the second one looks like the jobbie used to set a spark plug gap. I took a lady's mechanics course about 50 years ago and that's what we used to set the gap.
Most of which I have forgotten, but I still have the service manuals Except the first and last tools, using them is like pouring P### out of a boot with directions on the heel! for a mechanic that is!!!
DirtFarmerLoc: Escaped from the NYC area, back to MA
Manglesphoto wrote:
Most of which I have forgotten, but I still have the service manuals Except the first and last tools, using them is like pouring P### out of a boot with directions on the heel! for a mechanic that is!!!
(1) Read all directions before use. (2) Don't use tools for things they were not designed for.
(#2 is probably something we are all guilty of. I know I am. Whenever I get a new tool I find all sorts of strange uses for it).
(1) Read all directions before use. (2) Don't use tools for things they were not designed for.
(#2 is probably something we are all guilty of. I know I am. Whenever I get a new tool I find all sorts of strange uses for it).
For some things I do read the directions first, other things I go by When all else fails read the directions. The main reason being most tools have no directions!!!