Hey guys,
just having some ""pain in the arse" issues with my leggy.any1 know of any machanics on the southside besides skr that might know what a legnum is??
any feed back will be muchly appreciated!!
cheers!
Both Jon and Premium Motor Co. are located at the opposite side of town as to where he's asking. Premium Motor Co. aren't a mechanic workshop anyway as far as I know, only a wreckers/compliance workshop.
Opposite side of Adelaide... really, its not as though its a very big city.
But yes, what are the issues youve got - chances are someone here has had similar problems and can point you in the right direction.
yeah but our road infrastructure makes it harder to navigate. I don't know if S&J in edwardstown have experience with VR4's, but they work on evo's and they have good rep with the suby crowd
^ Agreed I would definitely like to avoid driving from one side to the other at all costs, the suburbs sprawl quite a distance and the roads are stupid. I think a couple of people have tried Graham West although I'm not sure that they had particularly good results, if it's something common to other cars or minor they'd probably be able to sort it fine.
Itd be hell following South road all the way, or getting onto Main North Road
You guys should see what its like travelling in other states
SA people are pretty lucky!
Which is probably why you think Sydney roads are OK - you're used to them, and you know alternative routes.
I grew up in a town about three hours away from Melbourne - and it was amazing the difference in perspective from friends/family in Melbourne versus those from down my way, as to whether three hours on the freeway was "a long way" or not.
hey guys.soz about the late reply. litteraly just got back from working in robe. my leggy sounds like its not getting either enough spark or air. Like, as it idles she sounds like its going to cut out. same thing happens when driving. its at the point now that im too sketched to let the missus drive it to work 5 mins up the road. ive only seen the engine light come on once
Get a paperclip, and bridge pins 1 and 4 of the OBD connector - then watch the flashes of the Check Engine Light. Count how many long and how many short flashes there are, and that is the error code. Post up your findings.