July 09, 2015

Do You Have An Automotive Problem? Repair It Yourself!

If you could fix your television or computer by yourself without taking it to a repair specialist, would you do it? Of course- it saves time and money! The same applies to your car. Read this article for tips on how to learn simple auto repair in order to save yourself a headache.

Purchase motor oil on sale and in discount stores and keep two or three bottles in the trunk of your car. Check your oil every time you fill your gas tank. If you find that your oil level is low, you will save lots of money by having your own oil on hand rather than purchasing it at a gas station for inflated prices.

Just like at the doctor, you can get a second opinion before agreeing to costly repairs. A reputable shop should not be padding the bill, but it does not hurt to see what another professional thinks about the situation. If you are still nervous, the dealer is always an option. It will be more expensive, but they tend to someone checking over their shoulder more often.

Take action if you believe a garage or dealership ripped you off. Notify one of the manager and give them a chance to issue a refund. If you are still not satisfied, contact your local Better Business Bureau to file a complaint. Your city or state consumer affair office is also a good resource.

It is a good idea to add an injector cleaner to the fuel you put into your gas tank regularly. You will get better gas mileage if the fuel injectors in your cars engine are kept clean. Adding enough cleaner to treat a full tank once a month is usually enough to improve your mileage a little.

Save some money by using your local auto parts store's diagnostic equiptment. Many are more than happy to let their customers use it because you may then purchase parts at their store. You benefit because you may have a small problem you can fix or you can just tell your mechanic what you want done.

If you are planning a road trip, make sure that you go and have your car serviced. Plan it a little ahead so you are not rushing to get it done at the last minute. Even if your car feels fine, you want to make sure that you will make it to your destination and back with no issues.

It can be dangerous to repair vehicles on your own. Ensure that you have help close at hand in case something goes wrong. Buy only the highest quality tools that will last and not break under pressure. This is very important for the tools that you use to change your tires. Make sure that the jack in your car can securely hold up the vehicle so you are safe while using it. This is why you should get a high quality hydraulic jack with stands.

Have a repair shop in mind before you run into trouble. If you wait until an emergency, you may end up going with a shady mechanic who is convenient because you are desperate. Ask friends for a mechanic with a good reputation. Then when you run into repair problems, you can trust you won't be ripped off.

Remember, you are owed an estimate before any work occurs on your car. If you did not receive an estimate and work did begin, do not feel obligated to move forward with any sort of payment. Move onto a more reputable auto shop as soon as possible if this occurs.

If you are planning a DIY auto repair, be sure to give yourself plenty of time to complete it. Start early in the day with all of the tools, parts and fluids that you will need close at hand. Remember that, no matter how well you plan, something unexpected will come up and consume your time. Avoid running out of daylight by getting an early start that will allow you to cope with the unexpected.

As said in the beginning of this article, learning how to repair things on your own makes life much easier in the long run. Besides saving money, you can get a sense of pride from fixing your car yourself. Remember the tips in this article so you can use auto repair whenever you need it!

February 02, 2015

Effective Secrets Of Junk Cars - A Background

How to Pay Cash for junk cars in Brooklyn, NY - Travel and Leisure Articles

Youngsters, less than 25 years old, may have to pay an initial deposit or could be made to drop the thought of leasing a car. A valid passport and the ability to make additional cash deposits might help strengthen their case. One can expect a hold/block around the debit card which is add up to the complete estimated price of the car rental. In other words, just how much that is corresponding to the whole estimated cost of the vehicle rental is no longer available to the debit card holder. Additional blocks can also be likely in case there is customers whose credit score is doubtful.


As you may have often heard, the Cash for Clunkers bill (formally the Consumer Assistance to Recycle and Save Program) is supposed to boost auto sales while attempting to reduce emissions from older cars that acquire a lower mile per gallon rating than these of latest cars. This is the first national program available today, nonetheless it is not the first program to get brought to automotive consumers. In Colorado, The Clear the Air Foundation was recently organized using a goal to “enable income tax deductions in case you donate high-emitting vehicles so that you can re-cycle the shell and also other parts as a way to lead a fresh approach toward cleaner air as well as a healthier environment.” This organization has yet to publicly provide specifics of this program, but is sustained by the Colorado Auto Dealers Association (CADA) as well as the Metro Denver Automobile Dealers Association (MDADA).

