Author Topic: 7 Garage tools you need...  (Read 8279 times)

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Offline Stephen M

  • Feature Writer
  • *
  • Posts: 597
  • Country: us
  • Puzzle Points 34
  • Rocket Scientist
  • YearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYears
    • Car-related musings
7 Garage tools you need...
« on: November 27, 2006, 10:55:22 PM »
7 garage tools you need...

...and didn't know you already owned.


While I'm sure most of our readers have a garage that would put an F1 team to shame, being a car guy inevitably means being broke from time to time. Being broke means having to improvise rather than call Snap-On. Here, then, are a few handy tools to have around the garage, many of which are already in your home.

1) Modeling clay (Play-Doh or silly putty will work as well)
A little dab will keep a nut in a socket at any angle, especially useful for those hard to reach studs. It won't mar a surface, but has enough adhesion to act as that much-needed third hand to hold a part in place or out of the way. It can also be used as a temporary bumper on finished surfaces when maneuvering in tight spaces (think starter replacement in newly painted engine bay). Lastly, it can be put in to service as a poor man's plastigauge. I wouldn't match main bearings with it, but you can find out where a given part is hanging up by coating the non-fitting side with a thin layer, test fitting it, and looking for impressions.

2) Aluminum foil

Great for crafting impromptu heat shields for valuable bits when soldering or using the little blue wrench. Also good for makeshift parts trays, though truth be told I prefer Chinet for that. Perhaps most useful for masking off engine compartments before painting. You can wrap throttle cables, wiring harnesses, and other painful-to-remove bits and spray away.

3) Laptop computer
If you're reading this, you're already well aware of the immense amount of automotive information available online. Countless How-To guides and community forums exist to guide you through just about any project. Consider, though, the advantages of having this wealth of knowledge literally at your finger tips. I wouldn't counsel buying one just for this purpose; rather, I'd suggest resigning yourself to the inevitable knicks, bumps, and oil stains and start dragging your existing laptop into the garage with you. Add a cheap webcam and you've got a poor man's boroscope.

4) LED Headlamp
For you, not the car. You can get an LED headlamp that will run for 100+ hours on a few AAs. Check the camping section of the local outdoor place. You can never have too much lighting, and it's nice to have light wherever you look, AND have both hands free.

5) Toaster oven
Great for drying/curing small parts, loosening stubborn sub-assemblies, and interference fits. Also good for softening/melting assorted bushings. Check with other household members before dedicating an oven to toxic chemicals, though. Nobody likes Pop Tarts that taste like crinkle finish.

6) Old heavy blanket / comforter

Concrete floors tend to be unkind to dropped lenses, bulbs, and well-aged bakelite. A thin layer of padding laid out under the work area can save a few curses, as well as a few aches and pains. Sockets tend to stay where dropped, too, rather than rolling off under the largest immovable object in the garage.

7) Cordless drill battery
Specifically, a 12 or 14.4 volt version. Great for trouble shooting automotive circuits, and should provide plenty of current to spot check a fuel pump or window motor. If you're feeling really ambitious and have an old reversible drill whose motor's gone south, you can cut it open and use the reversing switch to change polarity on the leads.

That's seven handy tools you already have in your house, if not in your garage. Care to share some others?
Quote from: Ultra
What possible higher authority could we appeal to than Steppenwolf?

Offline porridgehead

  • *
  • Posts: 876
  • Country: us
  • Puzzle Points 42
  • Seat's up! Pa's home!
  • YearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYears
Re: 7 Garage tools you need...
« Reply #1 on: November 27, 2006, 11:50:16 PM »
2" x 8" x 3' - for raising that slammed car just enough to get the jack under. If you are jacking from the front, this yields the exact amount of clearance so that you can now pump the jack 5,754,233 times to raise the car the first inch. Also useful to slam into the tire to remove a frozen wheel. Even more useful is removing that last lug nut before attempting to remove said wheel.

Tweezers - for removing splinters given by the 2' x 8' when you slammed it uselessly  into the wheel before you removed that last lug nut.

Bandaids - for covering the sucking wound caused by the splinter that you just removed.

