those were probably the original spark plugs that came with the tracker when it was first off the line.....you are lucky your car is still alive.
buned bones become brittle
A small amount of oil on the air filter is normal. It comes from the pcv valve up to the air cleaner box. This is to prevent the oil from being blown out into the atmosphere without being buned first. (It's an emmissions thing) If you arent using tons of oil and the car is running ok dont worry with it. (I assume your town car has a 5.0 liter engine) Please let me know if you have any more questions. Justin justin25taylor@yahoo.com
I have a 2001 Buick Regal and in order to change the tail lights or Lic. plate lights you must first open the trunk lid. Now look inside the trunk lid you will see 8 or 9 plastic wingnuts, remove these wingnuts and the complete plastice panel can be removed from the trunk lid. Simply replace the buned out lights and reinstall the panel. TAL
either a fuse is blown, the switch is bad, or the moter itself is buned up. start by checking all your fuses and test the switch to see if it is getting fire. test to see if your getting fire to the motor. last thing to do is replace foan motor. Resistor pack can also be bad. Answer It could also just be a bad ground. Have seen this before. Loosten a mounting screw on the blower housing, under hood on firewall. Run a wire from Neg side of barrery and wrap bare end around the screw. Reinstall mounting screw, see if it works.
This takes some work! Remove the liner on the underside of the trunk lid by prying the black plastic "plugs" out. I use a special tool for this but you should be able to do it with a flat-blade screwdriver or maybe two - one on each side. It helps to have someone hold the liner when you get down to the last couple of plugs. Then remove the nuts holding the light assembly to the trunk. There are 5 I think. Don't remove the ones holding the emergency trunk release handle or the trunk lock. Then pull the light assembly away from the trunk - it may be stuck to the trunk but if it doesn't want to move at all, be sure you have all the nuts removed. You should have a helper to hold the assembly while replacing the bulb or you could scratch the paint. The bulb assembly is removed by turning counter-clockwise 1/4 turn.
It does NOT matter that the fuse which keeps "burning out" is in a 1990 IsuzuTrooper!!!!!!!!!! This question, and ALL others like it, should be worded the SAME: WHY DOES A FUSE BURN OUT? A fuse is a FUSE, and it doesn't matter whether it's in a toy, a particular vehicle, or a house. IF an electrical circuit REPEATEDLY causes fuses to "blow out", that is a POSITIVE indication that something is VERY WRONG, probably a SHORT SOMEWHERE in the circuit. By purpose and design, it it not 'normal' for fuses to burn / blow out, and when that happens, the occurence is the result of something gone wrong, either a short, or an overload condition. When the fuse burns out, it is doing what it was supposed to do. By burning out, it stops the flow of electrical current in the circuit wiring, thus preventing serious damage and/or a fire! When a fuse burns out, the fuse is NOT the problem, and the proper "fix" IS NOT the simple replacement of the fuse. The blown fuse is an INDICATOR of a serious problem, a short or overload, which MUST BE CORRECTED BEFORE replacing the fuse. The proper fix is to: [1] FIND the FAULT in the wiring circuit which is CAUSING the fuse to blow. [2] REPAIR OR CORRECT THE FAULT. [3] THEN replace the buned out fuse.