Chevrolet For Sale In Islamabad

Posting Komentar

2020 Tesla Model Y electric SUV revealed – price, specs, release date | What Car?

2020 Tesla Model Y electric SUV revealed – price, specs, release date | What Car?

What Car?:

Classic & Vintage Car Rally 2018 I Exploring Pakistan (Karachi to Khyber on classic cars) 5/7

Classic & Vintage Car Rally 2018 I Exploring Pakistan (Karachi to Khyber on classic cars) 5/7

Frraz Malik:























































































































Cooking Range very low price buy OLX | offer time

Cooking Range very low price buy OLX | offer time

Offer Time:

Second hand Showcases and tow Tables very low price | offer time
Most expensive and beautiful bed in the world | offer time
Used bed very good condition and low price | offer time

How to Buy Used Tires for Your Car

How to Buy Used Tires for Your Car

Howcast:

How to Diagnose and Fix a Noisy or Sticking Power Steering Wheel

How to Diagnose and Fix a Noisy or Sticking Power Steering Wheel

Ratchets And Wrenches:

Hey how is it going do it yourselfers, today
I am going to show you how you can diagnose
a noisy power steering which may or may not
be accompanied by a sticky steering wheel.
Alright so the first thing you want to do
is to check the level of your power steering
fluid. And if you are low you want to add
power steering fluid just make sure you look
in your owners manual and add the correct
power steering fluid for your car. So next
you start your car and see whether the noise
has gone away or not. So next what you want
to do is to try to bleed out the air that
could be trapped inside your power steering
system and you do that by turning your steering
wheel from lock to lock with the engine running.
So basically you turn your steering wheel
all the way to the right and than all the
way back to the left and you do this for about
a dozen times or so and this should help bleed
out the air that's in the system. Now after
adding fluid and than turning the steering
wheel back and forth a couple of times you
find that the noise goes away and you also
get your power steering back, well in that
case you obviously had a leak in your power
steering system and that's what was causing
the noise and the lack of power steering,
now later in this video I'll go over how you
can go about finding leaks in your power steering
system. But if you find that bleeding the
air out of the system has made no difference
at all, well in that case most of the times
the problem is going to lay with your power
steering pump which is back there on this
car that I can't show you but it's generally
somewhere up here which is more accessible.
Now I say most of the times it's your power
steering pump, because sometimes a bad rack
and pinion would have the same signs. Now
usually a bad rack and pinion is also accompanied
by some other signs like loose steering while
you are driving down the road, or leaking
specially from the ends where your inner tie
rods attack to your rack and pinion, alright
see this is your inner tie rod end, this is
where it attaches to your rack and pinion
and inside here there is a seal. Which is
in fact leaking on this rack and pinion. Now
a dead giveaway that you have a bad rack and
pinion is whenever you go to make a turn so
for example over here we are about to make
a right turn, so after you make the turn,
your steering wheel is going to try to straighten
out and come back to the neutral position
on it's own. Now if you make that turn and
it doesn't come back towards the neutral position
than that's a dead giveaway that you have
a bad rack and pinion. Alright so we are going
to make our right turn, now I am going to
let go and see how it's starting to come back,
now if it was just stuck on the right side
and I had to manually straighten it out than
that was a dead giveaway that the rack and
pinion is shot and needs to be replaced. Now
there is a chance that the high pressure line
that goes from your power steering pump to
your rack and pinion could be clogged and
causing you to have issues as well, but that
line and your rack and pinion, whenever you
replace one or the other you should replace
the other one as well. Because what happens
is that when the power steering fluid comes
out of your steering pump and enters that
pressure line and than goes to your power
steering rack and pinion the power steering
fluid is under a lot of pressure, in fact
maybe a 1000 psi or more. Now what happens
is that overtime when that pressure line wares
out and deteriorates the material from that
line ends up inside your rack and pinion,
and inside your rack and pinion you have way
more than the seals on the ends of it where
your inner tie rods go and when those seals
go bad you pretty much need a rack and pinion.
And in fact most manufacturers will require
you to buy that pressure line when you replace
your rack and pinion otherwise they won't
guarantee their rack and pinion. Alright so
let me explain it on the white board so hopefully
you guys have an easier time understanding.
Basically we'll start at the fluid reservoir,
fluid from here goes to your power steering
pump, from here your pump pumps it out at
1000 psi or more to your rack and pinion,
and once you use it up it goes through the
return line to your power steering fluid reservoir.
Pretty nice and easy, now if you can get your
hands on a power steering gauge set you can
put a gauge after your power steering pump
and if the psi of pressure that's coming out
of your power steering pump is up to specification
but you are still having noise than that could
indicate a problem with the pressure line
and the rack and pinion. But that pressure
gauge set is something a mechanic would have
and most do it yourselfer's are not going
to be able to afford a good one or even borrow
it from their local auto parts store. Now
as far as where you can look for leaks, again
these lines all of them could leak, your power
steering pressure line could obviously leak
through the pressure line because it's under
so much pressure, and again the seals at the
end of your rack and pinion. And also you
should pay special attention to the clamps
that attach these this return line and this
fluid supply line to your power steering pump,
and if you have a bad power steering pump
you could have a leak from the bearings or
where the shaft goes through your power steering
pump as well. Also I should mention that whenever
you replace a component of your power steering
system you need to flush the old power steering
fluid out of there and replace it with new
one, and in fact I have a video on how you
can do that exactly and I'll put a link to
that video along with some other related video's
on this side of the screen that you can click
on there will also be links in the description
box down bellow as well. So with that said
hope this video helps you out, and if it did
please give it a thumbs up, subscribe if you
want to see more like it and I'll see you
next time. Thanks for watching.

