Am I late to the party on this?

MasterofDisaster

Senior Member
Joined
Jun 10, 2019
Posts
2,452
Reaction score
4,145
Location
Michigan
So I tried a 7/32" wrench on the piston rod on my rear shocks. The weirdo wrench shattered before I could torque down the shocks upper nuts. An adjustable wrench didn't work so great, and vise grips were about to tear it up. Turned out what I needed was
1781569236391.png

Used that and a torque wrench on a crow foot wrench, and I had no problem torquing down my rear shocks upper nuts.

I guess I could have found it at AutoZone or some such, but Bezos gave it to me that day after I ordered it.

I had never seen this tool before. Any of you brothers/sisters?
 

Samos3

Member
Joined
Feb 27, 2022
Posts
721
Reaction score
475
Location
St. Louis
Back in the day there was a tool similar but for wrenches. I had one. Worked great until the flats at the top of the shock sheared off inside it.
 

MasterofDisaster

Senior Member
Joined
Jun 10, 2019
Posts
2,452
Reaction score
4,145
Location
Michigan
Back in the day there was a tool similar but for wrenches. I had one. Worked great until the flats at the top of the shock sheared off inside it.
That would be ugly indeed.

I'm a little surprised no one -as far as I can tell- makes a box end wrench in that weird 5.5x7.5mm oval.
 

Samos3

Member
Joined
Feb 27, 2022
Posts
721
Reaction score
475
Location
St. Louis
That's cool. Looks a little more complicated.
It's not really. It's for some older cars, like Mustangs, that have upper shock mounts that are recessed. The inner piece goes on the odd shock stud flats, the outer fits the nut that screws onto the shock stud.
Great idea....unless the nut and stud are corroded.
 

Support us!

Support Us - Become A Supporting Member Today!

Click Here For Details

Back
Top