Great videos, from the scissor lift and safety concerns videos to this all amazing videos I've watched, you've earned a subscriber :) I'm Also a BMW owner of a F06 BMW M6 Gran Coupe :) Lovely car and lovely garage.
@@TheRealEvo Thank you very much! :) F06 M6 is a beautiful car! I couldn’t find one over here for reasonable price when I was looking for mine, so I settled with the M5
I might sound daft..but im a home diy car mecanic myself and wouldnt you just hook up a smoke machine and see where its pissing out from and replace and recharge aircon ?
@@realmusicreallife yeah I guess that could work - i don’t know however if smoke could potentially affect any components. Usually AC mechanics use the UV dye oil to search for leaks - and that was the case here too.
@@realmusicreallife I’ve seen some videos where techs used nitrogen gas to pressurize the system and then search for leaks with soapy water. Some also used regular compressed air, but that contains moisture so not the best option.
An amazing professional job. As we know there is very little room in the engine bay. The M5 is looking immaculate so kudos to you for your efforts...
@@mrz5705 Thank you very much! :)
Great videos, from the scissor lift and safety concerns videos to this all amazing videos I've watched, you've earned a subscriber :) I'm Also a BMW owner of a F06 BMW M6 Gran Coupe :) Lovely car and lovely garage.
@@TheRealEvo Thank you very much! :) F06 M6 is a beautiful car! I couldn’t find one over here for reasonable price when I was looking for mine, so I settled with the M5
youtube recommended me this video and I'm lovin it.. although I dont have an m5 though, but this is still informative !
@@RAINEN Thank you for watching! :)
Excellent tutorial, thank you for this realistic video
@@frederic4162 Thanks for watching!
I might sound daft..but im a home diy car mecanic myself and wouldnt you just hook up a smoke machine and see where its pissing out from and replace and recharge aircon ?
@@realmusicreallife yeah I guess that could work - i don’t know however if smoke could potentially affect any components.
Usually AC mechanics use the UV dye oil to search for leaks - and that was the case here too.
@@AlfisGarage ah I see. Thankyou
@@realmusicreallife I’ve seen some videos where techs used nitrogen gas to pressurize the system and then search for leaks with soapy water. Some also used regular compressed air, but that contains moisture so not the best option.