Begin by removing the inside door panel. Connect the mirror with the mirror retaining bolts. Attach the mirror wiring harness.
hurt no, if you pulled your cord and it jerked your arm and hurt you have a shear fly wheel key.
yes you can
In the US, yes, a drivers mirror is required.
The door mirror unit on an Audi A3 is removed by the inner cover and taking out the retaining screws. The mirror can then be pulled away, the adjustment cable disconnected, and the mirror removed.
Inner door panel has to be pulled off or loose to get to the nuts that hold the mirror on, take the nuts off and if the mirror is power you have to disconnect the wires and then just pull the mirror off.
As long as they were pulled completely out and not broken off at the base, they should grow back in. It will take a couple of months or longer, but they should come back.
The mirror itself can be 'pulled' out of the ear by either prying the mirror of using a suction cup. If the whole ear needs to be replaced the interior door trim must be removes then there are a few bolts holding the ear in place. Good luck.
it slowly dissolves by being broken up and pulled away by the water molecules.
The plastic cover where the mirror adjusters are/will be for electric ones simply unclips if pulled away from the windscreen (two clips hold it on). Then there is a black screw and a gold bolt that needs to be undone, the mirror unit should be able to be taken off now.
No. The bond involves deloalised electrons. When a metal is pulled into a wire essentially there is movement of the metal atom lattice and the bonds are disturbed rather than broken. Its a different situation in a covalent giant molecule where localised ciovalent bonds have to be broken as the lattice is deformed.
No, it won't. Air is pulled in atmosphere by earth's gravity.
Sprained ankle or knee, pulled muscle, broken bone, bloody nose.