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- Path: sparky!uunet!pipex!demon!cix.compulink.co.uk!dingbat
- Newsgroups: rec.autos.tech
- From: dingbat@cix.compulink.co.uk (Codesmiths)
- Subject: Re: Starting out?
- Cc: dingbat@cix.compulink.co.uk
- Reply-To: dingbat@cix.compulink.co.uk
- Date: Tue, 28 Jul 1992 07:42:00 +0000
- Message-ID: <memo.545318@cix.compulink.co.uk>
- Sender: usenet@gate.demon.co.uk
- Lines: 62
-
- In-Reply-To: agrawal@lipari.usc.edu (Amitabh Agrawal)
-
- > What are the minimum tools that I need to be able to start working on
- > the car?
-
- Heres a re-posting of something I posted a while back:
-
- Buy a Haynes book first, they usually have a list of selected tools
- in the front. Don't go mad in a toolshop, good tools aren't cheap &
- you really don't need all that much to start with. Some cheap tools
- are a bargain, as they work fine, but won't last for 20 years the way
- expensive ones will. Some cheap tools are just a joke & won't do the
- job. Here are my recommendations, for where high quality is needed:
-
- Steel toolbox. An ammunition box is cheap & better made than most.
- Hammer (cheap)
- Junior hacksaw
- Chisel (Nickel alloy is expensive, but can be sharpened with a file &
- doesn't need a grinding wheel)
- File
- Set of feeler gauges
- Xenon timing light (the type that also connects to the battery)
- Wire brush
- Cheap electrical test meter from Tandy/Radio Shack
- Set of cheap screwdrivers, varying sizes
- Pair of good quality pliers
- Pair of good quality wire cutters
- Cheap socket set, 1/4" drive & 3/8" drive
- Sparkplug socket
- Cheap spanner set
- Bag of mixed electrical connectors & fuseholders, a few rolls of wire
- & hand crimping tool (cheap)
-
- And when you start looking underneath:
-
- Pair of axle stands (essential)
- Inspection light
- Battery charger
- Full size hacksaw (cheap), but with top quality HSS blades.
- Good quality 1/2" drive rachet (Snap-On or similar)
- Cheap ratchet extensions (a few, in different lengths)
- 1/2" sockets (Snap-On or similar quality), expensive so buy them
- individually as needed.
- Good quality spanners (Britool or Facom). These duplicate the cheap
- set, but many things need 2 matching spanners to work on them.
-
-
- Working on engine tuning, changing brake pads etc. is quite cheap to
- start with & doesn't need much of a toolkit. Things that involve
- lifting gear generally involve lots of tools too. Go for it if you
- want, but we're now talking about a serious investment of time &
- money into car-fettling.
-
- Keep reading rec.autos.tech. We're quite a helpful bunch, but it's
- not easy to give general answers. If you have a specific problem,
- then ask away. The more information, the more concise an answer can
- be, the quicker it is to type in & the more likely the netters are to
- have time to help out.
-
- Have fun !
-
- Andy Dingley dingbat@cix.compulink.co.uk
-