Hazet ftw!
https://www.hazet.de/de/produkte/spe...SH-12K&c=23734
I have to re-make every line in the '69 and in the beetle.
Hazet ftw!
https://www.hazet.de/de/produkte/spe...SH-12K&c=23734
I have to re-make every line in the '69 and in the beetle.
Learned a hard lesson about changing #6 spark plug. DON’T let your extension slip into the hole. While removing the plug socket and extension, after reinstalling the plug, the extension came off the socket and then simultaneously slipped off the ratchet. That area above the oil cooler is cavernous and unwilling to relinquish anything it swallows. It took about 20 minutes and an arsenal of tools to retrieve it. It was actually a short 1/2” extension and a 1/2 to 1/2 adapter that fell into the hole. I immediately taped everything together before I proceeded![]()
1969 911S
1969 Datsun 2000...worth less, but more valuable
Sorry for your tribulations... but you're doing it wrong. Use a rubber-ring plug socket.![]()
Russ
ESR # 1537
'62 356S Notchback Hotrod
'67 S Das Geburtstagsgeschenk
'68 T Targa Sportomatic
'68 L SW Targa Sportomatic
'70 914/6 GT
I WAS using a plug socket with the rubber insert, that’s was caused everything to separate. When I tried to pull the socket off the plug it stuck. That caused the extension to pull away from the socket and the ratchet at the same time.
1969 911S
1969 Datsun 2000...worth less, but more valuable
Use magnetic plug socket, they release from the plug easier.
Early S Registry member #90
R Gruppe member #138
Fort Worth Tx.
Thanks Ed, that’s a great idea! I didn’t know that they even existed. I’m still using the sockets that I bought in 1970. With modern cars not needing plug changes until 100,000 miles one just doesn’t keep up with spark plug socket technology![]()
1969 911S
1969 Datsun 2000...worth less, but more valuable
Working in the trunk today.... Got some new zip-ties
John
![]()
1959 356 Coupe, 1600 Super, sold
1960 356 Roaster, race car, SCCA, sold
1960 356 Roadster, show car, sold.
1962 356 Cab, show car, sold.
1965 911 #301111, Red Book Vol 1 "Cover Car," owned 54 years.
1967 911 #307347, bare-bones, some road wear, a little surface rust, and a few dents..., owned 14 years.
1970 914/6GT, (Sold - ran the last three Rennsports)owned 30 years.
Photography Site: JohnStraubImageWorks.com
Registry #983
R Gruppe #741
This is from Saturday. PCA Club Race at Summit Point, almost 2000 miles from home. Broke an axle on my '67 911. We were already packing up for the sad trip home when Fred Pfeiffer introduced me to Dave Coleman. Dave drove me out to his home and shop deep in the woods (Dave was the one who made reference to 'Deliverance', not me), rummaged in a railroad container for a half-shaft, lent me tools, and I spent Saturday night on my back on the cold ground under the car installing the axle by flashlight. Success! I raced on Sunday! Hats off to Dave Coleman, a true mensch.
Rich Spritz
1956 Chrysler New Yorker (wife's)
1960 Huffaker BMC Mk1 Formula Junior racecar #15
1960 Huffaker BMC Mk1 Formula Junior racecar #91
1967 Porsche 911 racecar #727
1970 Winkelmann WDF2 Formula Ford racecar (gone)
1973 Merlyn Mk24 Formula Ford racecar #01
1969 Porsche 911T
2007 Porsche 997C4 cab (totaled by an idiot running a stop sign)
2014 Porsche 991 TurboS cab
2019 Cayman GTS (wife's)
My '73 911 is a little bit a further advanced than this photo shows now.
and 3 years after starting this project, and after approx. 250 hours of bodywork repairs, I took it to the painters yesterday..
Last edited by kaufmanp; 09-23-2020 at 01:09 PM.
Plug sockets with rubber inserts are just plain awful. Magnetic plug sockets are a bit better but nothing compares to the plug socket in my pictures. Ed, I'm surprised that you don't have one of these. They have been around for 2 or 2 decades and very few people know about them. They aren't cheap, but worth every penny. They have a little ball retainer much like a ratchet or extension but work much better than a magnet. They hold the plug with just the perfect amount of tension and wont pull of the end of an extension, either.
I know of no one that has tried one of these and not gone out and bought one.
Jim
PS:Ed, I would be happy to send you mine for a trial run. You can send it back after buying your own.