Top tips for “get you home” repairs.
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Re: Top tips for “get you home” repairs.
I'm over 40k miles into a JBWeld get-you-home fix on the moighty 406.
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Re: Top tips for “get you home” repairs.
It's a cracker.
"Be kind to past versions of yourself that didn't know what you know now."
Walt Whitman
https://soundcloud.com/skub1955
Walt Whitman
https://soundcloud.com/skub1955
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Re: Top tips for “get you home” repairs.
I thought the old one was cooks matches and paper clips for distributor arms, but that doesn't do much for modern vehicles.
Now it's more alligator clips, a reel of cable and low-temp solder connectors, plus a small cooks blowtorch for said connectors.
Now it's more alligator clips, a reel of cable and low-temp solder connectors, plus a small cooks blowtorch for said connectors.
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Re: Top tips for “get you home” repairs.
Carbon fibre is nought but JB weld with fancy string in it anyway.
- DefTrap
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Re: Top tips for “get you home” repairs.
TBF this was JBWeld splodged into a leaking core plug (accessed by feel only down the back of the motor and firewall), which I fully expected to fail fairly immediately given the likelihood of access causing a poor repair and also numerous subsequent heat cycles.Mr. Dazzle wrote: ↑Wed May 24, 2023 1:04 pm
Carbon fibre is nought but JB weld with fancy string in it anyway.
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Re: Top tips for “get you home” repairs.
My brother did exactly the same fix on a Ford Sierra, lasted about a week
So there you are, the spectrum of success is quite wide.
So there you are, the spectrum of success is quite wide.
- mangocrazy
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Re: Top tips for “get you home” repairs.
I've used epoxy putty to good effect in the past. When screwing into floorboards I came across a 'hard bit' and instead of backing off and thinking about it I persisted and screwed into a central heating pipe. Epoxy putty came to the rescue there and the 'fix' has lasted well over 20 years. Apparently you can get putty that's specific to the task in hand - I just used one size fits all stuff.
https://jenolite.com/metal-epoxy-putty/
https://jenolite.com/metal-epoxy-putty/
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Re: Top tips for “get you home” repairs.
Bodgers!DefTrap wrote: ↑Wed May 24, 2023 2:12 pmTBF this was JBWeld splodged into a leaking core plug (accessed by feel only down the back of the motor and firewall), which I fully expected to fail fairly immediately given the likelihood of access causing a poor repair and also numerous subsequent heat cycles.Mr. Dazzle wrote: ↑Wed May 24, 2023 1:04 pm
Carbon fibre is nought but JB weld with fancy string in it anyway.
Many moons ago I owned a s2 LR that blew the rear head core plug. Went to work, punched out a 4 mm thick ally disc, a bit bigger than the hole, carefully dished it (let's just say it involved a ball pein ok). It was then offered up into place with a broom handle and lightly tapped for seating, then the dished bit was given a decent thwack to spread it. Ne'er a days problem after! There was also the ti Clevis pin mod as well!
Tim Fry eat your heart out!
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Re: Top tips for “get you home” repairs.
I remember a bloke who holed a piston in the Mini he had up for sale with a buyer due. Popped the head off & epoxied a piece of 1/8in aluminum plate to the top of the piston. Slapped it back together, & fired it up. It ran. Shut it off.
Buyer shows up & bought it.
Buyer heads off in his new car. Only got a few hundred yards before a horrendous noise indicated all was not well. Managed to limp it back to the sellers house & got his money back.
The plate had come loose & turned 90deg in the cylinder.
We had the piston & very bent plate sitting on the shelf of horrors in the college engineering dept at Cambs
Buyer shows up & bought it.
Buyer heads off in his new car. Only got a few hundred yards before a horrendous noise indicated all was not well. Managed to limp it back to the sellers house & got his money back.
The plate had come loose & turned 90deg in the cylinder.
We had the piston & very bent plate sitting on the shelf of horrors in the college engineering dept at Cambs
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Re: Top tips for “get you home” repairs.
I saw a bodge where someone dropped a bolt through the hole and stuck a nut on the inside.ZRX61 wrote: ↑Mon May 29, 2023 1:08 am I remember a bloke who holed a piston in the Mini he had up for sale with a buyer due. Popped the head off & epoxied a piece of 1/8in aluminum plate to the top of the piston. Slapped it back together, & fired it up. It ran. Shut it off.
Buyer shows up & bought it.
Buyer heads off in his new car. Only got a few hundred yards before a horrendous noise indicated all was not well. Managed to limp it back to the sellers house & got his money back.
The plate had come loose & turned 90deg in the cylinder.
We had the piston & very bent plate sitting on the shelf of horrors in the college engineering dept at Cambs
Then ground the bolt head flush with piston head
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Re: Top tips for “get you home” repairs.
A village idiot I knew bought an H2 that was only running on two pots. It had spark, but the exhaust smelled *odd*
Turns out the smell was from the tennis ball stuck on the middle rod melting when that cylinder fired. Apparently this was a fairly common trick on 250cc cylinders. Someone recently told me he'd come across the same *fix* on a Suzuki 500T.