anyway you can run diagnostics on my parts to see if they are good. the way i figure it one is good, the other is bad. so i could keep the good one and throw the other away or sell it.
anyway you can run diagnostics on my parts to see if they are good. the way i figure it one is good, the other is bad. so i could keep the good one and throw the other away or sell it.
If the new part works then toss the old one .
Most professional technicians use the tried and true "float test" to see if a part is good or not.
The tech takes the suspected part and tosses in the lake or river. If it doesn't float, the part is bad !
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A Technical troubleshooter possessing more tools than talent !
I perform the float test all the time when the customer is there also. You should see there face when the failing part gets tossed in the water. 99% of the times they are upset as they did not get to perform the test themselves.
but when you replace two parts, which one is failing.
the part that swims back is still good...![]()