grumpyvette
retired mech engineer
I was adjusting the valves on my 1996 corvette and dropped one of those large pan head torx bolts that hold the center bolt valve covers in place, it vanished, down into the void between the pass side engine and fender well but failed to reach the shop floor .....
every guy who has ever worked on a car knows the frustration of dropping tools ,sockets, and fasteners down into cracks and restricted places in an engine compartment.
if you can see where it dropped an extendable magnetic pick-up took can some times reach it,theres also those extendo claw mechanics grab tools, that can be useful, and you certainly won,t be the first guy to use a garden hose with a nozzle to try to flush out a hidden fastener.
http://www.harborfreight.com/15-lb-capacity-telescoping-magnetic-pickup-tool-95933.html
http://www.sears.com/shc/s/p_10153_12605_00941322000P?mv=rr&clicked=true
a surprising number of times bolts and nuts seem to fall into little nooks and UN-accessible places that you just can,t seem to see them,, If you have an air compressor in your shop, one tool that's useful is a long needle like high pressure air nozzle that allows you to force 120 psi jet of compressed air down into areas where the hurricane strength air pressure can dislodge the hidden fastener allowing it to fall onto the ground where there's a slightly better chance of you locating it, rather than have it drop out of the car at some random location after you drive over a speed bump or chuck hole.
a bright mechanics drop lite and a flexible inspection tool can be a big help at times
now in this particular case I eventually found it by use of high pressure air knocking it loose and an old geezer crawling under the car to get it, but it occurred to me that if Id failed to locate it, I,D NEED A REPLACEMENT bolt and if I was going to replace one Id replace all 8 bolts (ideally with new chrome plated version) so I looked on line and found that even the stock bolt (PART NUMBER 10108675) and the seal washer under it (PART NUMBER 10068165) which are about the diam. of a 50 cent coin and and about an inch long
are discontinued parts at chevy and not available in chrome plated finish, so does anyone have a source for these?
they would look very similar to this, but have a slightly wider head
http://www.harborfreight.com/high-r...ion-camera-with-recorder-67980.html?hftref=cj
GOOGLE[/color] SLI-PV618
related info
http://forum.grumpysperformance.com/viewtopic.php?f=27&t=3557&p=20837&hilit=bolt+bucket#p20837
http://forum.grumpysperformance.com/viewtopic.php?f=50&t=9237&p=33281&hilit=bolt+bucket#p33281
every guy who has ever worked on a car knows the frustration of dropping tools ,sockets, and fasteners down into cracks and restricted places in an engine compartment.
if you can see where it dropped an extendable magnetic pick-up took can some times reach it,theres also those extendo claw mechanics grab tools, that can be useful, and you certainly won,t be the first guy to use a garden hose with a nozzle to try to flush out a hidden fastener.

http://www.harborfreight.com/15-lb-capacity-telescoping-magnetic-pickup-tool-95933.html

http://www.sears.com/shc/s/p_10153_12605_00941322000P?mv=rr&clicked=true
a surprising number of times bolts and nuts seem to fall into little nooks and UN-accessible places that you just can,t seem to see them,, If you have an air compressor in your shop, one tool that's useful is a long needle like high pressure air nozzle that allows you to force 120 psi jet of compressed air down into areas where the hurricane strength air pressure can dislodge the hidden fastener allowing it to fall onto the ground where there's a slightly better chance of you locating it, rather than have it drop out of the car at some random location after you drive over a speed bump or chuck hole.

a bright mechanics drop lite and a flexible inspection tool can be a big help at times
now in this particular case I eventually found it by use of high pressure air knocking it loose and an old geezer crawling under the car to get it, but it occurred to me that if Id failed to locate it, I,D NEED A REPLACEMENT bolt and if I was going to replace one Id replace all 8 bolts (ideally with new chrome plated version) so I looked on line and found that even the stock bolt (PART NUMBER 10108675) and the seal washer under it (PART NUMBER 10068165) which are about the diam. of a 50 cent coin and and about an inch long
they would look very similar to this, but have a slightly wider head


http://www.harborfreight.com/high-r...ion-camera-with-recorder-67980.html?hftref=cj
GOOGLE[/color] SLI-PV618
related info
http://forum.grumpysperformance.com/viewtopic.php?f=27&t=3557&p=20837&hilit=bolt+bucket#p20837
http://forum.grumpysperformance.com/viewtopic.php?f=50&t=9237&p=33281&hilit=bolt+bucket#p33281