4' of 2 1/2"  inch exhaust pipe - for slipping over the breaker bar to get that last lug nut out that you've now galled when you were striking the wheel with that goddamn piece of useless wood.

BFH - 5lb or better sledge hammer - for beating on the exhaust pipe breaker bar to remove the stinking motherless god-forsaken wretched lug nut.

Gauze strips - for applying direct pressure to the wound received when the mothersucking lug socket shattered into vicious biting shrapnel. This inevitably occurs at the exact moment that you notice you had neglected to switch to an impact socket after you decided to beat on the whole mess with a freakin' sledge hammer, fer Chrissakes.

Cell phone - for calling 911 after stumbling around screaming obscenities in pain from the shrapnel wound and falling into the car, knocking it off the jack and having the brake rotor land squarely on your foot, pinning you in place, out of reach of the jack.
« Last Edit: November 28, 2006, 12:22:15 AM by porridgehead »
Measures with mics, marks with chalk, cuts with axe, beats to fit and paints to match

Offline Rich

  • Feature Writer
  • *
  • Posts: 1036
  • Country: us
  • Puzzle Points 11
  • YearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYears
Re: 7 Garage tools you need...
« Reply #2 on: November 27, 2006, 11:58:10 PM »
Quit snooping around my garage, phead.... :o

Offline Otto Puzzell

  • Founder and
  • Editor
  • *
  • Posts: 31556
  • Country: us
  • Puzzle Points 444
  • Open field, with a window.
  • YearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYears
    • AutoPuzzles
Re: 7 Garage tools you need...
« Reply #3 on: November 28, 2006, 09:24:44 AM »
Nice article.  ;D

I have nothing half this clever to add.
You wanna be the man, you gotta Name That Car!

Offline MG

  • Free Radical
  • *
  • Posts: 1794
  • Country: us
  • Puzzle Points 12
  • Designated Driver
  • YearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYears
Re: 7 Garage tools you need...
« Reply #4 on: November 29, 2006, 10:35:37 AM »
Aluminum foil


YES!!!!   I have been vindicated!    :hah:


Plus too and also, us old timey English sports car enthusiasts always carry a "spanner" of sufficient length to whack the bejezus out of the fershlunginer SU fuel pump when the contacts decide to become one and spend eternity in a mutual embrace.    :ranton:
« Last Edit: November 29, 2006, 10:38:41 AM by MG »
Life is not measured by the number of breaths you take, but by the number of moments that take your breath away!

Offline porridgehead

  • *
  • Posts: 876
  • Country: us
  • Puzzle Points 42
  • Seat's up! Pa's home!
  • YearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYears
Re: 7 Garage tools you need...
« Reply #5 on: November 29, 2006, 04:29:17 PM »
Oddly enough, fershlunginer was one of the words that I used in my original 7 tools. Figuring that nobody would know what it meant (especially the way I spelled it: woefully incorrect), I changed it to mothersucking.  The coincidence of you using that  word, one that I have never seen employed in any automotive board, dictates that I award you karma.

I'm glad you didn't include a "potrezebie", as I think the universe would likely have collapsed upon itself. Of course, there are many who feel it already has.
Measures with mics, marks with chalk, cuts with axe, beats to fit and paints to match

Offline Ultra

  • Founder, Publisher Emeritus &
  • Editor
  • *
  • Posts: 7506
  • Country: us
  • Puzzle Points 20
  • More than you bargained for
  • YearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYears
    • AutoPuzzles
Re: 7 Garage tools you need...
« Reply #6 on: December 03, 2006, 01:42:56 PM »
They've gone mad!  Mad, I say!

“Honi soit qui mal y pense”


Click the pic....... Name the car

Offline MG

  • Free Radical
  • *
  • Posts: 1794
  • Country: us
  • Puzzle Points 12
  • Designated Driver
  • YearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYears
Re: 7 Garage tools you need...
« Reply #7 on: December 03, 2006, 08:33:59 PM »
potrezebie

A unit of fiscal computation, if memory serves.  I have always felt that readers of Mad magazine were ipso facto candidates for Mensa membership.  Although I would never be part of an organization that would have me as a member!    ;D
Life is not measured by the number of breaths you take, but by the number of moments that take your breath away!