Urobilinogen may turn brown on a urine dipstick due to oxidation, which occurs when the urobilinogen is exposed to air or certain chemicals in the dipstick. This brown color indicates the presence of oxidized forms of urobilinogen, which can occur in conditions such as liver disease or hemolysis. Additionally, a high concentration of bilirubin in the urine can also lead to similar color changes.
There is nothing to worry about with a Urobilinogen level of 1.0 E.U./dL. If you had a level above two then I would be concerned
It could just be from dehydration causing concentrated urine. Sometimes it is from a liver problem or bleeding. Simple tests done in the doctor's office can usually tell which it is.Dehydration or kidney disease can cause brown urine.
hehehe... "dipstick"... teehee
Sump compression
The 98 Cabrio has a sealed transmission, it does not have a dipstick.
The most logical answer would be urine, and it is!
1: Raise the hood. 2: Locate Dipstick 3: Pull out dipstick and wipe off with a lint free cloth or paper towel. 4: Re-insert dipstick 5: pull dipstick out again and look to see where the oil marks on the dipstick.
No. There would be no point.
locate which one you want out examples would be transmission or oil dipstick than just pull it out.
You would probably have to follow the dipstick tube to where it meets the engine, remove the bracket bolt and either remove the tube or lift it up to push the dipstick up or out of the tube.
My 96 Sunfire has no red cap, it has a regular dipstick. You'll want to find a small funnel. The fluid goes where the dipstick is supposed to be. I would also go to the parts store and get a new dipstick.
That would be urine.