no
Lemon juice
take the whole jar with you.
the sensor could be dirty. clean off the accumulated crud with a toothbrush and if the low coolant light still remains on then the sensor will need to be replaced.
buy a new key at the dealer for about $27.
That was Archimedes when he realised how he could determine the purity of gold in a royal crown without damaging it. Eureka means "I have found it".
Yes, the damaging winds could damage the atomic Betty's Ship.
The short answer is, do not clean your coins.WARNING - There is no way you can clean a coin without damaging the finish and reducing any collector value it may have.Some coin catalogues suggest that you might use a soft brush on copper or bronze coins and, that there are professionals capable of cleaning coins.If your coin has no particular value and you just want it to look nice and shiny, you could use any of the commercially available jewellery cleaners.
Before you mess things up really bad get a tap for the size threads on your O2 sensor and clean out the old threads with it, being careful not to really cut new ones just clean out the old ones.
"how do you change a throttle position sensor on a 1998 jeep grand Cherokee?" could someone without any experience do it?
It depends where you got it. If it is a good quality one go for it but if it was a very cheap one it could damage it. So it depends on the wig.
I have towed such things with my 93 & my 91 escorts. And I have been successful without damaging my car too.
If the butterfly was no longer in the crysalis, you could take a sheet of paper, gently scoop it up, and take it home. If it was in the crysalis, you couldn't do anything about it without damaging it even further. Hope I helped!