I thought this was going to be an article about one of the classic banes of many a marriage, intestinal gas. Try vibe coding your way out of that one, Tom!
Just keep the tank (or battery) topped up or high at all times.
Gas stations and charging stations run on (you guessed it! electricity) and where I live, trees fall on power lines and PG&E has a hair trigger on their lines as an insurance policy against actually making them safer ( helicopters run checks now and then) But not to digress, it's not paranoid to keep stuff topped up, to carry cable chains and a jumper cable.
The gauge always seems to work, even if it's a dumb float.
[rant]
If anyone has a vibe-coded solution to the perennial Subaru "Your windshield washer tank is empty" when it's damn full, problem, let me know. Otherwise, it involves creeping under the car, and messing with the world's worst liquid sensor. I'm a bit old for such shenanigans, and it involves the usual "tech" problem of "It takes $300 to fix a $2.00 POS sensor that the cost-cutters thought was cool."
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[ 4.1 ms ] story [ 18.1 ms ] threadGas stations and charging stations run on (you guessed it! electricity) and where I live, trees fall on power lines and PG&E has a hair trigger on their lines as an insurance policy against actually making them safer ( helicopters run checks now and then) But not to digress, it's not paranoid to keep stuff topped up, to carry cable chains and a jumper cable.
The gauge always seems to work, even if it's a dumb float.
[rant] If anyone has a vibe-coded solution to the perennial Subaru "Your windshield washer tank is empty" when it's damn full, problem, let me know. Otherwise, it involves creeping under the car, and messing with the world's worst liquid sensor. I'm a bit old for such shenanigans, and it involves the usual "tech" problem of "It takes $300 to fix a $2.00 POS sensor that the cost-cutters thought was cool."
[/rant]