or kept the backup at the shop and it worked out really well.
24:04
We have such an amazing tool-dying opportunity
24:06
in today's day and age that wasn't there
24:09
when we were first buying our tool.
24:12
Yeah, no, just last year or the year before
24:16
I was tinkering with my wife's Volkswagen
24:19
and I needed triple squares.
24:21
And I stopped at the, I was leaving where I lived
24:25
and stopped at a snap-on truck and asked them
24:28
and I don't know a set of triple squares
24:30
or 200 bucks or something.
24:32
And I went down to Harbor Freight,
24:34
bought a perfectly adequate set for like $30.
24:38
And they work fine.
24:40
And if you break one, you want to return it?
24:43
Cool, if you break one, did you want to buy a whole other set?
24:46
Yeah, and if you break one twice
24:50
and you go, you know, maybe I will get this size
24:53
and snap on a Mac or Mac or something
24:56
that maybe it is a little bit more rugged,
24:59
but it did everything I needed to do.
25:01
And I think that video combined with the idea
25:05
that you can make a good living and not go crazy
25:11
And like you said, you know, buying tools is fun
25:13
and it's somewhat addictive and, you know,
25:15
even doing home improvement projects.
25:17
It's like, oh, here's a new project.
25:19
Gotta buy a new tool, you know, kind of thing.
25:21
Oh, I love that. I love and hate that at the same time.
25:26
You have a million subscribers.
25:29
You're like everybody who does what you do now
25:35
you seem to be workaholics.
25:37
I had Brian Lones, who I've known for 10 years on the program.
25:41
He's a NHRA announcer for Fox.
25:46
He's a lead announcer for Fox.
25:48
He ran the website bank shift with David Freiberger.
25:52
They started it together back in 2010, I think.
25:55
You know, he does like, he has like five jobs going
26:03
Would you put yourself in that sort of workaholic category?
26:09
I would like to not put myself in that category,
26:12
but I don't know what it is about the majority
26:16
of the people that I've met that were like good technicians
26:19
seem to have a strong case of ADD
26:23
and aren't settling for just one thing, right?
26:27
There's always some random thing going on
26:30
that you're either side hustling to make a couple bucks
26:33
or doing as a hobby, like I'm sitting here looking
26:36
at this 3D printer that I have right here
26:38
that I'm actively learning as much as I possibly can
26:41
about among like 10,000 other little knick-knacky things.
26:44
So, yeah, look, I wasn't good at a lot of things,
26:50
especially growing up, but what I found
26:52
when I got my first like on-the-payroll job
26:55
is that I was actually pretty good at working.
26:57
Whatever it was, I found a way to get at it.
27:00
So you showed up every day with a good attitude?
27:03
I'll tell you, man.
27:05
The good attitude thing,
27:08
I don't know why it's so lost on so many people,
27:11
but that's a difference maker, right?
27:14
I was involved in hiring a lot of the technicians
27:16
that started after me,
27:18
and that was the thing we would always tell you,
27:20
like, if you don't know how to fix cars,
27:22
that's totally fine.
27:23
We can teach you how to do that,
27:25
but we can't teach you not to suck.
27:27
So come in, have a good attitude,
27:29
and you will set yourself apart from somebody that doesn't.
27:32
And I've witnessed it time and time and time again
27:35
of the tech that comes in, you know, ready to go,
27:38
excited versus the guy that'll sit on his toolbox
27:42
waiting for the great job to come in
27:45
because he didn't want to do the crusty job that,
27:48
like, let's be honest, nobody wanted to do it,
27:50
but it had to get done.
27:51
Yeah, no, absolutely.
27:54
In the YouTube world, do you have favorite YouTubers
27:58
that are in sort of the same space?
28:01
So this is going to probably surprise a lot of people.
28:04
So I do because I have, like, you know,
28:07
what started out as kind of colleague
28:09
but became personal friends of mine.
