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Re: Safety Fast - That includes working on them!

To: DWILSON@OREGON.UOREGON.EDU, british-cars@hoosier, mason@ftp.com
Subject: Re: Safety Fast - That includes working on them!
From: "DSTONE, 5-9521, BPR: 237-2322" <DSTONE@sc9.intel.com>
Date: Tue, 3 Dec 1991 16:00 PST
        Anybody else have anything to add?

        thanks, Rick Hoffman

          >>You just had to ask that, dintja Rick ?<<

     Actually, what I have to add are just two of my own
     experiences that thankfully did not end up doing
     serious bodily harm to my bodily, but could have been
     avoided if I'd just USED THE RIGHT TOOLS;

     -Once when replacing a 4spd. tranny into a '66 Nova
     (with the engine in the car), I did not have a tranny
     jack available, so I used the next best thing: me. I
     placed a small jack under the back of the engine to
     hold it steady, and laying under the car, positioned
     the bellhousing with my hands and the tailshaft w/my
     feet, jockeyed it into position. Well, once I had the
     input shaft inserted into the clutch disc, I released
     my grip on the bellhousing end a bit, and using my
     feet, began to move the tailshft around to get the
     whole shmere to slide home. The result: the input shaft
     worked itself out and the front end of the trans fell
     square on my head. I had an M-21 shiner for about a
     week to remind me of how NOT to install a tranny.

     -Once I replaced a starter on a 911, but gained access
     to the starter area (located directly behind the
     passenger), by removing only the RR wheel, and putting
     a jackstand only under that side. Unknown to me at the
     time, was that this starter was faulty, and had been
     assembled so that the solenoid WAS ENGAGED. The result
     was that when I hooked up the starter lead, the starter
     did what all good starters will do, and tried to start
     the car ! Well with one wheel still on the ground, the
     911 left off the jackstand, and directly into the rear
     bumper of the truck in front of it. Incredibly no
     damage occurred, and the jolt was enough to free up the
     solenoid, but had something not been there to stop it,
     I feel I would have become one w/a three-wheeled 911
     doing it's best to start !

          Lessons learned by-
                             dstone@sc9.intel.com


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