Your auto repair degree won't just qualify you to work in a garage. You can eventually take your career to a higher level in the auto world by honing your writing skills as well as your wrenching skills. The auto industry needs educated writers with automotive experience to write repair manuals, owner manuals and more. Plus you could write for online automotive papers or review new cars for hometown news sources.
yes
Try taking it to your local car repair garage or citroen dealer mate!
If your insurance company is offering auto repair insurance, you have the option of taking your vehicle to your own mechanic. Taking your vehicle to a personal mechanic rather than one chosen by your insurance company eliminates the doubts.
By taking it to a professional for repair. This is not a DIY repair.By taking it to a professional for repair. This is not a DIY repair.
To resolve a broken chain, you can try repairing it with a jewelry repair kit or taking it to a professional jeweler for assistance. If the chain is beyond repair, you may need to replace it with a new chain to continue using the necklace or bracelet.
To help get the shine back I would recommended taking your car into a garage or car repair shop. For example, Kwik Fit will look at them and tell you how much it will cost to fix or how you can do it yourself.
I believe you do add a degree. You also add a degree when taking temperature by armpit.
yes, add one degree when taking underarm temperature
Be more specific repair on what but if its like RROD i suggest taking it to a repair shop
add a degree
By taking the car to an A/C repair shop. Not a DIY job.
This requires more space than we can give in this forum. Check out the Haynes or Chilton repair manuals. There are chapters in the repair manuals that will step you thru the process step by step. You will need to be removing the manifolds. Taking off all the wires, connections and hoses. Setting up a way to lift the motor and then remove it from the transmission. It pays to have a space to set the parts so you can clean them later. The other nice thing about taking off parts in the garage is that the more you remove the easier it is to get it out later. Especially the transmission bolts. I have removed my 4 cylinder and my 6 cylinder in a regular house garage. So it can be done. Then I sent out the engine to get checked by a machine shop. After completion I reinstalled it all in the same garage. Get a manual tho. This isn't a quick repair that you will remember how you took things off originally.