Assistant Secretary Fernandez Participates in a LiveAtState on the Global Entrepreneurship Summit

Assistant Secretary Fernandez Participates in a LiveAtState on the Global Entrepreneurship Summit

U.S. Department of State:

MS. JENSEN: Hi. Welcome to LiveAtState, the
State Department's interactive video, web-chat
platform for engaging international media.
I'm your host, Holly Jensen, and I'm delighted
to welcome all of our guests joining us from
around the world.
Today, I'm joined in the studio by Assistant
Secretary of State for Economic and Business
Affairs Jose Fernandez. And he will be taking
your questions and speaking to you on the
Global Entrepreneurship Summit and U.S. efforts
to promote economic and business relationships
around the globe.
Before I turn it over to Assistant Secretary
Fernandez, I want to make a few housekeeping
notes. At any time, if you would like to start
asking your questions, you can do so by going
to the lower left-hand portion of your screen
and asking your questions in the window titled
"Questions for State Department Official."
And if you lose connectivity and you want
to email us your questions, you can do so
by emailing them to Live@State.gov. And if
you would like to continue this conversation
today after the conclusion of our program,
you can follow the State Department on Twitter
by using the handle @StateDept. Or you can
follow us by using the Twitter handle @EconEngage,
and that's @E-c-o-n-E-n-g-a-g-e.
And with that, I will turn it over to you,
Assistant Secretary Fernandez. Thank you for
joining us today.
ASSISTANT SECRETARY FERNANDEZ: Thank you for
having me, Holly. It's a pleasure to be here.
Let me just start by saying that last week
we hosted a Global Entrepreneurship preview
of what's being announced and what's being
- what will be held in Dubai next month. It
will be the Global Entrepreneurship Summit.
We're expecting over a thousand entrepreneurs
to converge in Dubai to talk about entrepreneurship.
And I hosted a panel; the panel had three
entrepreneurs from the U.S. and also from
the Middle East. And the point of the panel
was to talk about how we go about creating
an enabling environment in order to foster
entrepreneurship.
And one of the things that we learned - well,
a couple of things that we learned - one was
the employment gap and the youth (inaudible)
that exists in the Middle East, where you
have 30-plus percent unemployment among young
people in the Middle East, there are countries
where the more educated that you are, the
more likely you are to be unemployed. And
entrepreneurship is one of the tools that
governments have to create jobs and to create
opportunities.
And so we talked about enabling a policy environment
that will allow entrepreneurship to foster.
And I was able to announce a couple of really
new and interesting programs. One was an interactive
web resource hosted by the Atlantic Council
that will connect entrepreneurs in North Africa,
in the Maghreb, and will do three things:
number one, match entrepreneurs with mentors;
secondly, create a crowd-funding resource;
and thirdly, to put together potential investors
and have them talk to potential entrepreneurs
in the Maghreb. And we're really excited about
that.
We also announced that as part of our promotional
efforts to promote the Global Entrepreneurship
Summit, we awarded a prize to one contestant
who wrote an essay on entrepreneurship. His
name is Mohammad Abu Musa, and Mohammad, from
Jordan, Mohammad wrote an essay on promoting
entrepreneurship for women. And I'll - I'm
delighted to say that Mohammad will be going
to Dubai, and I'll be looking forward to meeting
him there.
MS. JENSEN: Great. I know you discussed this
a little bit, but what were some of your key
takeaways from last week's celebration of
entrepreneurship at the White House?
ASSISTANT SECRETARY FERNANDEZ: Well, number
one is how interested people are about entrepreneurship,
especially young people. They see it as a
tool to create new jobs to promote opportunity.
If you've got a great idea, it doesn't really
matter where you come from, as long as you
have the opportunity to make your idea a reality.
And so we had over 125 entrepreneurs from
- mostly from the U.S., but also from around
the world, and we talked about a couple of
things that governments can do, in my panel
at least.
Number one: How do governments go about minimizing
red tape? How do you create the regulatory
environment to promote entrepreneurship? Secondly,
what can governments do to train entrepreneurs
to get that skills gap reduced? How do you
get access to capital if you're an entrepreneur?
In some ways, the easiest thing is to get
a good idea. But then you've got to find people
who will believe in that idea and will want
to invest. And so access to capital is something
that we talked about a lot.
And lastly, something that I think in the
U.S. we take for granted, and that is that
