What are these 3 things on the check engine light?
What are these 3 things on the check engine light?
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Left: fan
Top: carburetor
Right: flywheel
So they're using this old logo on even non-carburated cars?
Why would they change a standard that everybody is aware of?
Now I want to know if electric cars like the Nissan Leaf have check engine lights.
idk, seems outdated.
car manufacturers make up new logos all the time.
Left: Serpentine belt
Top: Plastic engine cover
Right: Torque converter
It's why Windows and other software companies still use the floppy disk icon to signify saving files. Everybody already understands it, so it does its job perfectly.
they do
L2R
Fan, airbox, flywheel.
They're whatever you want them to be.
fan, flywheel, air cleaner
they also solve problems that don't exist and do shit no one was asking for, like changing how the shift lever works or giving it a dial or push buttons.
...
I wonder if it stays on all the time because there's no engine.
why do you think the phone logo on your cell phone is a picture of a landline receiver?
Some things are just always recognizable
Jesus I bet that thing's loud as fuck
It's the same as the floppy disk for saving on computers, it's just well known now and it would cause confusion if changed.
neat i never knew there was a term for it
It's a 260. There's a pedestrian engine. Had it been an unmuffled k code 289 that's a different story
Didn't the early stands have k codes?
Stangs
No but they do have a motor.
Maybe Veeky Forums should design a new one?
Left to Right:
Crankshaft Pulley or Fan
Old Style Air Filter, common on carburated cars
Flywheel
is anyone else bothered by the shape/scale variations of the "engine" between manufacturers
for instance here's a late model VW example
this one comes from a BMW i3
to me this one is the most aesthetic, i believe this is a Ford
and before ~2005, there were a lot more variations of "service engine soon" "check engine" or the engine image with "check"
...
>check engine light modeled after a Ford.
Not surprising
Left-propeller
Top-wing
Right-jet exhaust
It's a tiny plane according to my mom.
She knows this light very well since we used to have two Citroëns
It's part of the OBD-II standard or close enough.
>A plane
Your mom sounds like a cute
Nice trip, how did you get that?
I'm not posting her but I can confirm that for someone older than clarkson she looks really good. Don't smoke, kids. And don't be English for best results.
Why are you on /O ?
Do you not realize the vast majority of engines are in the same layout...
can you post pics of your mom - she sounds cute as fuck
It's an unsalted trip. They're relatively easy to reverse engineer since you can just generate the trips from a random sequence and then everyone can search for the tripcode they want from a single pool and they'll get it.
Here's what I'm saying on an example:
Jimmy Strings #sequence - > Jimmy Strings !sh1ggy
Someone else #sequence - > someone else !sh1ggy
Now with a trip using the nickname as salt
Jimmy Strings ##sequence - > Jimmy Strings !!g4yc00nt
Someone else ##sequence - > someone else !!4bs0lut3tw@t
As you can see the second trip is much harder to raise to the minus first power (reverse) because it depends not only on the entered sequence but also on the nickname.
Uh yeah, basically what I'm saying is, don't use unsalted hashes if you want your web page to be secure
I have been here since 2009 and just now i learned how secure tripcode actually differs from normal lmao
fan, intake filter, flywheel
If you ordered a k code, yes. If you ordered a c or a code then no. It's like the difference between a hemi 5.7 and the 392
Underrated post
Why the fuck are you not dead
Kek
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