Sharing personal information, or specifics on /r/MechanicAdvice is not allowed. This isnt a place to post your youtube channel, advertisements, memes, shitposts or businessĥ) Personal Information. Linking for the purposes of promotion (eg offers/coupons/self blog posts/youtube/advertisements/how to) is strictly prohibited and will result in a permanent ban. We allow links, pictures, video, or audio file to help diagnose your problem. Linking to outside content is not allowed, unless it's germane to the discussion. The only exception is for posting updates, provided it is properly marked as an or similar.Ĥ) Spam/Self-Promotion/Improper Linking/advertisements. Do not post asking questions of your own in someone else's post If you didn't get an answer the first time, or you don't like the answer you got that does not mean you post it again. Those who continually cause issue will be removedģ) Only one vehicle/problem/incident per thread, and only post once. Those who demonstrate they cannot follow the rules will be warned and posts removed. Golden Rule: If you have nothing nice to say, don't say anything at all. Dont assume a shop is trying to "rip you off." It's okay to ask for a second opinion. We're here to help so being rude won't help.
#ALIGNMENTS WITH HU TER WINALIGN MOD#
Please report bad advice to the mod team.Ģ) Keep discussion friendly, civil, courteous, and professional. If we feel a piece of advice is particularly reckless, dangerous, or extremely unhelpful it maybe removed If a post or comment is provided that is not a response to a question, the post may be removed. No intentionally bad, harmful, or deceptive advice. Memes, youtube videos and other non questions are not allowed Title, salvage, body work, paint work, etc questions also dont belong here. Showing off w/out a question goes in r/justrolledintotheshop legal/insurance questions go in r/legaladvice or r/insurance. If it's got wheels, treads, floats, flies, or has an engine you're good to go and we'll do our best to help. This is a subreddit for asking Mechanical questions pertaining to vehicles, engines, etc. Questions of this nature will be removed RULES Please Take a Moment To Read The Rules Before Postingġ) Advice Format. BELONG in r/Autobody or /r/Diyautobody/ Do not ask for an estimate there as it is against the subs rules. If that isn't available, provide all you know and explain why.Īll bodywork, accident damage, paint, dent/ding questions. If possible posts must include the make/model/year in the title or body of the post. PART TRADING: * If you have parts you would like to trade please do so at our new subreddit r/PartIt Hunter equipment is approved and used by vehicle manufacturers, automobile and truck dealers, tire dealers and service facilities around the world.įor more information, contact a local Hunter representative at the /r/MechanicAdvice IRC for instant conversations with other users on libera.chat irc network. Hunter Engineering designs and manufactures alignment systems, wheel and tire service, brake service and inspection lane equipment. “Proactive alignment service prevents premature tire wear.” “Our faster WinAlign HD QuickGrip adaptors speed alignment checks allowing service facilities to sell more alignment service,” says Don Glaser, Article manager.
For this reason, many service facilities and fleets routinely check heavy-duty truck wheel alignment readings as part of regular preventative maintenance programs. Proper wheel alignment can increase tire life by 20% and decrease fuel consumption by 2%, according to Hunter.
The new adapters feature no metal-to-metal contact, which avoids rim damage. Hunter says commercial shops using WinAlign HD and HD QuickGrip adaptors can easily measure all three axles of a heavy-duty vehicle simultaneously. Hunter Engineering Co.'s new WinAlign HD QuickGrip adaptors are designed to speed alignment service and prevent rim damage.