Discussion at this link gives several suggestions besides netting over their home.
Quoting from that site: "The answers provided on this board are for general guideline purposes only. The information is not intended to diagnose or treat your pet. It is your responsibility to assess the information being given and seek professional advice/second opinion from your veterinarian and/or qualified behaviorist."
https://www.binkybunny.com/FORUM/tabid/54/aft/131300/Default.aspx
Mosquitoes EVERYWHERE BinkyBunny com House Rabbit Information Forum...
SOURCE: 1977 VW Gas/Fuel Injected Rabbit
It sounds like it could be a problem with the fuel pressure regulator. When the engine is cold, there is a cold start valve that dumps extra fuel to start a cold engine.
SOURCE: 1983 volks rabbit 1.6 L starts o.k. but stalls when warm low rpm
This is caused by a faulty temp sensor, look at the top of the engine coming out of the head right near the distributor there is a coolant housing with a coolant line which should have one maybe two sensors one will be black (square with 2 to 4 wires) the other one will be blue. If yours only has one connector then disconnect it, start engine...the engine may idle higher than normal drive it till it warms up or to the point where it would normally stall, if it doesn't stall then replace the sensor and problem solved.
If you have two sensors, black one and blue one, its been awhile for me but disconnect one or the other, one of them is your temp gauge sending unit can't remember if its the blk one or blue one. But try that.
SOURCE: 1980 Rabbit Pickup. Engine surges at all speeds.
1980??? didnt have any sensors ,distributor cap points and carb ,zenith carb as i remember and bosch points and distributor
SOURCE: Stereo Wiring 1984 VW Rabbit
red brown is speaker(rear left),grey blue is remote for anntena.Hmm,red black possible is a amp or a live one(+12V)
As a general rule the cage should be at least 4 times the
size of the rabbit, but if your house permits - bigger is better. This is true
especially if the rabbits will spend most of their time in the cage.
As a guide: larger rabbits need a cage of 30" by
36" and smaller rabbits (Less than 8 lbs): 24" by 36".
Try this great guide: http://www.therabbithouse.com/guide_size.asp
387 views
Usually answered in minutes!
×