Well I missed it as well.Are we missing the fact that he's fixed the issue?
Forgot to addDon't do option (3).
Where did he post saying he had fixed it? Other than bypassing it temporarily?Are we missing the fact that he's fixed the issue?
A lot of truth there Lugbolt! I have worked on a lot of german made machinery and always seemed like they wanted you to take a lot of things apart to change something simple. I once heated and bent an 8mm allen wrench so I could get into the throat of an extruder to change an oil seal with 4 allen screws holding it in. There method required removing the gearbox after removing the 75hp electric motor etc. We would often do as you say cut off a wrench for a particular job. Another I cut a 19mm open end off and welded a large washer on the cut end. That way I could keep it on one finger to reposition without dropping. It required for that one a large wrench to initially loosen and tighten but no room for a large wrench to swing.Welcome to mechanic'n
You have options.
(1) make a tool to get in there. I have done this many, many times. Take a $50 wrench, cut the end off, weld it to something else, bend here, tack it there, etc.--just to do a job that won't cost the consumer anywhere near what it cost me to buy the parts to make that tool!
(2) hire it out.
(3) get online and compiain about it
(4) start taking stuff off until you can get to it. That is often how mechanics that do it for a living have to do it. And-that's also one of many reasons repairs cost what they do.
(5) just do it, however you can, and ask good questions along the way.
Opps, I though i read he fixed it, I was wrong.Well I missed it as well.
Opps, I though i read he fixed it, I was wrong.Where did he post saying he had fixed it? Other than bypassing it temporarily?
Every job requires a blood sacrificeForgot to add
(6) skin your knuckles, curse, have wife tell you you should be wearing gloves while using tools