goodie wrote:
Silliest thing that i've done about 12 months ago was i was trying to get no; 1 piston on tdc (,and i've done it this way god knows how many times) i was flicking the ignition switch to roll the engine over then i'd go around and check piston with a small phillips head screwdriver to check where piston was, did this a couple of times untill almost there it just needed one more flick on the key i thought, but somehow i got side tracked and done something else but i'd left the screwdriver in the plug hole didn't i .
Well i wasn't away for too long and when i came back to it i thought oh yeah thats right i had to flick the key just one more time, bad move because it snapped about 2" of the end of the screwdriver off which was then sitting on top of the piston eh!!. Well a lot of thinking, swearing and mucking about and wife holding the torch at the plug hole i managed to get it out , ( i felt like a dentist doing surgery , both hands on the job ). the tool that saved me from taking the head off was a Blue-Point telescopic magnet which has a very strong magnet, mate the amount of times i've used that tool on my mini is unreal, one of the best tools i've ever brought.
I must of checked the bore a dozen times or more to satisfy myself that was no more pieces of the screwdriver in there' before i'd fire it up.
Colin.
When I was young my Dad and I were changing the valve stem seals without removing the head. We managed to use an old screwdriver handle to hold/jam the valve up as we removed the spring and changed the seat. (dodgy I know)
When we removed it the last time about 1cm of screwdriver handle had shattered and fallen into the bore.
We tried all sorts of ways to try and get the bits out, including a vacuum cleaner.
In the end we decided it was only plastic and fired up the car.
Burnt fragments of screwdriver handle went rattling down the pipes and came out the exhaust.

_________________
68 Morris Cooper S Mk1 (*ex 78 1275 LS 4th last built, 70 Morris 1500 OHC & 70 MiniMatic)