Both of these procedures are discussed on the Toyota Nation Camry forum. The throttle body only handles combustion air that has passed through the filter. There is no fuel to gum up the mechanism that occurred on carburetors. You can take the air cleaner off with the duct work and see i the throttle plate has a build up. Don't try to open it. It is driven by an electric motor and you may damage it. As for flushing the transmission,try googling this subject. Toyota doesn't have this maintenance listed in the maintenance schedule. I do mine myself. See the Toyota Nation Camry forum
GO TO A REPUTABLE MECHANIC >>>>DO NOT BE FOOLISH TRYING TO SAVE $$$$$
I'm trying to find the answer for that on a 1997 Toyota Camry.
The transmission control module has detected that the transmission is trying to mechanically shift to a lower gear than intended. Try dropping the transmission oil pan and changing the transmission oil and filter. If this does not fix it you will have to have it looked at by a mechanic.
You can not for it is illegal to tamper with this and it is tamper proof. If you are trying to show less miles, unscrew the speed odometer cable from the transmission and drive.
i have a 1988 Toyota corolla fx w/ a 1.6 liter manual transmission i am trying to replace carburetor with a reman replacement vapex pt#181-16131 the wiring connection is different what is necessary to do to install properly
According to a transmission mechanic I talked to some cars keep most of the fluid in the transmission. The fluid has to be pumped out and new pumped in at same time. Not sure if this was baloney or the truth since he was trying to sell his $149 transmission fluid flush.
check your fuses, you may have blown a fuse, not a mechanic but know a bit about problem solving.
Because the Mechanic killed his dad. And he found out so he was trying to kill him
Neither the manual or the automatic transmission models are designed to tow with all four wheels on the ground. You will have to get a trailer or the Remco driveshaft kit in order to do what you are trying to do.
Not trying to be cute but is will last until it fails. If you change the fuel filter every 50,000 miles it may last the life of the vehicle. But then again it may fail tomorrow. There is no guarantee on a mechanic device.
Which bulb are you trying to change?
couldn't find a straight answer online. If you have a manual, it would be either under the dash close to where the clutch pedal attaches or in the transmission. If it is an automatic, it would be in the transmission. If you're trying to fix your own car, you should get a Haynes manual from Auto Zone for your car. A Haynes manual is geared more for the home mechanic than the Chiltons manual, which is geared for a mechanic. Either way, a good auto parts shop should be able to help you find it.