Auto zone has a some lubricant you can pour in your transmission. mine is slipping will this work?
Assuming yours is an automatic transmission (AT), you should first check to see if there is the correct amount of ATF (AT Fluid) showing on the AT dipstick. Do not overfill. Do not expect any magic from a lubricant that is not intended for your make of AT. You did not say what kind of car you are driving or which transmission it has. Different transmissions sometimes require special lubricants, peculiar to a specific transmission. If you look long enough at Auto Zone, you may notice that FORD has its own FORD ATF. Be especially careful with an AT that has no dipstick. Some cars, (like BMW) have a special permanent ATF that should be changed once every 100,000 miles. Checking the ATF level in specific cars with no AT dipstick require an exact warm operating temperature of the ATF on a level surface before opening the filler plug to add or drain off the excess permanent ATF. A slipping AT most likely will require a replacement AT when the ATF is at the correct level and temperature.
chances are he will need put on supplements for the rest of his life. The regular vitamins just don't have enough iron for anemic children (or adults for that matter). He will also need his iron levels monitored from time to time to make sure his levels are still low. If he isn't getting enough Iron from his diet then he will need the supplements. Just be prepared because the extra iron can cause constipation which is uncomfortable enough for adults.
you ask this three times stop wasting our time an have it rebuilt If you can afford the car u can afford to have it fixed
Probably not. I assume you checked the fluid level? Is it manual or automatic? If those quick fix things worked there would be a lot of mechanics out of work.
Cook all your son's food in cast iron. You just need one pan. Amazingly, it's been shown to eliminate most cases of low iron without drops for toddlers. There was actually a study done in one of our counties in the 1980s. All moms on welfare were given cast iron pans and they found that the rates of iron deficiency for both women and children went from 35% to 1%. I found this out when I asked why a certain type of cast iron pan had been showing up at the Salvation Army thrift shop. Of course, all those kids are adults now. Funding dried up and now people are pretty resistant to having anything that doesn't have Teflon.