So I need to prep my cars for moving. One of them has been sitting here for years. Car has been lowered and all the tires are flat now and don't hold air anymore. Found a set of used replacements so the chrome ones are gonna be removed and maybe rechromed for future reinstall (anyone know of a good reasonable rechrome shop?).
It's this guy:
That was my daughter back when she was maybe 10? She's 20 now and bossier than I.
:grim:
Anyhow, with the tires being flat and the lowered suspension, the car is sitting on the mufllers. Too low to easily get a floor jack under... what a pain. But the worse part of the day had to do with those dang lug nuts. Find out they had locks on 'em. Well, of course there is no key so I check all the auto shops and they said they got nothing. Buy a universal socket from Harbor Freight thinking it might work and it would except it needed around 1" clearance all around the lugnut. Then bought a set of extractors from Sears but they were too small. Then finally found a proper lug nut extractor. A set of 2 sizes for $25. Only 1 size works -- the other too big. Well it worked all right. But once it extracts the nut, you can't ever get it off the extractor. Ever. I finally installed a hardned bolt (same as stud) and using my superduper ultra long snapon breaker bar, finally thought I got it to budge but it was all for naught since the only thing budging was the bolt snapping in 1/2. Not I'm really up the creek since I got 3 more wheels left to go and the extractor is all filled up and nothing short of a melting pot was gonna separate them.
In the end, I ended up sacrificing some sockets which I am loathe to do since I hate losing tools, and definitely hate breaking up sets of them. Rather than sacrifice my snapon and Mac sockets, I ended up finding all my craftsman sockets that would fit and hammered the crap out of them to the lock. Each lock required 2 sockets -- the first cuts/grinds the splines down a bit and the second zips them off. The sockets are no good anymore but compared to the cost of the extractor (and gas it would've cost to get more), I guess it was a wash.
What a day. And still not over since the last tire I still can't get changed due to I can't fit a jack under anyplace. When I'm done moving, I'm putting stock springs back. I bought the car lowered and it looks really cool but I'm too old for this ****. It shouldn't be heart surgery to replace a tire.
It's this guy:
That was my daughter back when she was maybe 10? She's 20 now and bossier than I.
:grim: Anyhow, with the tires being flat and the lowered suspension, the car is sitting on the mufllers. Too low to easily get a floor jack under... what a pain. But the worse part of the day had to do with those dang lug nuts. Find out they had locks on 'em. Well, of course there is no key so I check all the auto shops and they said they got nothing. Buy a universal socket from Harbor Freight thinking it might work and it would except it needed around 1" clearance all around the lugnut. Then bought a set of extractors from Sears but they were too small. Then finally found a proper lug nut extractor. A set of 2 sizes for $25. Only 1 size works -- the other too big. Well it worked all right. But once it extracts the nut, you can't ever get it off the extractor. Ever. I finally installed a hardned bolt (same as stud) and using my superduper ultra long snapon breaker bar, finally thought I got it to budge but it was all for naught since the only thing budging was the bolt snapping in 1/2. Not I'm really up the creek since I got 3 more wheels left to go and the extractor is all filled up and nothing short of a melting pot was gonna separate them.
In the end, I ended up sacrificing some sockets which I am loathe to do since I hate losing tools, and definitely hate breaking up sets of them. Rather than sacrifice my snapon and Mac sockets, I ended up finding all my craftsman sockets that would fit and hammered the crap out of them to the lock. Each lock required 2 sockets -- the first cuts/grinds the splines down a bit and the second zips them off. The sockets are no good anymore but compared to the cost of the extractor (and gas it would've cost to get more), I guess it was a wash.
What a day. And still not over since the last tire I still can't get changed due to I can't fit a jack under anyplace. When I'm done moving, I'm putting stock springs back. I bought the car lowered and it looks really cool but I'm too old for this ****. It shouldn't be heart surgery to replace a tire.
:super:
thats where it may not be able to be redone exactly same

