First off condolences on the loss....not that much older than my father in law who is currently in remission from cancer having just completed stem cell transplant....it's tough realizing how quickly things can change but glad to hear that you were able to make conscious efforts to be with the family.
Happy Birthday to your little one! We have a unicorn themed event in our backyard tomorrow for the exact same occurrence....thank goodness forecast is positive for them to all be outside and not in the basement but looking forward to watching them run and play.
Sorry to hear about your mother in law, and my best to your family. The secondary benefit of making decisions that benefit your longevity is that - unless you’re browbeating your kids about it which I doubt - you will set a good example for them. They will hopefully take notice of the discipline and mindfulness of your changes.
And, to add my personal experience, inspired by nothing other than my tight schedule with two kids, I’ve made similar changes. For me that’s no more alcohol (love the stuff and never abused it, but I can’t afford to have even the hangover I get from a beer or two anymore). I’ve traded my evenings in the garage with a couple of beers for 35mi of running per week. Now when I get to do something like a CV joint, I’m not so worn out and I actually enjoy it. If I could summon the energy to read more I would do that too, but 8PM after the kids are in bed hits different now, ha.
WOO-HOO!!!!
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Way to stick with it!
Nick. massive kudos on sticking to it, and working the problems with patience. All of these experiences tend to add up in a good way when it comes to future repairs. I call it the “spidey sense” which gets more and more accurate with experience. I’m sure you’re quite stoked with the successes on the stubborn struts…
OMG I almost spit out my Tea I was drinking!!!OK, you have another tool to buy - you don't use a claw hammer to hit things on a car, you need a ball peen hammer!
Good to see you're getting it sorted. Let us know how it rides/drives with the new shocks.....
OK, you have another tool to buy - you don't use a claw hammer to hit things on a car, you need a ball peen hammer! Go to Harbor Freight and pick one (or several) up. Also, while you're there, consider a dead blow hammer too - they're really inexpensive and you WILL use them.....
Good to see you're getting it sorted. Let us know how it rides/drives with the new shocks.....
OMG I almost spit out my Tea I was drinking!!!![]()














@nicholam77 , you could have put a vise grips on the shaft of the old strut to facilitate removal. Also, like it or not, air impact is different than electric impact. Faster, more brutal, something. I might try an electric for some things, but when doing the strut top nut, air would be my only choice.
Nick, I'm with Kay on the air impact. Bought my first 1/2" air impact 50 something years ago. It's a Rockwell and still works just fine. For jobs needing a really brutal impact, I bought a Harbor Freight 1/2" Earthquake and if it doesn't loosen a fastener it quickly destroys it.
I don't think you need the brutal impacts yet because the fasteners on your cars look to be in good shape, despite your location.
Nice work getting the suspension swapped out. I don't mean to go too far off the rails and will admit I have no experience working on german cars, but from what I am seeing here compared to Japanese engineering zee Germans really don't make things easy for the DIY guy. Sorry german car rant over!
Nick, Noxudol is awesome, but otherwise careful application of fluid film or Woolwax yearly is the next best thing. With Noxudol, I just touch up a few spots each fall.
You have a collection of Allen keys and pass thru sockets well beyond my set…but I have no German cars in the stable right now. Rust and any kind of allen key wrench is always a **** shoot here. The combination of corrosion in the socket (no longer snug contact with the tool), high torque to release a rusty fastener, and a small internal radius to take that torque is a recipe for frustration in the winter/salt climates like ours. It's a fact of life for yearly brake service as many caliper slide bolts are allen heads. Subaru at least has them in a capped rubber boot that you can fill with grease…
Nick,
I’m so sorry to read about your loss. Condolences to you and your family. 60 is far far too young. Wishing you all the best as you navigate this.
Also, happy birthday to your kid! We just celebrated my daughters 2 year old birthday as well. We had a nice outdoor gathering planned, but got rained out (it rains every weekend…) and had to relocate into the garage. Cocomelon theme for us heh.
Awesome to see you pulling the trigger on all those tools and getting that job done!! I had actually never heard of that spreader bit you grabbed. I’ve always hammered a chisel into the seam, but that’s much more elegant. I think I will order one to have.











