• @ThatWeirdGuy1001
    link
    937 months ago

    Ayo the car thing is absolute bullshit.

    10mm bolt for the fuckin brake caliper but 3/8 for the fuckin slide bolts?

    Get the fuck outta here

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      117 months ago

      Don’t know what car you’re driving but I think you’re just using the wrong size wrench/Allen key

      • @ThatWeirdGuy1001
        link
        16
        edit-2
        7 months ago

        My last car was a 2012 ford fiesta. The lug nuts are 19mm. The caliper bolts were 10mm and the slide bolts were 3/8.

        The car before that was a 2001 cavalier. Not only did it have metric and standard bolts but the slide bolts were fuckin Allen heads.

        Like literally why?

        • pancakes
          link
          fedilink
          English
          147 months ago

          Probably because they were made by American car manufacturers and couldn’t make a logical or consistent design decision if their lives depended on it.

          • @ThatWeirdGuy1001
            link
            77 months ago

            Like I’m not even an engineer and I’m just screaming about the dumbest decisions made by people who make more in a week than I make in a year 😭

            • @AngryCommieKender
              link
              1
              edit-2
              7 months ago

              The last one I ran into is that the Windshield Washer Fluid Reservoir in a Chevy Bolt is about 1/4 cup smaller than a standard 1 gallon jug of fluid. You could have expanded the diameter of the fill tube by less than 1/8 of an inch and fit that remaining 1/4 cup of fluid in there.

            • @Maalus
              link
              -47 months ago

              Yeah, but the difference is that they made it so you need an extra socket or an alan wrench. I think you’d have made dumb decisions that were a little bit more deadly.

        • @BilboBargains
          link
          3
          edit-2
          7 months ago

          It’s usually cost. They have tooling to produce components that have probably been around decades. The cost of retooling just to change the fastener sizes may not be economically viable. Eventually these legacy components will be phased out and it will be 100% metric.