Toy Top - ADHD peoples' brains work being a child's top. Most of us have a brain that are spinning too slowly this will let you wobble. Some have bigger wobbles than the others. Like the top, we could wander around life (such as the top wanders round the table top). When given stimulant medication, the oxygenated blood supply for the frontal lobe individuals brain increases and, being a top that's been increased, the brain receive balance and spin efficiently and that we relax. It is a great analogy to exhibit people why the seeming paradox of giving a hyperactive person a stimulant drug actually calms them down.

What truly makes this an uplifting fat loss story to Franz is exactly what Turnbeaugh declared finally turned things around for him. I think when people would adopt this mindset after they finally become ill of being overweight, they might finally succeed in their weight-loss goals! It doesn't matter much the way you decide to shed the excess weight, it's the mindset which you adopt that will make you stay on track.

Next, you'll have to assess your junk automobile and can need to make a report on systems or areas of the body which are not working or which are damaged. Also, don't forget to add the list of any parts that has also been removed. Do not forget to look for the tires of the vehicle as well as interior condition also. Before actually supplying the cash, the business who's ready to choose the junk vehicle, might be asking several questions according to the condition with the automobile, its year of purchase, how much time it's not been working, etc.' and generally you may expect the charge to anywhere between 30-50$ for the junk vehicle.


September 21, 2014

Cash For Junk Cars Brooklyn NY: How To Get Cash For Your Junk Car

Are you thinking: I want to junk my for my cash, I want to sell a car for junk or what is involved in junking a car? Then you have come to the right place. It has never been simpler to get the best junk car price for your car or van, with free pick up,  Here is a list of junk car buys in Brooklyn, NY.


September 19, 2014

Russian Tourist Facing Charges For Climbing Brooklyn Bridge Signs Up For Community Service

A Russian tourist accused of climbing up a cable on the Brooklyn Bridge in August was in court Friday, and is still waiting for a final resolution.

Yaroslav Kolchin faces a reckless endangerment charge for climbing to the top of the bridge because it was “fun,” WCBS 880’s Irene Cornell reported.

Kolchin was seen walking back and forth on the landing, taking photos with his iPhone, police said. They said once a police aviation unit was hovering at an altitude next to the tower, Kolchin began to descend safely down the same way he had climbed up.

He was met by police at the security gate, where he was taken into custody without further incident.
In the meantime, Kolchin has signed himself up for community service– something the judges have said would be far more fitting than the 90 days in jail prosecutors were offering him.

He is spending his time volunteering for New York Cares, Cornell reported.
“Yes, last time in Russia, it was my dream. But in America, it is reality, it’s really great,” Kolchin said.

Kolchin said his English is getting better every day, saying “I love this country.”

http://newyork.cbslocal.com/2014/09/19/russian-tourist-facing-charges-for-climbing-brooklyn-bridge-signs-up-for-community-service/


Two men convicted in 1993 kidnapping of Brooklyn teen see guilty verdicts overturned in state appeals court

Two men who’ve spent more than 15 years in prison after being convicted in 1993 of kidnapping a 16-year-old Brooklyn girl saw their guilty verdicts overturned Wednesday when a state appeals court ruled cops withheld evidence that might have cleared them and then lied about it.

Everton Wagstaffe and Reginald Connor, both sentenced to up to 25 years in prison, had always maintained they were innocent in the kidnapping and death of Jennifer Negron.

The teenage girl’s bludgeoned body was found on New Year’s Day 1992 in East New York. A witness was produced by cops and used by prosecutors to link the two men to the crime, even though they had no link to Jennifer and no motive was ever established.

A judge dismissed the murder charges due to lack of evidence, but Wagstaffe and Conner were convicted of kidnapping. For the past 23 years, they’ve struggled to prove they weren’t guilty of any crime.