in order to create entrepreneurship, it's
got to be acceptable to fail. In Silicon Valley
in California and other places in the U.S.
where we have lots of entrepreneurs, every
entrepreneur has failed once, twice, three
times. They just get up and they try to create
a new company. And so creating the policy
environment, creating the culture that will
make it acceptable for someone to just fail
the first time, but just get up and try again,
is something that we also talked about. And
that, to me - those were four of the takeaways
from last week.
MS. JENSEN: And what's the U.S. Government
doing to promote entrepreneurship overseas?
ASSISTANT SECRETARY FERNANDEZ: Well, we've
got a number of programs. Ultimately, entrepreneurship
is something that's homegrown. So you're going
to have to have people interested in entrepreneurship.
But what we can do in the U.S. is we can bring
entrepreneurs together, entrepreneurs from
the U.S. with entrepreneurs from the Middle
East and other parts of the world. We can
provide access to investors; we can provide
training sessions.
For example, last year in Morocco for the
NAPEO Entrepreneurship Forum, we had 10 sessions
on - training sessions for entrepreneurs.
We had over 100 trainers - people who talked
about how do you put together a business plan,
how do you make a pitch to investors, how
do you create a workforce that will be interested
in entrepreneurship. All these are things
that we can do. We've got a culture in the
U.S. of entrepreneurship; it's something that
the rest of the world typically wants to learn
about, hear from the U.S. And so we can just
talk about what we've done here. Although,
ultimately entrepreneurship, again, will have
to be homegrown.
MS. JENSEN: I just want to remind you that
if you have any questions, you can start to
ask them now in the lower left-hand portion
of your screen, titled "Questions for State
Department Official."
Can you tell us: Why is entrepreneurship good
for a country's economy?
ASSISTANT SECRETARY FERNANDEZ: Well, look,
it's about jobs, it's about opportunity, and
it's about young people, in many ways. In
this country, small and medium countries create
most of the jobs. That's the same thing around
the world, including in the Middle East and
North Africa. Opportunity - if you've got
a good idea, you ought to be able to have
the opportunity to make that idea into a business.
And so entrepreneurship is about creating
a regulatory environment that will allow those
kinds of small new companies with new technologies
to foster and providing the capital that they
need in order to make those companies a reality.
And third, young people want to create new
websites, want to create new technologies.
And that typically is done through entrepreneurship,
and in the part of the world where you've
got a large portion of young people are unemployed
or underemployed, entrepreneurship provides
an opportunity for those people to create
their new business, to employ others, and
to do what they have to do in order to grow
their economies.
MS. JENSEN: So why does the State Department
and the U.S. Government in general care about
promoting entrepreneurship in other countries?
ASSISTANT SECRETARY FERNANDEZ: Well, ultimately,
at the end of the day what the U.S. likes
- wants to do is to promote economic growth
and social inclusion. And that - entrepreneurship
is all about that. Again, creating jobs, creating
new companies - those are things that entrepreneurship
does. Because our best partners are countries
with growing economies that can provide for
their people, that can provide jobs, and that's
something that entrepreneurship helps to do.
It's not the only - it's not a silver bullet.
It's part of many other things. It requires
the right regulatory policies; it requires
the right opportunity for women, for young
people, and others. But it's part of what
we want to do because our best partners are
economically stable partners.
MS. JENSEN: Our next question comes from Syed
Asif Ali, from News 1 TV in Islamabad: Secretary,
can you please explain Silk Road vision, India,
Pakistan, Afghanistan, Central Asian states,
and so on, and its timeframe in your mind
for this?
ASSISTANT SECRETARY FERNANDEZ: Well, there's
a lot to talk about with the New Silk Road
vision. It was announced - Secretary Clinton
began discussing it last year when she went
to India. And basically the New Silk Road
is an economic and an international transit
network to link Central and South Asian countries
together. That's basically one-fifth of the
world's population. And this is - these are
countries that in the past haven't been as
linked as they could have been in order to
grow their economies.
This is an idea that's already taking root.
You've got India and Pakistan that have moved
to normalize trade and economic ties. And
there you're talking about a $10 billion increase