28:11
I have a handful of groups of people
28:13
that I consider personal friends, you know,
28:15
Paul from Deutsche Autoparts, Eric Cargai,
28:18
Engineering Explained, Chris Vicks,
28:20
all personal friends of mine.
28:21
And I consume almost zero automotive YouTube
28:26
because after working on cars all day
28:30
and dealing with my own YouTube, you know, Internet space,
28:33
I don't really want to think about cars
28:35
when I'm, like, winding down, chilling in the evening.
28:39
I want to do something else.
28:40
So, yeah, I don't consume a lot,
28:42
but I'm very thankful to have a group of friends
28:46
that are also in the space that, you know,
28:48
we can share ideas, positive and commiserate
28:51
when it's time to complain about stuff.
28:54
Yeah, no, you know, talking to Brian Lones a couple weeks ago.
28:58
I said, what do you watch on YouTube?
29:00
And he says, you know, at the end of five days
29:04
on the road at Dragstrips, he said,
29:07
I watch them make pancakes in Thailand.
29:12
And I'm like, what?
29:13
And he goes, he says it's so completely different.
29:17
It's like the world's best pancake stand or something.
29:20
And he said it's just, I don't know, I find it fascinating.
29:23
They come in and they have nothing set up.
29:25
And 20 minutes later, there's a whole little mobile restaurant
29:28
and they're making pancakes, you know, so.
29:31
I love that. Yeah, I watch more like,
29:34
well, I've been on a King of the Hill kick lately
29:36
because of the reboot of the series,
29:38
but I watch more like movie breakdowns
29:41
and stuff like that than I do anything on YouTube.
29:44
Just like that you said, like it's so different
29:47
than what I do day to day, but, you know,
29:49
you also want to try and like learn from other creators
29:52
and what they do and what they do well
29:54
and what works for them.
29:55
Because I think that's how you make better videos.
29:57
I'm amazed at, you know, I watch probably too much of it,
30:02
but you know, I look at people like Derek Bieri,
30:04
who has Vice Grip Garage,
30:06
who pretty much films everything on an iPhone.
30:08
And I'm amazed at how well that comes out.
30:11
And then I look at, you know, Sarah Entuned,
30:14
who has multiple camera shots set up
30:17
and I'm like, and is so fussy about it.
30:20
And, you know, and then there's the people in between,
30:23
you know, Eric at South Main Auto,
30:25
who, you know, I love how he ends his video with,
30:28
you know, if I can do it, you can do it kind of thing.
30:31
And, you know, I think all of these stuff
30:33
that you do, stuff that they do,
30:35
it gives regular people and technicians
30:39
a place to learn something that they didn't know before.
30:43
Yep, in fact, in, well, three minutes ago,
30:46
because I wasn't watching the clock,
30:48
we had a video that just launched about
30:50
checking timing chains on your TSI.
30:53
And, you know, it's not going to be a video
30:55
that pops out a million views on day one,
30:58
but it's going to be a video that people search
31:00
because they're worried about the timing chains
31:02
on their two liter golf.
31:04
And it takes both to me, right,
31:06
the big projects, like we just wrapped up this
31:08
crazy imported Volkswagen Lupo VR5 swap.
31:13
And it was interesting and different
31:15
and different challenges for me.
31:16
And now, you know, I'm thankful to get back
31:18
to kind of the roots of the channel of
31:20
here's the Volkswagen problem.
31:22
Here's how you find it.
31:23
Here's how you avoid it.
31:24
And you should do that.
31:25
Otherwise, you're going to be rebuilding your engine,
31:27
which nobody really wants to do.
31:29
Oh, well, I think one of your videos
31:32
you told me in a five-seller Volkswagen,
31:37
if you need to replace the vacuum pump,
31:39
you don't have to take the transmission out.
31:41
You take it all apart and then assemble it
31:43
without having to move the transmission out of the way.
31:47
And that's saved me a whole lot of time.
31:50
It's something that when I looked up the shop,
31:52
you know, shop manual and looked it up and I said,
31:55
you know, step two, remove transaxle.
