1. Buy at least a shop manual, plus a Hollander and a Motors manual if they are available for your year car. 2. Have a full set of hand tools including duplicates of commonly used sizes such as 7/16. 1/2, and 9/16 sockets. 3. Have equipment for basic old car tuneup including dwell meter, vacuum gage, fuel pressure gage, Timing light, MityVac, and others as needed. 4. Know prices of parts for your car. 5. Use common sense, including safety first. 6. Do not assume- check, test, and recheck, measure and remeasure. 7. Have at least 6 catalogs from parts suppliers for your vintage of vehicle, especially mechanical and electrical. 8. Have at least one friend you can count on for assistance and information. 9. Never buy and use used mechanical or electrical parts unless you or someone you trust can THOROUGHLY rebuild those parts. 10. Be patient. If you are working on a time constraint or in a poorly lit or junk filled disorderly location, allow your self four times the estimated hours needed ( or 4 times the frustration level), rather than the double it will usually take. No charge for the above golden rules. If I follow them my work gets done correctly and the car runs reliably. Shortcut any of them and you can extend your required repair time accordingly. Having followed the above for the last 10 years, I have never, thats NEVER, had an on the road breakdown no matter the climate or speed I cruise at. I am not a master mechanic but the above rules seem to have proven themselves over time. Now that I writ em down, I am gonna print em BIG and post it in the garage and the basement!!!! Lars 56 Plymouth Sport Suburban V8 41 Plymouth P12 2 door ex 38 Plymouth pickup ex 51 Merc two door Guess its cold out (just above 0) and nothing else to do? |