in trade and investment in those two countries.
There's been a recent agreement signed by
Bangladesh to have its goods be able to go
through India in order to move to other parts
of the region. Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Afghanistan
have formalized a cross-border transport agreement.
So it's basically the New Silk Road. What
it tries to do is to integrate the economies
of the South and Central Asian countries together
in order to grow them. And it's an idea that's
been around for centuries, but I think the
time has come to make it a reality.
MS. JENSEN: Our next question comes from Blset
Ibrahim from CNN Arabic: What plans do you
have for Arab Spring countries which involve
youth entrepreneurship?
ASSISTANT SECRETARY FERNANDEZ: Well, that's
a great question. As I've mentioned, there
are many reasons, there are many causes for
the Arab Spring. One of them, obviously, is
the desire for human dignity, the desire to
- for people to have opportunities and to
have jobs and to be able to fulfill their
potential.
But another is simply the lack of employment,
the lack of economic growth that will allow
young people to have jobs and to see themselves
having new careers in the future. Entrepreneurship
is about creating new jobs, creating new technologies,
but it also makes countries that want to foster
entrepreneurship have to do certain things.
They have to deal with the red tape, they
have to provide the right regulatory environment,
and they also have to be able to get women
involved in the workforce, because in many
countries in the Middle East and North Africa,
women are some of our best entrepreneurs.
We've had a couple of entrepreneurship contests
that we have hosted around the world, and
invariably, with few exceptions, women are
most of our contestants, and they also, oftentimes,
are the winners.
And so it's our way of reaching and working
with young people in the Middle East, and
it's our way to basically do what we've - what
we say we want to do and basically put our
money where our mouth is, and that is promoting
entrepreneurship, promoting private enterprise
in a way that will help create jobs.
MS. JENSEN: So this is a follow-up from Blset
Ibrahim: What do you think about the plans
which were made by the countries which witnessed
the Arab Spring?
ASSISTANT SECRETARY FERNANDEZ: The plans?
MS. JENSEN: That's what it says.
ASSISTANT SECRETARY FERNANDEZ: Well, those
plans obviously are still a work-in-progress.
Many countries are still undergoing change
and will - we're likely to see that change
continue. But as I - I've travelled to all
of the countries, for the most part, of the
Arab Spring - Tunisia, Libya, many, many others
- and all of them realize that they have to
create new opportunities, they have to grow
their economies. And in Tunisia, they had
30 to 40 percent of young people unemployed.
You had more unemployed educated - college-educated
youth in Tunisia than non-college-educated
youth unemployed in Tunisia. They realize
that they've got to create the right skills,
they've got to promote the right skills, they've
got to find new sources of investment, they've
got to create the conditions that will make
foreign investment and domestic investors
want to invest in their economy.
So those are their plans. And obviously, there
are things that the U.S. can do, such as promoting
investment in those countries, trade agreements,
finding ways for more young people from those
countries to study in the U.S. and elsewhere.
So those are the kinds of things that we can
do to promote the aspirations of the people
in the Arab Spring who, in many ways, we can
say are ongoing, and they will continue.
MS. JENSEN: So one more follow-up: What do
you think about the policy which some Arab
countries are applying to develop their economic
situation, like Jordan and Egypt, as in raising
the prices of fuel, and under the circumstances
that they are facing?
ASSISTANT SECRETARY FERNANDEZ: Well, that
- it's - I'm not familiar with the - obviously,
I have read about the efforts to lower the
subsidies, but ultimately - in fuel and in
other goods. But ultimately, every country
has to decide how to apply its funding. It
has to - if they have subsidies, they've got
to have targeted subsidies. That means subsidies
that will go to the people who need them as
opposed to just everyone indiscriminately.
But ultimately, all these countries are looking
for ways to attract more investment, to provide
more opportunity, to create opportunities
for trade, to bring in the kinds of technologies
that will allow young people and others to
be employed, to have educational alliances
with other countries as well. And that's a
whole part of the economic growth. One of
them obviously is to have the right macroeconomic
policies that will allow those unfortunate
who may not have as many opportunities to
receive the kinds of subsidies that are needed,