31:58
Wait, it's going to be a better way.
32:03
So Charles, I want to thank you for taking time
32:05
out of your Sunday morning and joining us
32:07
on the Car Doctor radio program.
32:09
It has been a delight.
32:11
Thanks for having me.
32:13
Have an awesome day, everybody.
32:15
Take care, Charles.
32:16
That was Charles Sandville, the humble mechanic.
32:18
Great guy has some really good content.
32:21
Build some incredible things.
32:24
And down the earth guy.
32:27
You know, on his website, he says,
32:30
my name is Charles.
32:31
I'm a Volkswagen technician.
32:32
I've been a mechanic.
32:33
I've been a monkey car enthusiast for many years.
32:35
I started this site mainly to connect with my customers
32:38
in a way that I can't in the shop.
32:40
However, it's my hope.
32:41
It can also serve as a community forum to share information
32:44
and impart a little wisdom and have a little fun.
32:50
Let's take a break.
32:52
This is the Car Doctor program.
32:53
You're listening on 959WATD.
32:56
We'll be right back.
32:58
Even car geeks and do-it-yourselfers
33:00
will be on AAA to give them extra peace of mind on the road.
33:03
AAA offers 24-7 roadside assistance,
33:06
whether you're in your own vehicle, a friend's car,
33:09
Combine that with great rates of insurance,
33:11
hotel, gas, and buying savings,
33:13
and discounts on 8,700 brands,
33:16
and you're covered on and off the road.
33:18
Get a special membership offer today
33:20
at aaa.com slash joy.
33:23
That's aaa.com slash joy.
33:29
It's Paul Kabilian from Kabilian's Car Care
33:31
at 104 Mataquisa Street in Pembroke.
33:33
Vacation season is here,
33:35
and the time to take care of your car is now
33:37
before those road trips.
33:39
Kabilian's is always here to make sure you're road-ready.
33:42
To schedule an appointment, call 781-834-6558.
33:46
Find us at 104 Mataquisa Street in Pembroke.
33:49
Or find us online at kabilianscarcare.com.
33:52
Thanks a million, Mr. Kabilian!
33:56
Someone ran a shopping cart in my car
33:58
when I left it unattended.
33:59
Auto Shine Auto Body.
34:00
You bend it, they mend it.
34:01
My kid didn't see that giant telephone pole
34:03
when he opened the door.
34:06
Auto Shine Auto Body.
34:07
You bend it, they mend it.
34:08
The chuckle head behind me was texting
34:10
and driving, and now I'm re-rended.
34:12
Auto Shine Auto Body.
34:13
You bend it, they mend it.
34:14
I don't even know how this happened,
34:16
but look, my bumper is dented.
34:17
Auto Shine Auto Body.
34:18
You bend it, they mend it.
34:20
Your buddy just had a great experience
34:22
Who was that he recommended?
34:23
Auto Shine Auto Body.
34:24
You bend it, they mend it.
34:27
Auto Shine Auto Body
34:28
has been providing friendly,
34:29
fast, professional,
34:30
and affordable services
34:32
Auto Shine Auto Body
34:33
is a gold certified auto body shop
34:35
with locations in Abington
34:37
Whether you're using
34:38
your insurance company
34:39
or paying out of pocket,
34:40
Auto Shine Auto Body
34:41
will work with you.
34:43
at autoshineautobody.com.
34:45
Auto Shine Auto Body.
34:46
You bend it, they mend it.
34:49
it's Quinn Kelly reminding you
34:50
to tune in Sunday night
34:51
at 5 for the South Shore's
34:53
first voice in sports talk radio,
34:55
the Sports Exchange.
34:57
of local high school action
34:58
as well as a relatable voice
34:59
on all things Boston Pro Sports,
35:01
we've got you covered
35:02
live at 5 every Sunday night.
35:04
Have a question for our host,
35:05
Miss Last Week Show,
35:06
or just want to share
35:07
a great sports story
35:08
you can find us on Twitter
35:12
mark your calendar folks
35:13
and we'll see you Sunday night
35:14
at 5 for the Sports Exchange
35:19
Honored with a Lifetime Achievement Award
35:22
from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration.
