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Question:

I love my boxer dog but he is embarrasing me by doing this.. any advice?

I have a 9 month old boxer boy called blayze. I love him so much but he is more than a little embarrasing in his latest fad. He is 31kg and very strong. When I walk him, he will grab strangers carrier bags full of shopping and moun t them with a firm grip. It happens allot and often on a m ain road where people stop and laugh at him. I intend to stud him as he is from a line of champs so de sexing isnt an option. It is funnt, but shows me up. Any advice? He has a halti and retractable lead as he pulls too much

Answer:

Try a dealership; however, on a 22 year old car, it's highly improbable that the part is made by Ford any more Have you tried the auto parts stores such as Auto Zone and others? The door systems were changed completely to accommodate the new design of the 1990 Town Car. Since the 1989 model year was a carry over from the 1988 model year, and possibly the system being the same since the early 1980's models, you could broaden your search to include years from 1985 to 1989 (the minor redesign of the Town Car after its introduction in 1981, assuming the door handle/locking system changed any between those years).
Jay Dawg is right, except that I have had the experience of snapping (actually, I used a good pair of side cutters) off the piece, only to find that it is just a little too short. I've done that enough times that, now, I file or grind if there is any question in my mind. Stiffness would result from the piece being just a little long or from a slight misalignment of the lock and cylinder. Or a badly cut key, but it would be stiff before you even installed it. Good Luck
could you possibly FABRICATE the Part? If you can`t find it , MAKE IT.
So, the gist is this: Mass affects space by curving it, and curved space affects other masses in it. Example - The moon curves space a little; when Man walked on it's surface, he felt only 1/6th the gravity he felt at Earth's surface. The Earth is more massive, and space is curved - or warped - more - and we feel a full G on Earth's surface. While it's not wrong to assume two objects attract each other, the *way* it happens is that space is curved around them - like, a bowling ball on a trampoline. It sits in a 'well' that makes a marble's path around it curve. The marble also has a gravity well, but the bowling ball's is deeper - so, the marble is more affected by the bowling ball's gravity than the bowling ball is affected by the marble's gravity.

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