03-13-2017, 10:16 PM | #26 |
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Hanging on the wall in the garage. Each with their own space, so when you're done working on the car you can immediately see if any tool is missing. If you arrive home from work and you're walking into the house, you'll see that the wife or kids has "borrowed" anything and not returned it. That way you don't take the seats out only to find you've no longer got a torx driver to finish the job.
Generally I leave sockets in the box they came in, and I've got two sets of screwdrivers & spanners (not that you need two sets, it just tends to happen as you get older) one on the wall, another still in their box/roll for jobs on-the-go. A toolbox suits people who are working on-site, but you're forever rifling through the thing to find a tool from the bottom, and forever loosing stuff because it's not clear what's missing. An android tablet with a ODB2 cable. It's probably more expensive than a cheap ebay scanner, but then you've got all the equipment you need for a MHD flash tune (and hopefully soon a xHP TCU Tune) later in life |
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03-14-2017, 07:52 AM | #27 |
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Tool chests have wheels for a reason...
To roll under the car near the area you are working under...
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A manual transmission can be set to "comfort", "sport", and "track" modes simply by the technique and speed at which you shift it; it doesn't need "modes", modes are for manumatics that try to behave like a real 3-pedal manual transmission. If you can money-shift it, it's a manual transmission. "Yeah, but NO ONE puts an automatic trans shift knob on a manual transmission."
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09-27-2021, 07:26 AM | #30 |
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Keep handbook in car, have spare fuses and bulbs and a few simple tools in the car, litre of oil, latex gloves and a puncture repair kit with tyre inflator should the cat not have a spare wheel of some kind. Cell phone with charger cable.
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09-27-2021, 03:11 PM | #32 |
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just a high end toolbox from home depot has served me well. 99% of cars stuff can be handled with that. i got one for 150-200 bucks.
anything more than an intake or exhaust i'm calling up an indy shop.
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2018 Porsche GT3 6MT Previous: Ferrari 458 | R35 GTR | F80 M3 | F87 M2c | E46 M3 | E36 M3 | Scion FRS |
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10-11-2021, 12:40 PM | #33 |
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Tools...start with the basics. Socket set, screw drivers, trim tools, etc.
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10-12-2021, 11:11 AM | #34 |
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Though a few have mentioned torque wrenches, at some point it may be worth the upgrade to a digital torque wrench. One of the things you don't want to cheap out on is properly-torqued bolts and lugs.
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10-12-2021, 12:03 PM | #35 | |
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Quote:
Never felt the need for a digital one. The premium price they cost is better spent on more normal (and specialty) tools if such a decision were to occur. I have worked with them and only in some situations they are maybe more ergonomic (and of course in professional production enviroments they offer logging of torque data for quality control etc). But when using them I'm mostly in fear of damaging the electronics. When tinkering usually my tools end up all togheter on a cart or table, including the toque wrenches. Not a good enviroment for the weak lcd displays. Besides, on most parts of the car, the "properly torqued" parts is often more that bolts hold the same torque than extreme accuracy of that torque.
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Last edited by GuidoK; 10-12-2021 at 12:12 PM.. |
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10-12-2021, 01:27 PM | #36 | |
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Quote:
Last edited by Equilibrandt; 10-12-2021 at 01:32 PM.. |
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10-14-2021, 03:00 AM | #38 | |
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I don't; I use then as they are ment to be. I set the desired torque, and when using them and I need a different torque, I set that different torque. When I'm done with the job I set the wrenches to 0 and put them away. I have 4 wrenches but in ascending range span. In some cases torque wrenches with a compact head size can be very handy. Or torque wrenches that can adapt open box heads like some stahlwille manoskops (sadly those are very expensive)
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Z4 3.0i | ESS TS2+ supercharger | Quaife ATB LSD | Brembo/BMW performance BBK front/rear | Schrick FI cams | Schmiedmann headers+cats | Powerflex/strongflex PU bushings | Vibra-technics engine mounts | H&R anti rollbars | KW V3 coilovers/KW camber plates | Sachs race engineering clutch | tons of custom sh#t
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