YES BUT NOT FOR LONG- THEY WOULD WORK ON RESERVE VACUUM 3-4 PEDAL PRESS
A a steam locomotive can turn itself off when the engine is overheated.
mine overheated a lot, turned out to be the heater core.
CHECK WHEEL BEARINGS
Not necessarily. I actually just overheated my air-cooled engine the other day. First, are you sure it is water-cooled? If so then more than likely you will need to replace certain parts in the engine such as piston, piston ring, etc. Or it would be cheaper to just buy a new engine.
You either ran out of gas or your engine overheated.
Are you talking about an automobile engine or meat? Are you asking about an engine that overheated? Your question makes no sense. Ask it again and be specific as to what has happened, and any symptoms you are having.
air still in lines. rebleed
Driving with the parking brake on wears the rear brakes. (Almost all cars have the parking brakes work on the rear brakes.) How much depends on how hard they were set and how far and fast the car was driven. It is possible that the rear brake system was overheated a bit, but in a mile or two it probably wasn't overheated that much, and it almost certainly wasn't worn that much, either. (How do the brakes work now? How do they sound? How do they feel?) A brake shop could probably tell in short order. Many of them do free checks on brakes. The experts there can provide some basic information about what may have happened. The concerned person would make a couple of phone calls and get the scoop from someone who does brakes for a living.
The first thing I would check or do would be to remove the rotors and check their condition. If they have enough surface left, have them turned to get them true again. If they can't be turned, then replace them with new (which should also be turned or at least checked .The most common cause of pulsating brakes, I have found, are warped rotors. This is usually caused from overheating.
the engine mounts could be bad
Ran out of gas, failed fuel pump, water in the gas. Alternator, crank sensor, cam sensor, computer, coil, broken wiring. No oil in the engine and engine seized, overheated to the point of ruining engine.Ran out of gas, failed fuel pump, water in the gas. Alternator, crank sensor, cam sensor, computer, coil, broken wiring. No oil in the engine and engine seized, overheated to the point of ruining engine.
ABS brakes should have no effect on engine idle, but a bad power brake vacuum booster would have an effect on engine idle.