One of the best places to start could be a dealership. If you don't want to go that route you can always look it up using a Haynes or Chilton repair manuals.
You can safely put 2ml into the 10l aquarium
38L is 10.04 US gallons.
on the crank behind the front cover
it's located on the firewall right in back of the intake
Not very easily if at all, and why would you want to?
They always blow the head gaskets between 70 and 100 thousand miles.
If you mean 3.8 Litre engine, the answer is 200 horsepower, from the factory. 225 lb/ft of torque.
there should be a sticker under the hood of the car that tells you what the gapping should be. .60
76l for the first fish and 38l for each additional fish so 266 litres.
Fuel injected. fuel injected. the 3.8 liter was never carb. it was in the 80's in other GM vehicles
Five quarts including filter. My owners manual says 5.75, including filter. My experience agrees with the extra .75 quarts! :)
Divide 10 by 38. _ _ ._ _ 38l 100 38 can't go into 10 so add a decimal+zero Then do your basic division. This was coming from a 6th grader.
haynes repair manuals are good but you can go to autozone.com and they have online repair manuels as well it a good site for a lot of information on repair work.
It shouldn't idle that high the factory idle setting is around 900 RPM's check to make sure nothing is sticking and check vacuum lines. Good luck fixing your problem.
Connect a diagnostic code reader to find out what's going on. That's the only way you'll know for certain. It could be something as simple as a bad air filter or oxygen sensor but the computer diagnostics will tell you what code has been stored.
The mass air flow sensor is located in the throttle body housing on the 3800 engine. There should be 4 screws that hold it down to the housing. Once they screws are removed, the sensor lifts off of the throttle body.
There is not significant difference between rest cardiac output but during the load amateur heart pumps 18-24 l/min, professional heart pumps 32-38l/min.
Yes you can, you will need to buy a y pipe either at autozone or your nearest parts store. You will also need to buy 2 mufflers flowmasters are my choice but you decide what you want. then buy some cool tips and there you go.
Where was the leak coming from? the coolant has some pathways that go to the intake. that's to warm up the air.the most important question is where the coolant was leaking from?
Yes , on a 1998 Ford Windstar the fuel pump shut off switch ( inertia switch ) is in the drivers footwell behind the kick panel by the drivers left foot , by the inside hood release ( there is an access hole in the panel )
Had the same problem years ago, same year, model. Found the cable at NAPA auto supply, about $30, much cheaper than the GM dealer. Couldn't do the replacement myself, had to have a mechanic do it (it was a B***H). Still cheaper in the long run this way.
What year is the gtp, if 95 or newer yes, if gtp is in the 80's then no due to pollution restrictions today, and may have to change the computers from each vehicle. Each computer is set to specs for the engine it controls.
Well, the transmissions are interchangable, so your good there. But if you put a 3.3l in youll have to change the ECM because they have different settings for the 3.8 and 3.3. So if you change the ECM I think youll be ok. My email is RPplayer73@aol.com
COULD BE FAULTY TEMPERATURE GAGUE. THAT WAS THE SOLUTION FOR MY 95 TRANSPORT. COULD BE FAULTY TEMPERATURE GAGUE. THAT WAS THE SOLUTION FOR MY 95 TRANSPORT.
It seems it may have been bad gas. After some gas treatment and an oil change it gradually improved in three or four days and then stopped completly.