35:27
but Car Doctor on 959 WATD.
35:35
to the Car Doctor Program
35:39
Want to talk about the car
35:40
that got me around this week
35:41
and also, you know,
35:43
some of our advertisers,
35:44
Auto Shine and Cabillions,
35:46
love to get them on the program.
35:48
So if you guys are listening,
35:56
Let your salesperson know.
35:57
Love to have you on the program.
35:58
Talk about what you do,
35:59
sort of like what Charles does
36:01
in his now internet garage.
36:06
You know, some of the things
36:08
some of the challenges you face,
36:09
especially in the auto body business
36:11
or repair business,
36:13
I think it could be
36:14
a great little segment
36:16
to do on the program.
36:18
Car that got me around
36:19
was the Toyota Highlander
36:20
but not just a regular Highlander.
36:22
This is the Grand Highlander
36:24
and it happens to be a hybrid.
36:26
So sort of super-sized
36:29
I've always liked the Highlander
36:33
It's always been a good,
36:39
it's a good family SUV
36:41
providing that your family isn't too big.
36:43
But with the Grand Highlander,
36:45
Toyota aimed for something more.
36:47
I think it's a vehicle that
36:50
retains what it's always been
36:52
but it added something
36:55
and that was more space.
36:57
You know, there are
36:59
Highlander-sized SUVs
37:01
that have three rows of seats
37:03
and the third row is
37:08
can you squish adults back there?
37:10
Well, they'd be comfortable, not really.
37:14
The Grand Highlander,
37:17
They put comfortable space,
37:18
they put three rows in.
37:20
I was sitting in the third row this morning
37:22
just trying it out,
37:23
just seeing what it was like.
37:24
Yeah, it's pretty comfortable.
37:27
You got to flip the second
37:29
captain's chair row
37:31
forward and, you know,
37:32
kind of crawl in the back.
37:34
But it's not super-
37:39
So the Grand Highlander's purpose
37:43
It's bigger than the old one.
37:44
It's a longer wheelbase.
37:45
It's a little boxier.
37:47
It maximizes volume.
37:49
It's, again, it's super-sized.
37:52
It isn't just a stretched out version.
37:55
They really kind of, I think,
37:58
thought it through.
38:01
We'll get into the less-than-perfect part.
38:03
The harder to this review is
38:05
the available Hybrid Max powertrain.
38:07
The base Hybrid option
38:09
gives you really good fuel efficiency.
38:15
It's a 2.4-liter turbocharged hybrid engine.
38:18
It makes 360-ish horsepower, I think,
38:21
and 400 foot-pounds of torque.
38:24
It's got plenty of power.
38:26
It doesn't just merge into the highway.
38:29
It just, you nail the throttle.
38:31
It's, I had a run from here
38:33
up to Iannis yesterday
38:36
Merging out on the highway
38:38
with Saturday morning traffic.
38:40
People leaving the Cape.
38:42
No problems whatsoever.
38:44
It feels as good as a V6
38:48
It can tow 5,000 pounds
38:50
according to the MSRP sticker,
38:53
Monroni sticker thing.
38:57
EPA says 27 miles per gallon combined.
39:01
I've been driving, and again,
39:03
my driving isn't like it used to be
39:05
when I used to commute 100 miles or so
39:07
back and forth to work.
39:09
I commute 12 steps to
39:11
where my desk, my computer are these days.
39:15
But according to the digital readout,
39:18
30 miles per gallon.
39:20
Pretty good for a big vehicle.
39:23
Again, the real strength of this vehicle
39:28
Third row, it's not an afterthought.
39:30
It's generally usable space
39:33
for adults capable for, you know,
39:36
going for a long ride with adults
39:38
and not having them complain too much, I guess.
39:41
The second row is available
39:43
with captain's chairs,
39:45
which slide and tilt for easy access.
