![]() |
Bone head moves
What bone head moves have you guys pulled off while working on your truck? I was trying to get my instrument panel wireing sorted out and was having trouble because I couldn't understand why some lights were lit up and other were not. I double checked the grounding and everything. I turned out that I had screwed the grounding wire back to the intrument panel and not the truck. If Bill Engvall would have been there he probaly would have handed me my sign. :banghead: :dohh:
|
Re: Bone head moves
how about putting your engine/trans in without the flexplate?
|
Re: Bone head moves
Not taking enough/any pictures before disassembly and not bagging hardware... (why is this coffee can still so full of nuts and bolts?)...
|
Re: Bone head moves
I had bought another running 72 and was wiring a tach into it and it had a floor shifter which was in my way in park so i moved it to first and proceeded to start the truck without thinking about it after i installed the tach and ran the truck into a bunch of barrells of oil wrecking my rad thank god the grill was already screwed.
|
Re: Bone head moves
Quote:
|
Re: Bone head moves
Quote:
|
Re: Bone head moves
changing direction on a build. $$$
throwing away ANYTHING! |
Re: Bone head moves
How about yelling and cussing for about 1/2 hour after installing a rebuilt transmission and trying to figure out why the truck won't move and then realizing the transfer case is in neutral.
|
Re: Bone head moves
how about changing the oil, then oil filter......getting side tracked (go help the wife), pouring all five quarts into the car.....your son comes around the corner of the car and ask's "whats all of this stuff running under the car"...........as you look under the car you see the :censored: oil plug laying on the ground. :dohh:
then this occurs with the wife= :m3: (because it's not my fault) :lol: |
Re: Bone head moves
Propping your original paint, un-molested, perfectly straight, 67 hood up against the garage wall for just a second so you can move something else out of the way.
Of course you're doing this to put the hood in a safe place so it doesn't get damaged . . ..... only to have the only gust of wind for the day blow the hood over & watch it smack flat on the center body-line against the concrete driveway. |
Re: Bone head moves
Man, you guys make me feel so much better!!!!!!!!!!
I guess my bonehead move was going right ahead with my truck disassembly, after finding out my wife was having twins. (Who are now 3 year olds) The truck project is still ongoing, just at a slower pace. |
Re: Bone head moves
I had a '52 Chevy coupe beat me up one time. I was much younger, and much more inclined to impulse. The car in question was on jack stands up front and I was doing something in the vicinity of the starter. This was a 6 volt system, and I managed to short out my wedding ring between the "hot" starter post and ground somehow. I jerked my hand back, and the ring was glowing! When I jerked back, my elbow hit the underside of the hood. I had the presence of mind to take the ring off quick, because a blister was already on the way. I'm standing beside the car in pain and decide to kick the front wheel. The wheel was off the car, and my shin hit the edge of the fender. Ouch two! Now I'm really frustrated so I tried to bang the hood with my fist. The hood was too high and I hit the edge of the hood with my boney fore arm. Ouch three! I just sat down on the step not believing how many places I hurt. My wife had heard me muttering to myself and came out to ask what I was doing. Suffering dear, just suffering. What I learned from that was, walk away, don't hit the car/truck, it's tougher.
|
Re: Bone head moves
Quote:
|
Re: Bone head moves
Quote:
|
Re: Bone head moves
So far on my current build my bone head move was ordering new inner fenders and forgetting to order the retainer clips that hold them in place. Driving all over the place I went to our company body shop up the road and they had clips that were almost identical that worked perfect...
|
Re: Bone head moves
Working on my 71 Camaro (350/350). I had it jacked up in the sloping driveway with my floorjack. No need for stands, as I am only going to be under it for a few seconds. I was doing something, bumped the shift linkage, nothing happened so no alarm. A second later I hear a creek and the car is on my chest. I couldn't do anything, no breath, no YELLY, I was under it for a few minutes before someone saw me and lifter the car. A few seperated ribs, cracked sternum, and almost dies from air bubbles in the blood (when you compress your chest {decrease the lung's filling with clean air} you build up poison gas in the blood), anyways I now most of the time put jack stands under a car?! I KNOW, I KNOW, but I am hard headed.
BTW Faces of DEATH (seen it??) A dude died under car in a wrecking yard, car fell and the front brake rotor cut his legs (off if I remember right?!) and he bled to death?! So do as I say, not as I do!! Use jack stands!! |
Re: Bone head moves
Quote:
|
Re: Bone head moves
I have too many to recall but here are three.
We put the engine, clutch and transmission together trying to save time to find that it could not be put in the truck that way since the transmission is a granny low 4 speed. We were in a hurry to get a newer year bed on my '67 so instead of taking the time to align it properly and bolt it we aligned it and welded the bed to the frame. A few days later I realized I need to replace both cab corners, oops!! Installing a 3/4 ton cab on a 1/2 ton frame and using the rear 3/4 ton cab bushings, which makes the front fenders alignment impossible. I am sure given the time I could remember more, though. Danny |
Re: Bone head moves
Quote:
Ditto! I have had a cinder block break as well as a big wood block tip, whatever you use, be sure it is secure. Sorry about your buddy, I was close to meeting up with him though. My brother too, he changed the starter on my mom's 74 Nova with a muncie 4-speed. Didn't disconnect the batt, arced the + term and drove the car over the ramps and onto his chest like 10-15 years before I did it to myself, I should've learned from his incident as well. |
Re: Bone head moves
Not bagging parts. Not buying POR 15
|
Re: Bone head moves
Assembled my 454 bottom end (the first time) while talking to the neighbor's kid and in a hurry because it was rapidly getting hot as hell in my garage. I had a dyslexic moment and put the piston/rods in the opposite banks (1/3/5/7 on the 2/4/6/8 side). The rod side clearance was just tight enuf with it put together wrong that I had 8 clacking rods when it warmed up. That cost me a set of gaskets and rod bearings, and some time & humility.
Plus it was hotter outside the second time around...:waah: |
Re: Bone head moves
Quote:
|
Re: Bone head moves
Of course I've never done anything like this stuff.
You do believe me, right? You have to, you're my buds. Anyhow, I nearly lost a very good friend. He was going to replace the u-joints on his Dodge motor home. He set the e-brake, and disconnected the rear u-joint from the differential. He had forgotten that the e-brake on the Dodge was on the drive shaft. As soon as he popped the drive shaft from the rear yoke, the motor home started to roll backwards down the driveway. He couldn't get out of the way in time and it rolled over him. He literally laid in his driveway for a couple hours before a neighbor was curious about "Why is Mike's motor home in the middle of the court?" and walked up to investigate. So, I say, instead of just being sure you use jack stands, CHOCK THEM WHEELS for God's sake. It'll only take another 30 seconds, or so. Rant finished. |
Re: Bone head moves
so far the worst ive done is loose my gas cap twice after filling up and after removing my headlight bezels to replace a headlight i moved my truck forgetting i still had one bezel on the ground and i flattened it :( but i bought new ones the next day lol
|
Re: Bone head moves
Spending too much on an ebay item that aint worth diddly. Live and learn.
|
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 04:58 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions Inc.
Copyright 1997-2025 67-72chevytrucks.com