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Don't the high schools teach car repair any more?
When I was in school, my high school had a car repair shop program. Don't they do that any more?
I'm trying to figure out what to do with my Jeep, and one thing I thought of was to let high school car repair students have at it, but damned if I can find any evidence of the local schools having a car repair program. Maybe the school system just hasn't figured out that the internet exists yet (hey, it could happen... when I was in school my algebra textbooks mentioned computer punch cards, okay?), or maybe they just don't fund programs like that any more. |
That jeep doesn't happen to be an 03 with a working back window zipper does it?
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It's very rare. Shop classes in general (auto, wood, metal) are becoming scarcer and scarcer as schools are forced to dedicate more and more of the operating budget to turning kids into standardized-test-taking automatons.
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Donate it to the LoT commune?
I checked and my HS doesn't have an automotive program anymore. Bummer, it was fun to work on cars at school. I think LB City College still has an automotive program. |
North Hollywood High's auto shop teacher is still listed as faculty, so I take that as solid evidence that the class is still running. (wow, just found some photos of the school from 1927. Trippy)
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I think Santa Monica College has an auto repair course, try your local JC.
Then again, I've always wanted a Jeep. |
Golden West College has an auto-repair program. I think OCC does as well.
Betty - it is a Jeep Grand Cherokee. |
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My experience has also been that it is the local community colleges have auto shops.
Too bad because the kids in school should be able to do some minor work on their cars. |
You'd likely have to look to vocational schools for modern car repair programs.
Beyond the pedagogical priority and funding issues you have the simple fact that modern cars simply aren't amenable to the kind of manual repair and maintenance that you used to do. There was a guy who called into Car Talk on NPR a few months ago saying he wanted to learn how to fix his newish car himself rather than paying people. They essentially told him that except for some stuff around the fringes you can't anymore. You need extremely specialized tools and computers for most things around the engine. Even changing the oil is difficult on most modern cars. They're all safer, lighter, faster, and more efficient but at the cost of simplicity and ability to just hit at them with a wrench until everything works again. So when debating whether to fund an autoshop class it is probably a decision made easier when it is would actually have to be a pre-1990 autoshop class. |
Yep, this has been our problem. My husband used to do all of the work on our cars. Of course, these were pre '90 vehicles. He just didn't have the full time need to go out and purchase the tools needed. He did sometimes borrow them from the mechanics for a fee{special hexagon shaped tools, off sized mm tools} but then they quit that.
Well, he also got tired of doing it. |
It's a compromise, we've traded simplicity and ease of repair, for energy efficiency, durability, and ease of maintenance. (not to say the old cars won't last long too, but they require more maintenance to stay that way. I'm still amazed that cars today can go 100k miles on a set of spark plugs, they used to rebuild engines at 100k).
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Yep, it does, in fact, have a radiator that is less than a month old :) And a thermostat, and a serpentine belt, and an air filter.
Funny about that... |
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I posted the entire jeep on some jeep forum, but I posted it for the whole vehicle, not just parts.
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We don't have auto repair at our school. We don't have any woodworking or shop classes at all. Instead, our school has a video studio, CAD lab, digital print shop, networking classes, and web design.
Instead, people can opt to take classes at our local community college (College of the Canyons), which is like less than a mile from our school. They have much better equipment than a school could ever afford, anyway. |
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Don't bother donating either. I work for a non-profit and we have people wanting to donate their old cars all the time. There are many companies who will do all the work of selling off the car but the amount of money the non-profit ends up making is extremely minimal Plus that company gets it's own cut! Honestly, it's almost worth you selling it in the Pennysaver or something. There are people who may want it just to sell it for parts! |
Loan it to a vocational school instead. Probably same deal as if you loaned it to a high school 20 years ago.
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