but otherwise, to be able to apply those
funds and those subsidies in a targeted way.
MS. JENSEN: So are you doing anything in other
regions of the world?
ASSISTANT SECRETARY FERNANDEZ: Oh, (inaudible).
We are - we've got - on the entrepreneurship
front, we have programs that are ongoing in
Indonesia. We just had an entrepreneurship
delegation in Ireland, of all places. Entrepreneurship
is actually - it's an American export, probably
the easiest thing that I can talk about to
many countries, the U.S. culture of entrepreneurship.
And in many countries, from Chile that are
- that has embraced entrepreneurship, to parts
of Africa, people want to know how we've done
it. And sometimes we take it for granted in
this country, but they want to know how you
make it easier to create a company, how you
make it easier to close a company if you fail,
how people go about providing capital, how
we're able to have our workforce get the right
skills to create new companies and new businesses.
And that's all part of entrepreneurship. And
it's not just the Middle East; it's elsewhere
- as I said, from Chile to Africa to Indonesia
to Taiwan. And so we're doing it in many,
many places.
MS. JENSEN: Our next question is: What are
you doing to help women start their own businesses?
ASSISTANT SECRETARY FERNANDEZ: That's been
one of our main objectives in the last few
years. Women in many places don't have the
same opportunities, obviously, that men do.
And in many cases, it's not just because-
not only because they don't get the right
educational opportunities, but it's also because
in many countries, women don't have the contacts.
If they have a business, they don't have the
customers.
So for example, one of the programs that I've
been very proud to be involved in is in Peru.
And what we did in Peru, through an organization
called WEConnect, was to have that organization
train over a thousand women-owned businesses,
businesses that were owned - majority-owned
- by women in Peru, train them on marketing
skills, employment skills, putting together
business plans, dealing with customers. And
then after they were trained and after they
were certified, they were put together with
customers. And we had U.S. companies such
as Wal-Mart and others who agreed to buy a
certain amount of products from these women-owned
businesses.
And so we were able to not just train them
and not just to put them in a position where
they could succeed, but we were also able
to help them to get the right - probably to
do the hardest thing that any business has
to do at the beginning, and that is to find
customers, because we had companies that had
agreed to buy from these women-owned entrepreneurs.
And then we can keep doing that around the
world. If we can find that alliance of educators,
of businesspeople, and of companies that are
willing to help small and medium-owned - medium
women-owned businesses, I think we'll be able
to continue what we've sought in the last
few years under Secretary Clinton's leadership.
MS. JENSEN: I know you're going to find this
hard to believe, but this is our last question.
(Laughter.) I understand that you were a key
participant in the Maghreb Entrepreneurship
Conference in January. What were some of your
key takeaways from that conference?
ASSISTANT SECRETARY FERNANDEZ: That was a
great conference, and that - we had about
450 entrepreneurs from North - mostly from
North Africa, from the Maghreb, but from other
parts of the world as well. And what I found
really, really striking in that conference
was to see how borders were erased through
entrepreneurship. We had entrepreneurs from
Morocco and Algeria, for example, two countries
that have a close border, exchanging business
cards, putting together deals, making plans
to create new companies. And so that energy,
that sense of possibility, that sense that,
as a region, they could do a lot more than
they could do individually was something that
I took away from that conference.
But also the desire of entrepreneurs to work
with the U.S., to work with American universities,
American business schools to find investors
from the U.S. who were willing to invest in
their companies. It was really the sense of
possibility, both across the region but also
with the U.S., as something that really stayed
with me after that conference.
MS. JENSEN: Well, thank you for that. And
that's all the time we have for today. I would
like to thank all of you for joining us. A
full audio and video copy of today's program
will be available shortly for download. If
you would like to get the latest information
from the State Department, you can follow
us on Twitter by using the handle @StateDept
or @EconEngage. And if you would like more
information on our 21st century statecraft
and our economic dealings, you can visit our
Facebook page. It's www.facebook.com/EconBizEngage.
We look forward to doing this again with you
really soon.

