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I have a pretty short memory span and I'll be changing out all my belts, all rollers, and the water pump over a period of several weeks (my work schedule gives me very little personal time). Do any of you have a system for keeping things straight so you don't forget something, put something on backwards, keep parts from getting mixed up, making sure the new parts go on the same way the old parts came off? Any suggestions sure would be appreciated.
Maybe like marking parts before the come off, laying them on the floor in order or something like that? So many have mixed up the orientation of the balance belt system parts I'm thinking that it must be easy to make a boo boo putting it all back in.
Harvey
I like cars whose eyes pop up...
'94 968 Double-Black, 72K Miles (Weekend Queen, Heavenly Handling)
'88S4 928, Polar Silver, 41K miles (Daily Driver)
'85S 928, 32V, 5 spd (SOLD to an enthusiast. I miss this great car)
'02 Audi TT, Turbo, 6 spd (SOLD. Porsche is better in about every way)
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buy camera, drink coffee, buy camera, drink coffee <img src="/forum/images/smilies/968/smile.gif" class="smilie" alt="" />
Michael Sorbera
aka San Antonio Silver Bullet
2002 VW Beetle TDI
2004 Nissan Titan Crew Cab
2004 Cherokee 33ft Travel Trailer
1990 Mercury Grand Marquis
1993 Amazon Green 968 Coupe (sold)
2002 Speed-Yellow Boxster (sold)
1987 Slate Grey 944 Turbo (sold)
1987 Guards Red 944 (first Porsche - sold)
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Zip lock bags and a magic marker make good storage for the parts. I bagged and labeled the bolts for each component.
The factory service manual and the parts catalog have detailed drawings of this area showing where every bolt and washer go as well as tech specs.
If you can get one day off and a helper you can do the job in one day which should limit the confusion.
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FWIW - plastic bags-and-sharpie is also my method. If I had a garage and a workbench then I would lay down paper and layout the parts in sequence of disassembly - noting right on the paper any notes I need. Since my repair jobs are typically multi-day affairs labeling carefully is the only way I can remember... The digi-cam is also a fantastic tool.
1992 black/tan coupe, window express, koni struts/shocks, 17C2 wheels, guards <acronym title='Limited Slip Differential'><acronym title='Limited Slip Differential'>LSD</acronym></acronym>, pinion fixed, sound system, etc, etc, OCD for sure.
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Labling and laying out on paper is a great idea. I could scoot the cardboard or whatever under the back part of the car until I was ready to reassemble.
I locked the flywheel last night, drained the coolant, loosened the crank bolt, etc, etc. I'm about ready to dive it. But I'll be doing the WP too so I have to remember where everything went. Don't want any left over parts!
Thanks!
Harvey
[quote name='apex' date='May 13 2005, 09:33 AM']FWIW - plastic bags-and-sharpie is also my method. If I had a garage and a workbench then I would lay down paper and layout the parts in sequence of disassembly - noting right on the paperĀ any notes I need. Since my repair jobs are typically multi-day affairs labeling carefully is the only way I can remember... The digi-cam is also a fantastic tool.
[right][post="4711"]<{POST_SNAPBACK}>[/post][/right][/quote]
I like cars whose eyes pop up...
'94 968 Double-Black, 72K Miles (Weekend Queen, Heavenly Handling)
'88S4 928, Polar Silver, 41K miles (Daily Driver)
'85S 928, 32V, 5 spd (SOLD to an enthusiast. I miss this great car)
'02 Audi TT, Turbo, 6 spd (SOLD. Porsche is better in about every way)