Cops had insisted that Wagstaffe and Connor weren’t suspects until the witness brought their names up. But based on evidence provided by defense lawyers, the Appellate Division ruled Wednesday that cops had been looking at the men before the witness appeared — and had lied about it in prior court hearings.

“The defendants were being investigated by the New York City Police Department prior to the detectives' interview of [the witness], a fact that was contrary to the testimony of one of the investigating detectives that the interview with [the witness] on Jan. 2, 1992, led the police to the defendants,” the ruling stated.

The defense lawyers had additional arguments attacking other police evidence as well, but the appeals court said it didn’t need to hear anymore and moved to overturn the convictions.

“Mr. Wagstaffe is in shock, he is trying to come to grips with this,” his attorney, Myron Beldock, said Wednesday.

The Appellate Division took the unusual step of not just overturning the convictions but also dismissing the original indictments — which Beldock said was an indication of how flagrantly the authorities had violated the law while pursuing the guilty verdicts.

“It is very rare (to do both), it indicates the great injustice that occurred when evidence was kept from the defense. As the court said, the verdict would probably have been different,” Beldock said.

His client, Wagstaffe, 45, is currently in the 23rd year of his 25-year sentence. Wagstaffe had refused to accept parole offers for early release that demanded he admit guilt.

Beldock hopes that Wagstaffe will be brought to the city from Greene Correctional Facility, a medium-security prison in Coxsackie, NY, as early as next week for a hearing on next steps in his case.

Connor, 46, served 15 years and was released on parole, said his attorney David Toscano.

As a condition of his release, he had to register as a sex offender, Toscano said. It’s been a “big obstacle” as Connor has tried to rebuild his life, the lawyer noted.

“This is great news, obviously he’s very happy today. He was wrongly convicted and even out on parole he continues to have restrictions on him,” Toscano said.

The Brooklyn District Attorney’s office still has an option to appeal, but the lawyers said they’d hoped not further litigation would be necessary.

“We would be very disappointed if this ruling were not the end of the matter ... It would be a very misguided use of prosecutorial resources,” said Toscano.

Jennifer Negron’s case was one of 100 being re-examined by Brooklyn prosecutors after information emerged about a tainted detective who allegedly fabricated evidence in some murder cases decades ago. The Conviction Review Unit is going over 71 cases tied to retired detective Louis Scarcella.

The questionable detective wasn’t involved in Jennifer Negron’s murder investigation, but the cops’ methods in identifying Wagstaffe and Connor fit the “pattern” of a Scarcella case because they relied on testimony from a sole witness, Toscano said.

As with many of the Scarcella convictions under examination, Wagstaffe and Connor were convicted on the word of a police informant — a crack-addicted prostitute who had to be forced to testify at trial. The woman, identified as Brunilda Capella in Wednesdays’ ruling, died many years ago. But she provided a key detail that prosecutors used to define their case. Capella said she saw Wagstaffe and Connor haul Jennifer Negron into a Buick known around the neighborhood. When cops found the car, they also found a headband on the backseat. It had belonged to the dead girl, prosecutors claimed.

Cops said they’d never suspected Wagstaffe, who’d been arrested on prior drug charges, or Connor, who’d been arrested for robberies, until Capella pointed them out.

But as it happened, it was the cops who fingered the men, and fed the information to their so-called witness, Beldock said.

“She did not disclose their names until [cops] told her who they wanted her to identify. They misrepresented it. It was fraud and misrepresentation,” he said.

Toscano and Beldock had plenty of other ammunition to bring to bear if they had needed it, including new DNA tests that proved hair and skin under the victim’s fingernails did not belong to Wagstaffe and Connor.

They also had found the woman who owned the Buick implicated in the crime.

The woman had testified that she’d taken her car to church the night of the girl’s murder, where it had stayed until 5 a.m. the next day. She said she’d told cops that in 1992, but they made no record of her statement.

http://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/nyc-crime/men-convicted-brooklyn-kidnapping-verdicts-overturned-article-1.1944007



Brooklyn vendor given cheap-shot kick by cop says NYPD needs ‘to take care of us better’

The Brooklyn fruit vendor who was kicked in the back by a cop after he had been subdued and handcuffed by other officers said he can’t stop thinking about the jarring assault and the officer’s cheap shot.

