Wvned. I can't buy one bolt. I have to buy 20 of them which is stupid because I only need one so I would throw 19 of them away.
I will go to a junkyard to get one bolt.
I don't know if that rod you linked is the same thread as a Jeep. If it is, Thank you, I will get it.
It's disgusting that we can't make the simplest things any more. I still have my ball joint fork but I haven't used it in maybe 40 years. I made a lot of money with that simple thing. I bet very few, if anyone on here under about 50 even knows what that is for.
As a younger person I always fixed my own car and even now no one has ever touched one of my cars, boat or appliances except for lately a couple of times when I just wasn't strong enough or didn't have the right "computer" tool for it.
Now that I am going for a new shoulder in a few weeks that arm doesn't work to well and I had some Jiboni put rear rotors on my car. A simple 15 minute job with less than a hundred bucks parts. He charged me over $600.00 which is insane. I don't know how people pay for these things. Such a simple job that you only need a jack and two working arms to do. Drives me crazy. :confounded-face:
My boat needed some oil in the reservoir for the power trim.
The hydraulic pump was all the way back in the bilge behind the port engine and Houdini couldn't get to it or even see it. So I called "SeaRay" to ask them how to access it. They told me that I had to cut a 10" hole through the deck or the floor of the boat to get to it. Like Really!!!. Is anyone stupid enough to do that. I told him that he should tell the engineer who designed it to call the engineering school he went to and see if he could get his money back.
I had to remove two very big boat batteries, the water tank, water heater, valve cover and alternator, then snake my Svelte, muscular, sinewy body in there to see the thing which was sitting in a pile of rust. The big, steel bracket the pump used to be bolted to disintegrated to dust so I didn't have to remove it as there was nothing to remove.
Out of all the materials they could have made a bracket of that was designed to sit in warm salt water forever they used steel. OK they painted it.
Wood from Home Depot would have been better. I removed the thing along with the hoses and wiring and moved it using longer hoses to a place that was accessible near the front of the engines so any Human Being can work on it.
For a bracket I used 1/2" acrylic which will last longer than the pyramids and it is cheaper than the $125.00 they wanted for a new bracket. The boat had two of those pumps so I had to do it twice.
If I had that "engineer" in my hands I would have given him ich.