WaiveCar at Cal State LA

WaiveCar at Cal State LA

Cal State LA Parking & Transportation:

The WaiveCar is one of Cal State LA 's
newest sustainability programs that was
introduced in spring 2019 with this
program faculty, staff, and students, 21
years and older will be able to book a
zero-emission vehicle for two hours at
no cost any additional time is $5.99 per
hour there will be designated parking
spots for them throughout campus to pick
up and return after each booking now let
me take you through the steps in order
to sign up and start your trip with
WaiveCar first download the WaiveCar
app through the app Store and fill out
your information to create your account
once that is complete you will come to a
screen showing you a map of the
available WaiveCars choose the nearest
vehicle to you and hit book after you
book the car you have 15 minutes to
reach it before the booking times out. In
order to unlock the car simply hit
unlock on the screen in the app and
start the car by pushing your foot down
on the brake and pressing the power
button once you have returned the car to
one of the designated parking spaces
make sure the key is in the sensor and
turn off the car after, verify your
location when returning the car and hit
finish and lock on the app. For more
information on the sustainability of
wave car here is Dr. Blekhman. Hello my
name is David Blekhman and a professor of
technology at Cal State LA and I would
like to talk about hydrogen, clean
transportation and the exciting shared
mobility WaiveCar program. Hydrogen fuel
is a sustainable fuel it can be produced
from sunshine from wind, the electricity
is combined with water and then water is
split to produce hydrogen and oxygen
then we use this clean hydrogen to fuel
the cars. Hydrogen vehicles are going to
be a very important component of future
mobility, hydrogen vehicles excel at
quick refueling and long distance drive
so they will have a very major role in
producing new transportation. We are very
excited to host the WaiveCar program
and utilize shared mobility vehicles
utilizing hydrogen also in the future we
are hoping to bring in shuttle buses
that utilize hydrogen, potentially
forklifts and other technology so
to make our campus more sustainable and
lead the way for other CSU campuses. If
you have any questions please feel free
to contact commuter services at (323) 343-5277. Thank you so much for
listening and we hope you have a safe
trip

ROLLS ROYCE PHANTOM IN SAMUNDRI FAISALABAD PAKISTAN ! TRAVEL VLOGS

ROLLS ROYCE PHANTOM IN SAMUNDRI FAISALABAD PAKISTAN ! TRAVEL VLOGS

Pakistani Around The World !:


PLEASE LIKE MY CHANNEL FOR MORE VIDEOS .

Family thanks Huntersville Police after serious accident

Family thanks Huntersville Police after serious accident

WCNC:

TITAN AUTO SALES REVIEW: MONTE WATTS PURCHASES A 2008 GMC YUKON DENALI

TITAN AUTO SALES REVIEW: MONTE WATTS PURCHASES A 2008 GMC YUKON DENALI

Titan Auto Sales:

I'm Monte, this is my daughter Lily.
We came here today to Titan to work with Arthur
and James.
Great review, great job, great flow.
We were able to get the vehicle of our choice
for a great deal.
And we just appreciate it.
We found it all online using their very user-friendly
website.
Thank you again.

Related Posts

Posting Komentar

Subscribe Our Newsletter