“I couldn’t stop watching the video. I was traumatized,” Jonathan Daza said Thursday at his Sunset Park home, holding back tears as his 7-month-old son, Jonathan Jr., bounced on his shoulder.

“I watched it over and over, and I honestly can’t believe that I’m still here ... that I’m still alive.”

The 22-year-old and his family were selling fruit at a street fair on Fifth Ave. in Sunset Park on Sunday. When the fair was set to close, cops began to open the street and told them to clear out along with other vendors.

Daza and his family were packing up, he said, when a group of officers came up to them and started asking for their identification.

As one of the cops grilled Daza’s 17-year-old sister, the vendor said he told her not to answer their questions. The police quickly turned their attention to the vendor.

“The officer starts yelling at me, asking me who I am, and I told him: ‘I’m her brother,’” Daza recalled. “That’s when the officer grabbed me, with force; he pulled me to the side and then he called for more officers, and then that’s when they started hitting me.”

http://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/nyc-crime/brooklyn-vendor-reacts-nypd-cheap-shot-article-1.1944813


Beckett’s ‘Embers,’ at the Brooklyn Academy of Music

The way to hear Samuel Beckett’s radio play “Embers,” in the Pan Pan Theater production at the Brooklyn Academy of Music, is to shut out the vivid imagery onstage. Only then will Beckett’s words, the story of a solitary man named Henry, lost in thoughts spoken aloud at the sea’s edge, be free to form pictures in your mind.

That advice seems counterintuitive, and terribly conservative: Who goes to the theater to ignore visuals as striking as these? An enormous sculpted skull (by Andrew Clancy) hunkers amid a landscape of stones; around it, hundreds of small round speakers hang suspended and gleaming. Aedin Cosgrove bathes it all in gorgeous lighting, now stark, now soft and undulating. As an art installation, the design is a thorough success.

http://www.nytimes.com/2014/09/19/theater/becketts-embers-at-the-brooklyn-academy-of-music.html


Funk-Driven Art Highlights Brooklyn Neighborhood's Past

At the Weeksville Heritage Center in Crown Heights, Brooklyn visitors can explore homes that still stand from a 19th century black settlement.

"A group of African Americans purchased land, which afforded them the right to vote, and then began to build a self-sustaining activist community for other free African Americans around 1838," says Tia Powell Harris, the Executive Director of the Weeksville Heritage Center. "We have a radical story to tell here and it needs to be told."

To bring the conversation to the present day, the public art organization Creative Time asked four artists to create new works of art inspired by the self-empowerment vision of Weeksville.

"We're doing a project called OJBK radio. It is a temporary, guerrilla-style radio station that will be on the corner of Fulton and Utica. It will be housed in a sound sculpture and takes the form of a 1959 Cadillac Coupe de Ville," says Robert Pruitt, an artist with the Otabenga Jones and Associates Art Collective.

Each artist found a theme with the help of his or her community partner, and so the exhibit is called "Funk, God, Jazz, and Medicine: Black Radical Brooklyn."

"What does black radical Brooklyn look like today? What does it look like to take control over your community, your radio station, your images, your health and your design? And so we're thinking about that in terms of what makes Black Radical Brooklyn radical today," notes Rashida Bumbray, a Guest Curator at Creative Time.

There are lots of interactive components to the project, including one called An Urban Rhapsody in FUNKtional Design, with an emphasis on Funk.

"Zenobia Bailey has been working with these high school students to actually make what she calls funk-ified objects, where they take cardboard and newspapers and materials of everyday life, and she makes couture objects that they're installing into one of these historic homes," said Nato Thompson, Creative Time's Chief Curator.

Visitors can explore the artworks here and nearby through self-guided walking tours each weekend through October 12.

http://www.ny1.com/content/lifestyles/arts/215808/funk-driven-art-highlights-brooklyn-neighborhood-s-past/