39:48
The second row seats are real comfortable.
39:50
They're real good seats.
39:53
This is the first car my wife actually liked,
39:56
the passenger seat.
39:58
She is very fussy about short seats
40:01
that don't give good under thigh support.
40:03
She liked this a lot.
40:05
The cabin is thoughtfully designed.
40:07
It's got plenty of cup holders
40:09
and bins and storage
40:11
and all that kind of stuff.
40:13
The dashboard layout is clean.
40:15
It's pretty user friendly,
40:17
but also it can be frustrating.
40:21
This Toyota lacks, you know,
40:23
real knobs for some stuff.
40:25
The climate control does have
40:27
real knobs and buttons,
40:29
but to go in and like change
40:35
it becomes challenging a little bit.
40:38
Sometimes you have to go
40:40
what seems like a couple screens deep.
40:42
Just too much distraction.
40:44
That wouldn't be good
40:47
if they could think through that a little bit more.
40:50
All kind of premium Lexus-y
40:53
like soft touch interiors.
40:56
You know, this could easily be a Lexus.
40:59
Wouldn't be hard to confuse it.
41:01
On the road, the experience is what most people want.
41:04
It's comfortable, especially families.
41:07
It's not a sports SUV.
41:12
Soaks up the bumps nice.
41:14
It doesn't feel too floaty-boaty kind of thing.
41:17
It feels confident, I guess.
41:19
Steering is light. It's accurate.
41:21
It's still a large vehicle
41:23
when I went to Home Depot yesterday.
41:25
The parking lot at this Home Depot
41:27
was they tried to put
41:29
as many spaces in as possible.
41:31
It's pretty easy to get around.
41:34
It's still pretty easy to use.
41:36
But it's a big vehicle.
41:38
You got to remember that when you look behind you,
41:40
there's a whole lot of vehicle back there.
41:42
The Toyota Grand Highlander,
41:44
especially in this hybrid max layout,
41:48
they did a really good job.
41:51
I think it meets modern family needs
41:53
that can tow a 5,000-pound boat or camping trailer.
41:57
It comes equipped with what they call the utility hitch.
42:01
So it's kind of a class 2 smaller hitch looking thing,
42:05
which I think is really just made for bike racks
42:07
and stuff like that.
42:08
I was a little surprised to see it.
42:10
Again, 30-ish miles per gallon in my driving.
42:14
I think it's Toyota trustworthy, sensible,
42:18
belt and suspender kind of vehicle.
42:21
It's not just a great hybrid SUV.
42:24
It's kind of just a great SUV.
42:26
If you're looking for your family that needs
42:30
to carry more than just a couple people around
42:33
and you're tired of vehicles that are getting
42:37
less than 20 miles per gallon,
42:39
take a look at the Grand Highlander hybrid.
42:42
I think it's the new benchmark of 3-row hybrids
42:45
that, you know, 3-row SUVs that just happen to be
42:48
a hybrid that gets 30 miles per gallon.
42:50
This top-of-the-line version, not cheap,
42:52
62 grand, but the average price of new car state,
42:58
I read something the other day that said
43:00
the average car payment is $900 a month.
43:03
Not in my lifetime.
43:05
But, you know, that's what people are paying.
43:07
If you want to join us, our phone number is
43:12
We can talk to you about whatever's on your mind
43:15
in the automotive world.
43:17
We're happy to talk to you about it.
43:21
Someone wrote to me and said,
43:23
I've been looking at a certified pre-owned 2022 Lexus,
43:26
as it turns out, sort of Toyota-ish.
43:29
RX 350 with the V6 engine.
43:31
As you know, this was the last year this engine was included
43:34
in the RX 350 before it was discontinued
43:37
for the Turbo Charge 4.
43:39
I had the impression the V6 was a terrific engine,
43:42
dependable, durable, powerful.
43:44
What's your opinion of each?
43:46
Bottom line is, this person says I'm 73 years old.
