I turn them counter clockwise until I feel the lead-in on the thread
Works on putting that peanut butter lid back on the jar straight, too! That's an old trick, but a really good one.
I turn them counter clockwise until I feel the lead-in on the thread
Bread does work on transmission pilot bearings.
How do you use bread on transmission pilot bearings?
Not automotive, but bread does work to absorb water so you can solder copper pipes. Put the bread down inside, clean, flux, solder. Water gets held back by the bread.
You jam it in the hole, as the bread builds up it will act as a hydraulic, and push out the bearing. I had a guy stick a 5/8 spark plug socket in a 5.4 Triton, getting it hopelessly stuck in the spark plug tube. 2/3 of a loaf of bread dislodged it. Then a long pick and compressed air removed the bread.
Less nasty than using grease, and easier to use.
I always went to the toilet, grabbed a few brown paper towels, wet them, and stuffed them in. It's easier and more convenient than sending the porter out for a loaf of bread. It's also less messy.
Not automotive, but bread does work to absorb water so you can solder copper pipes. Put the bread down inside, clean, flux, solder. Water gets held back by the bread.
WD-40 is one of the best hand cleaners ever made.
Back in the70's we used to heat up a distributor cap to find tiny cracks in them. They appeared on the inside of the cap and they were source of misfires. Can't remember if
we put cap over a boiling pot of water to do it. Anybody remember doing this?
My 74 Datsun B-210 had a misfire I couldn’t figure out my uncle did that and I had cracks in the cap replaced the cap car ran like new..
Wow, that's one of those things that needs to be seen to be believed...
Great trick!
Mike
I’ve just filled that cavity with grease from a grease gun and then whack an appropriately sized bolt or rod. I think that grease is probably a less compressible/more effective material to use than bread! But I guess if you need to get that pilot bushing out and only have your sandwich available, bread will get the job done.
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My 74 Datsun B-210 had a misfire I couldn’t figure out my uncle did that and I had cracks in the cap replaced the cap car ran like new..
If you're changing the cap, change the rotor as well. I've seen cracked ones.
If you need to find TDC on a cylinder while turning an engine over by hand, lay a plastic cap from a soda bottle over the spark plug hole. When it blows off off, you are near TDC on the compression stroke.
I like to put my bolts to different components, in sandwich bags, and label them when doing big jobs.
For all you guys labeling, or putting bolts in sandwich bags....
I went to tech school for heavy equipment mechanics. If an instructor saw you organizing your disassembled parts he would walk by and move it all around and drop all the bolts into one bucket. He told us that we need to learn to reassemble from scratch. The same way I do it today, toss it all in a bucket and sort it out as you assemble.
Now I can understand it, and I do bag screws on hardware on a job I might not get back to in a while, but the Saturday after noon water pump, or timing chain replacement, toss it all in a bucket!
So, wait; nobody uses a pilot bearing puller anymore?
For all you guys labeling, or putting bolts in sandwich bags....
I went to tech school for heavy equipment mechanics. If an instructor saw you organizing your disassembled parts he would walk by and move it all around and drop all the bolts into one bucket. He told us that we need to learn to reassemble from scratch. The same way I do it today, toss it all in a bucket and sort it out as you assemble.
Now I can understand it, and I do bag screws on hardware on a job I might not get back to in a while, but the Saturday after noon water pump, or timing chain replacement, toss it all in a bucket!
I do. Kent-Moore brand. Probably not made anymore.So, wait; nobody uses a pilot bearing puller anymore?
I do. Kent-Moore brand. Probably not made anymore.
For all you guys labeling, or putting bolts in sandwich bags....
I went to tech school for heavy equipment mechanics. If an instructor saw you organizing your disassembled parts he would walk by and move it all around and drop all the bolts into one bucket. He told us that we need to learn to reassemble from scratch. The same way I do it today, toss it all in a bucket and sort it out as you assemble.
Now I can understand it, and I do bag screws on hardware on a job I might not get back to in a while, but the Saturday after noon water pump, or timing chain replacement, toss it all in a bucket!
I think this is an underrated skill.
I personally prefer to "peel" the job. Taking off parts in layers or stages, and putting all associated fasteners nearby. It's usually easy to take 20 clips and 20 bolts, laying on a bumper/pair of headlights, and fathom out where they went. All the head light bolts should be identical pairs, except the outer on the LF corner, where it was wrecked, that bolt isn't OE, etc.
...

The plastic cap of a spray can to cover battery terminals. Worked on a Jeep that had the battery cables keep flipping back to the terminals.