Just so you know, you will never stop collecting tools. So, time to invest in a bigger toolbox now. Maybe look for a good black Friday deal at Harbor Freight. GJ'ers love spending other peoples money.I've been meaning to try it ever since you posted about it like 5 years ago
Yeah, I guess I'm lucky none of mine were very bad. Btw the 'yearly brake service' was running through my head while I had it up on stands, but I was just too preoccupied and short on time. I'll have to do it when I swap to winter wheels. Which sadly is not that far off...
Thanks, man. And happy birthday to your youngest! Two is such a fun age.
Speaking of all the tools, here was the cost of doing this refresh as a DIY:
Racingline Sport Dampers: $574
OEM Sachs strut bearings and mounts + OEM VAG replacement bolts: $168
Tools: $493
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$1,235
Kind of a lot, in my view anyways. For the tools, it mostly made sense to buy a 'set' vs. a one-off wrench or socket size. I spent a little more doing that, but the way they price it it just makes sense. Things I added to the collection were:
° Milkwaukee impact wrench + 5ah battery + charger
° Metric offset wrench set
° Metric deep impact socket set
° Metric + Imperial pass-through socket and ratchet set
° Metric and Imperial Allen key set
° Spring compressors
° Triple square / spline bit socket set
° Both strut spreader tools
° 21mm 12-point socket in case I needed to remove the axle (may return to Amazon)
° 22mm strut nut socket (cutaway)
A few of those things are specialized and probably won't get used much, but some of them will be nice to have on hand.
I am starting to run out of drawers in my Craftsman bench, and wish I had more shallow drawers for hand tools vs. some of the deeper ones.


Just so you know, you will never stop collecting tools. So, time to invest in a bigger toolbox now. Maybe look for a good black Friday deal at Harbor Freight. GJ'ers love spending other peoples money.
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Nice job on the suspension. It'll be that much easier when you convert to that KWv3 set up.![]()
I'm with Dan; look for a HF deal and get a tool box. Perhaps a top chest you can sit on the benchtop between the two wall cabinets.
Just an FYI, the Bosch mid and high range (330, 740, 770) impact wrenches have the same 'smart' technology:
In reverse, with bolt mode activated, the Auto Bolt Release stops rotation when there is no load on the tool to help prevent accidentally dropping bolts and nuts during removal.
GJ'ers love spending other peoples money.
When the time comes, if you can find a way, keep the car. There are a couple I wish I had kept from when I was your age.
Air cooled 911 prices seem to be diverging. Special cars have not slowed at all. In fact, their prices are still accelerating upwards, thanks in large part to the big auction sites like BAT, Elferspot, P-Car market and others. Google the 'White collection.' Standard cars, while still appreciating, seem to have slowed the rate of increase, slightly. When you get serious about finding one, and I'm confident you will one day based on your comments over time, get close to the local community. It's interesting to see how many cars change hands that aren't on the open market. Less than it used to be, again see 'auctions,' but still an option. I think Odis has a few examples in his collection that came from private or off market sales.
Congrats on knocking that all out. Definitely don't envy that design for struts. Never worked on one like that. I remember my first suspension replacement and how long it took. Seven later and they are mostly a breeze.
Seems you spent about as much to do it as the shop wanted to charge just for labor between parts and tools but now you have a set of tools for a lifetime of more projects out of it. Seems like a solid win.
Nice job pushing through the strut job. I have one of those top strut sockets too. It worked well for the stock setup, but not when I upgraded the upper strut mounts, I had to resort to using a spark plug socket, wrench and allen wrench. And guestimate the torque.











Crikey Nick, that snow seems early, I couldn’t be doing with that, I’d have to move.![]()
The tree looks like it’s to big and to close, i think it’s the right decision to get rid of it.
Iced coffee? When it's freezing outside? Bravo!!!
We are related in some way!
Similar treat here with Halloween snow, just a dusting. I'm good with it. With any luck all the 'skeeters are now decomposing.
I love how you've decorated your living room, and is that an authentic Herman Miller Saucer??
I really do think I might keep this car forever haha. We'll see how it goes and what it's worth, but ideally in my mind I'd like to get a new, more practical daily, and just keep the GTI as a fun car / project car. I wouldn't mind the extra drop, upgraded clutch, full stage 1. I don't have the winter storage or all that thought out yet, but if I had a different daily I could even keep it out of the road salt.
I've said it before, but I feel like in 10 years when there's no more manuals and we're all driving EV's and 911's et al are priced into the stratosphere, the Mk7 GTI is going to be a desirable 'affordable' car.

www.midwest-bayless.com
I have to mention one more problem with a Fiat X-1/9. If you are over six feet tall, you might get stuck in it. Ask me how I know.Think about a Fiat X-1/9 if you want an Italian car. Later is better. I had one for years. Great little 2 seat sbox. Their only real problems are the grounding design and the shift linkage. A weekend's effort will cure both.

I'm 6'-ish and never had a problem. Good to know.I have to mention one more problem with a Fiat X-1/9. If you are over six feet tall, you might get stuck in it. Ask me how I know.
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