43:49
I'm looking for a comfortable, quiet ride
43:51
after driving a 2010 Honda Civic for years.
43:56
The four-cylinder engine performs good.
43:58
It's 275 horsepower.
44:00
The V6 engine and the older models produced almost,
44:03
you know, not much more than that, 295 horsepower.
44:07
I do think the V6 engine,
44:09
whether it was in a Toyota or a Lexus,
44:12
was one of the best engines in that lineup.
44:15
Although the engine can have issues,
44:18
the V6 engine with proper care can last a really long time.
44:22
And I think after driving the Honda Civic,
44:24
this Lexus will feel like a really nice transition
44:28
from everything from, you know, how it drives
44:31
to the ride that's going to return, you know,
44:34
but also, you know, you say you're 73.
44:39
You know, getting in and out of an SUV
44:41
is a whole lot easier than getting in and out of a Honda Civic.
44:44
Something to think about.
44:49
Someone wrote to me and said,
44:54
You said to use Barkeeper's Friend or Bon Ami Cleaner
44:58
to clean a really dirty windshield.
45:00
I have found that glass top stove range cleaner
45:04
gets windshields really clean.
45:06
Never tried that, I suppose.
45:08
Similar, you know, if you have a glass top stove,
45:11
you know, it's a little gritty like the Bon Ami stuff
45:15
or the Barkeeper's Friend.
45:17
So I don't think there's anything worse than doing that.
45:21
So I'm driving with a dirty windshield.
45:27
A person wrote to me and said,
45:28
have you encountered a problem with the 2025 Kia Sorento plug-in hybrid
45:32
at first start-up and drive?
45:34
We are annoyed from the rear of the car
45:36
under the rear portion of the vehicle.
45:41
We call it crickets or a percolating sound.
45:44
It's mostly in the morning now, almost all day.
45:47
We're back to the dealer and they stated some packing items
45:50
were left underneath the vehicle.
45:51
That's a little scary.
45:52
It's still happening.
45:53
Please let me know if you or any of your community knows about this.
45:59
And the only issue I'm aware of is some noisy rear shocks,
46:02
especially over bumpy roads, not crickets though.
46:07
I will say I was in a 2025 Ford Explorer,
46:12
which is generally a nice vehicle.
46:15
I was parked to answer a phone call.
46:17
And after a couple of minutes,
46:18
there was more weird sounds coming from this car.
46:22
Clicking, popping, you know,
46:25
not just the catalytic converter,
46:28
heat shield expanding and contracting.
46:31
There was solenoids and things clicking and snapping
46:35
and making all kinds of noise.
46:37
Probably is pretty normal.
46:42
So something to think about.
46:44
One more and then we'll take a break.
46:48
A person says they've been a fan of my column.
46:50
This is a column question.
46:53
I've been doing my own work for many years as a resource.
46:55
I always relied on all data, which is what I use all the time.
46:59
And they used to go to the library to get it.
47:01
Apparently the library doesn't want to pay for it anymore.
47:04
And is there another service that is available
47:08
for detailed maintenance schedules, repair topics
47:11
that is not subscription-based service?
47:14
Well, you can get, I mean, most car owner's manuals
47:18
have some service interval stuff.
47:21
So you can find about, you know, and, you know,
47:24
if you bought the car used and the owner's manual is still,
47:27
you know, the two previous owners have it somewhere still.
47:31
You can get nearly every owner's manual online
47:35
every once in a while.
47:37
They'll ask you to put in a vehicle identification number.
47:40
And I go to owner's manuals a lot.
47:43
And even when that comes up, I'll just go online,
47:47
try to find a used something for sale.
47:50
And it happens to list the vehicle identification number.
47:53
I'll just copy and paste that into the thing.
47:56
You know, and a lot of car dealers will have
47:58
the vehicle identification number of a used car on there
48:01
because they do, you know, one of the, you know,
48:04
car facts or one of those things.
48:06
So it has it there.
48:08
There is a website called, and it's,
48:13
you have to do the HTTP colon backslash, backslash,
48:18
but it's called charm.li, C-H-A-R-M.li.
