Well done, sir. You now have interweb fame.
We can all thank the Internet for stories like these. This latest one coming from the H-Town board involves an LT1 owner who accidently put brake fluid and oil back into the engine after draining it for a routine oil change.Well, he could be dumber. At least he didn't do it on purpose, and he recognized there was a problem.
Worst part is that he sprayed brake cleaner into it to get the brake fluid out...
as i know break fluid destroy and remove the paint so this oil may clean his engine if he just use it for few minute just like engine flushing maybe im not sure
This is totally a setup. No one can be this stupid. Using copper gasket sealant in his coolant? This has BS written all over it. At least the guy knows how to troll well enough to get the chumps over at that forum riled up.
actually brake fluid in your oil( one or 2 ounces) softens your seals to stop small leaks. this is an "old school" method for leak resolution.
I've seen it even more stupid than this...Tranny Fluid into the engine by accident or maybe because that guy was stupid enough to do it...it was on a 1981 Toyota Corolla...
at least he didn't try to port the heads on his car by sucking sand through the intake, I'm sure you all have read about that guy. http://www.audiforums.com/forum/showthread.php?t=80267
Oil prices are skyrocketing, and we have to consider the possibility that it will not only affect us, but also the economy. Because of this, everyone got a bit of a break when they plummeted along with retail sales and the rest of the struggling economy. If anyone thought they were going to keep getting discount gas, well they had better think again because oil prices are beginning to rebound, and there's going to be more family lending so that the average taxpayer and such can get to work every day – again. Big Oil is the largest and most profitable industry on earth (6 of the 10 biggest corporations are oil companies) and they will never worry about payday loans the way their customers do, no matter how low the oil prices are.http://personalmoneystore.com/moneyblog/2009/06/18/taxpayers-payday-loans-unstable-oil-prices/