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Question:

use in place as a gasket?

i need to replace my air idle control vavle on my 2003 hyundai xg350..i cant find just the gasket and surely cant afford to pay for a new valve etci wanted to use cork thats gas proof in its place but im kind of hesitant about it..i dont know what else to use..i have to get this fixed so i can get back to work.i then thought of cleaning the old gasket and just placing some blue rtv around the gasket but dont know if i want to do that as well due to the fumes can cause damage to the sensorsi also thought of buying a bathtub stopper thats very thin from walmart less than a dollar and cutting that out..any ideas what i can use to replace the gasket?been having issues with the car for weeks and just gets worse and worse..now i found the issue but cant find parts needed to fix and cant afford the entire assembly..i also dont have anyone at all to lend me the moneyall i can do is make my own but not sure what material i can use in its place.

Answer:

you don,t Charge them you Change them, and I have never heard of changing them once there up they stay some one is trying to RIP you off
You are correct. They cease to be a colt at age 4. I call horses by color too all the time, or by personality, or even both. One particularly difficult Hackney pony mare in my barn is known as The little bay witch.
He's definitely not a colt anymore. At 5, they officially are no longer a colt.
If it's a small household one, you just have to replace it, because you don't want to run the risk of not having enough active ingredient in an emergency. You could keep it as a backup, but you should get another one. In any kind of business, every time you use an extinguisher, you have to have it recharged by a company that services them. These are the types of firms that do inspections, provide proper signage, and often do other safety services, such as eyewash stations and first aid kits. You can find one by using your search engine, but for a small homeowner unit, it will probably be cheaper to just get a new one. Even if they aren't used, they are under such high pressure that eventually the propellant will leak and it will have to be replaced anyway.
You are right, technically a colt is no longer considered a colt at age 4. But if you are just calling it a colt as a name and people know what horse you are talking about, then who cares. If you want to be politically correct, then you can stop calling him that and come up with another distinction for him.

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