48:22
I have no idea what the L-I stands for.
48:25
I probably should look it up.
48:27
But it has almost every make and model up to 2013.
48:34
So now it's 12 years old.
48:38
You know, sometimes looking at, you know, a 2013 car,
48:42
and if you have a 2015 or 2016, it can be close enough.
48:47
It can give you an idea what's going on at least.
48:50
So it's called, it's again, it's HTTP colon backslash,
48:55
backslash or forward slash, forward slash, whatever that one is.
48:59
Charm.li, that's one way.
49:02
You can also get a single make all data subscription.
49:05
I think it's about 100 bucks.
49:07
Or you can, or, you know, Harbor Freight has Truefix.
49:11
It's about $300 a year.
49:13
It has really good OEM information.
49:15
And you'll find that in, you know, a lot of different scan tools now too.
49:21
So it all works out pretty good.
49:23
Why don't we take another break?
49:24
Pay some bills if you would like to join us in the next,
49:26
oh, seven or eight minutes of the program.
49:28
Our phone number 7818374900, 7818374900.
49:34
Phone lines are open.
49:35
We'll be right back.
50:05
Well, Nick, there's a pretty good resume here.
50:08
You've always been this responsible?
50:10
When I was young and irresponsible, I was young and irresponsible.
50:15
You know that story, the giving tree?
50:17
Oh, come boy, swing on my branches.
50:25
One day I was driving my pickup truck, saw an apple tree.
50:29
I climbed up, swung on our branches, ate her apple.
50:33
The branch broke, cracked my windshield.
50:37
I'm Peter Brown from Tiny and Sun's Glass.
50:39
We come to your work, your home, or your story time.
50:42
We replace your windshield and insurance pays.
50:45
One, eight, eight, eight, sixty-four tinies.
50:51
Wasn't worth the trouble, really.
51:04
This special event is proudly sponsored by Distinctive Pergolas,
51:08
inviting you to come see their stunning craftsmanship up close.
51:11
Whether you're dreaming of a new patio, pergola, or garden design,
51:14
this is the perfect chance to get inspired.
51:16
That's Monday, September 15, from 4.30 to 6.30 p.m.
51:19
at Landscaping by J. Michael, 853 Plain Street in Marshfield.
51:27
Hey, I'm Ashley Jordan.
51:29
Tune into Twilight Showcase Radio,
51:31
hosted by Sandy Stride and Keith James
51:33
on 959WATD and 959WATD.com.
51:37
Search for Twilight Showcase Radio on Facebook
51:40
and visit twilightshowcase.org.
51:44
Tonight from 8 to 10 on 959WATD.
51:50
Honored with a Lifetime Achievement Award
51:53
from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration.
51:56
He's John Paul, the car doctor
52:05
I wonder how long I can milk that Lifetime Achievement Award thing.
52:09
It was very nice to get it.
52:13
It really showed that people appreciate
52:17
whether I do this or whether it was putting kids' car seats in
52:21
or teaching people how to do that
52:23
or doing the older driver programs that we did
52:26
or any of the safe driver programs.
52:28
It was very nice to be recognized by that.
52:31
And it was also nice that most of the time
52:35
that award was giving posthumously.
52:37
So it was nice to be alive to get the award.
52:40
So that was quite nice.
52:42
It was about a year ago.
52:44
So I really appreciate the folks from NHTSA doing that.
52:48
A person says they have a brake vibration
52:52
in a 2005 Toyota Highlander
52:57
Everything is in the car
52:59
as it came from the factory in Japan
53:01
except they changed the brakes at 90,000.
53:03
Today I took front calipers off
53:05
to see if the slide pins were moving and they were.
53:08
There's no leaks anywhere. The flex hoses look good.
53:11
And on the outside, no bumps or dents.
53:13
The caliper boots were dry. Everything looked okay.
