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Tools
Art Love
I thought I'd start a new thread titled tools because there are a lot of tools, both special and routine, and it makes sense to have a place where people can find details of tools in one location.

I'm going to start with pipe spanners. US folk call them flare nut wrenches. They are a general tool and very important in these cars as already pointed out in my threads on the air suspension and elsewhere. Ron Bunting posted a picture of a set of SnapOn spanners that he liked. I've posted a couple of pictures as well. Justin explained something to me this afternoon that I was not aware of. Snap on pipe wrenches were initially designed for NASA to allow them to tighten small size nuts to high torques. There is a detail in the design which they hold the patent for. You can see it in the following picture. It is the concavity at the points in the spanner where the corners of the nuts lie. This concavity prevents the corners of the nuts from being rounded off as much as possible. It is present in all their pipe spanners to scale. It is easiest seen in the large socket on the left, but equally present in the small pipe spanner on the right.









Ron didn't really show how his set of spanners work, so I have a series of pictures to show how they open up and that they spring tighter the harder you pull on them. The square hole in the middle of the handle is for a bar if you need it.













Here a re a couple of other special tools that I have posted recently on other threads that I am adding here.

This is an oil seal punch for rear axles and similar applications.





Here is a bearing fitting and removing tool.









Tool for undoing and doing up grooved nuts on rear axles.









That will do for starters.
Art
Ron B
This is a beading machine I made from a stove pipe crimper.
I needed to make some special beads in a floor for a Buick so i turned up a bunch of different rollers with various shapes to suit.
Saves heaps of time hammering beads out with a hammer and dolly. The lump of steel i used is 1045 bright cold rolled and my little lathe was groaning with a 30KG hunk of steel in the chuck.
it stands on abase made from a plow disc and the cast iron machine base sits on a Ford 351 water pump pulley.[:D][:D][:D]

quote:
12-14-2004, 11:49 PM #8
Tom Hanson
MBCA Member

What the heck, try to stuff a MB 6.9 liter V8 in it. What a machine that would be..
__________________
Tom Hanson
Orange County Section




Art Love
Cone for getting the front rubbers of the rear axle trailing arms onto the floor mounts.





Same thing adjacent to another cone for getting O rings on.





Seal puller.









For pressure testing air bellows units using workshop compressor.





For holding bellows units in the vice while working on them - made from the diagram in the service manual.





Reversible circlip pliers.





For the large castle nut in the swing axle side of the diff.







S class
For removing broken off thread taps (comes in different sizes)





For removal/refitment of the slot nut on the inner side of the rear wheel bearing of W116, W126, W123 etc :



800Nm torque wrench.....




116.036
116.036
116.024
107.044
202.018



Ron B
heres a tool i made for replacing those damned shifter bushes.
It was an antique hole punch i had laying about with a ring to go on the other side of the arm. The bush goes on the pin .Squeeze it onto the shifter rod and it's done.






quote:
12-14-2004, 11:49 PM #8
Tom Hanson
MBCA Member

What the heck, try to stuff a MB 6.9 liter V8 in it. What a machine that would be..
__________________
Tom Hanson
Orange County Section
paul-NL
On request from Art Love:

Here is the tool for removing the steering pulley (made by Werminghausen)

Gael
My wheel axle bearing remover tool is a piece of wood. I put it on the floor and bang the wheel axle on it vertically, bearing up. After a few bangs the bearing falls down. It worked each time.
Ron B

This is a cradle I made to remove and lift front axles into W109's etc. Quick and easy to use ,it makes changing bushes etc an easy task.








quote:
12-14-2004, 11:49 PM #8
Tom Hanson
MBCA Member

What the heck, try to stuff a MB 6.9 liter V8 in it. What a machine that would be..
__________________
Tom Hanson
Orange County Section
S class
that trolley missing a wheel Ron? [:)]



116.036
116.036
116.024
107.044
202.018



Ron B
Yes...[:D][:D] it's been that way for 12 years.
Here are a couple things,one is for lining up the torque arm bushes and the sharp one is for guiding the diff centre pivot arm up into the car.



quote:
12-14-2004, 11:49 PM #8
Tom Hanson
MBCA Member

What the heck, try to stuff a MB 6.9 liter V8 in it. What a machine that would be..
__________________
Tom Hanson
Orange County Section


Art Love
In my first posting in this thread I mentioned that SnapOn invented and patented the flare wrench concept with the corners missing. Justin and I visited SnapOn world headquarters in Kenosha WI just prior to the Meet and there in their museum was the patent and a picture of the young engineer whose bright idea it was.





This was also in the museum.





And I can't resist posting this even though it has nothing to do with tools[:)].




Art
Ron B
Yeah,those yellow shoes have absolutely nothing to do with tools or M100's...




[:D][:D][:D][:D][:D]





quote:
12-14-2004, 11:49 PM #8
Tom Hanson
MBCA Member

What the heck, try to stuff a MB 6.9 liter V8 in it. What a machine that would be..
__________________
Tom Hanson
Orange County Section
Art Love
Here is a handy tool.













Art
Art Love
Justin has decided to do his own air, fuel and brake lines, at least for the ones that Tom can't supply. So he has bought himself this flaring set. It will do all the necessary jobs.








Art
Ron B
I'd love a Sykes kit too but a $XXXX it aint going to happen quickly...[:D]

quote:
12-14-2004, 11:49 PM #8
Tom Hanson
MBCA Member

What the heck, try to stuff a MB 6.9 liter V8 in it. What a machine that would be..
__________________
Tom Hanson
Orange County Section
cth350

special tools, like the bearing bits I would need for my 600 rear axle work. -CTH

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