53:16
When I pushed the caliper pistons back in,
53:18
they seemed to take more pressure to push in
53:21
I have never had to use that much pressure
53:23
on any Toyota caliper
53:25
in my 50 years of repairing Toyotas.
53:27
I've never had to replace a caliper on my car,
53:29
but I have on other vehicles
53:31
where drivers have a heavy foot.
53:34
What are the chances of caliper pistons are sticking?
53:37
Well, it's certainly possible.
53:39
I mean, rust builds up on the inside of brake calipers.
53:42
Also, just as a tip,
53:45
it's not a good idea to push caliper pistons back in.
53:48
Correct the bleeder screw,
53:50
put a hose on the end of it, catch the brake fluid
53:52
because what can happen is sometimes
53:54
you push rust back up through the brake system,
53:57
up through the anti-lock brake system,
54:01
and you can cause a whole bunch of problems.
54:04
Some people will clamp the brake line.
54:07
I don't think that's a great idea.
54:10
Some people will clamp the brake line
54:12
and open the bleeder screw.
54:14
Perfect. That's fine.
54:16
I don't like to really squish brake lines, though,
54:18
if I don't have to, but there are brake line clamps.
54:21
They're made just for that reason.
54:23
But I don't like pushing
54:25
old dirty brake fluid back into the master cylinder
54:28
because it goes through the anti-lock brake system.
54:31
Anyway, usually out-of-round rotors
54:34
are caused by a combination of rust on the hub
54:36
and even around the wheel studs.
54:38
So the rotors might be slightly at a round.
54:41
And a lot of times this is why dealerships
54:43
and some shops will resurface brake rotors
54:47
right on the car because they want to get
54:49
the rotor perfectly true,
54:52
even if the hub is not for whatever reason.
54:57
So what I like to do is
54:59
I take a wire wheel on a drill
55:03
and knock every bit of rust off the hubs,
55:06
make them clean and shiny.
55:08
Also, even take a smaller wire brush,
55:10
go around the wheel studs.
55:13
So everything's going to lay good and flat.
55:16
I think that's important.
55:18
Also, when I first started to repair cars a lifetime ago,
55:22
no one ever talked about bedding brake pads.
55:25
You put brake pads in, brake shoes in,
55:28
you took a ride, made sure it stopped, you were done.
55:31
Today, there's a very specific procedure
55:35
when you put brake pads in
55:38
to make sure that they kind of
55:41
mate to the rotor and drum surfaces.
55:44
You don't really need to bed brake shoes,
55:47
but it's sort of the same thing will happen.
55:52
And then finally, use torque wrench.
55:56
There's a lot of controversy about things like
55:59
torque sticks, which are sort of
56:01
things you put on the end of an impact gun
56:03
and you tighten it and they jiggle
56:05
and they're supposed to be, oh, 70 foot-pounds
56:10
Either spin the lug nuts on by hand
56:12
if you have a battery plug-in
56:16
or air impact wrench.
56:19
Spin the lug nuts up so they're snug.
56:22
Then use a torque wrench.
56:24
And it doesn't have to, when it comes to wheel lugs,
56:27
it doesn't have to be a super expensive torque wrench.
56:30
It just needs to be a torque wrench.
56:32
You need to, if it's off a few pounds
56:35
and usually there's a little bit of a,
56:38
torque is 75 to 85 foot-pounds.
56:41
So you set it at 80.
56:44
If it's off a couple pounds in either direction
56:46
it's going to make a difference, no.
56:48
But it's going to be consistent.
56:50
So it's going to be 81 foot-pounds
56:54
So it's going to be good and even.
56:57
Well, that's our program for today.
56:59
I want to thank Charles, the humble mechanic
57:02
Fantastic chatting with him.
57:04
I want to thank Jesse back at the studio
57:06
for doing all the work he does there.
57:08
And until next week, make sure
57:10
you wear your seatbelt drive safely.
57:12
Be good to your car.
57:13
And if you do see an emergency vehicle
57:15
by the side of the road,
57:16
slow down or move over.
57:18
Talk to y'all next week.