View Full Version : Dumbest thing you've done in a shop
meanjean
11-11-2010, 04:59 AM
Pulled some bone head moves in the past.
Here's some of the better ones.
-Added 4 litres of bug wash into the rad of a semi truck.
Didn't notice until it was too late.
-Lifted a 1/2 ton with a floor jack by the oil pan, oops.
-Was charging a fork lift battery with booster cable ends.
Not a good connection so I wiggled an end and a spark ignited one of the cells.
Cell exploded and shot battery acid into my face.
Who can beat those stunts?
theres and old addage that goed something like
keep ur mouth shut and let them wonder
open ur mouth and remove all doubt. LOL:D
meanjean
11-11-2010, 09:51 AM
I'm not fooling anyone.
I've got to laught at myself.
Can't go thru life looking like me without having a sense of humour.
Mingy
11-11-2010, 10:33 AM
I had to remove the driveshaft from my 1974 Volvo so I could replace a u-joint. So, I put it up on jack stands and slid underneath. It was held to the differential by 6 bolts. I removed the six bolts. Surprisingly, upon the removal of the 6th bolt, something called 'gravity' swung into action, resulting in a trip to the dentist ...
ipz2222
11-11-2010, 01:17 PM
No way I'm telling you all ,uh Imean the one dumb thing I did!!!!
luke the spook
11-11-2010, 01:53 PM
well there was that one time i put petrol into my diesel 4x4. i relized what i had done when i finished topping up the tank . ended up costing me 140 bucks i had to drop the tank right there on the ground and refill it , lucky i didnt start it. thats one for the books anyway
NC Bota
11-12-2010, 04:58 AM
I was changing the timing chain on on old Mercedes Diesel. The procedure is to break the chain at the camshaft, attach the new chain, then turn the engine over by hand while feeding the new chain in and pulling the old chain out. This works best with two or preferably three people. One to turn the engine over and the other(s) to tend to the chain.
I only had me, so I rigged up some string and a couple of milk jugs to keep tension in the chains while I turned the engine over. The strings were strung over my garage door rails and the milk jugs hung from there. All was going pretty well, but the garage door was bumping my butt so I reached over and punched the garage door open button....
The first inclination of disaster was both milk jugs hitting the ground followed by the timing chains disappearing into the front of the engine. There is no timing chain cover, so this was not a good thing. Fortunately the strings were still visible and after carefully snagging them I was able to pull the chains back out and even better didn't mess up the timing.
DsBota
11-12-2010, 01:39 PM
Today I set my shirt on fire from a angle grinder:eek:. Nice 10 inch hole but I'm ok.
meanjean
11-12-2010, 05:56 PM
Was using this old school and very dangerous drill.
2 handles and a toggle switch.
I was leaning over to put pressure on the bit.
The handles got caught up in my clothing and squeezed me to the poing where I had trouble breathing.
I flopped around fighting to get loose and managed to unplug the damn thing.
pat331
11-12-2010, 08:09 PM
I done so many dumb things working in the shop and outside, I'm having trouble remembering them all. One of the most memorable was setting an expensive stack of sawn lumber on fire from an angle grinder. I nearly killed myself getting the fire put out.
DsBota
11-13-2010, 03:44 PM
Meanjean I did something similar but had the wire wheel on the drill and had that caught in the crotch of my pants:eek:.
aquaforce
11-13-2010, 05:22 PM
The only perfect man I know died on a cross so I mess things up to keep from getting crucified. :D :D :D :D :D LOL
I did a rebuild on a corvette rear differential and reinstalled it in the car then let it go with no lube in it. Of course it locked up about four miles from the shop. :o :o
skeets
11-14-2010, 03:16 PM
The dumbest thing I ever did was when I was changing oil in my truck and I asked my EX to marry me
gmtinker
11-14-2010, 07:28 PM
A few years ago, it was a perfect storm - my (now ex-)wife and I were having serious arguments, I had one of the worst colds I have ever had (stoned on NyQuil), it was Christmas Eve (which I hate working anyway) and I had to do an intake gasket on the dealership owner's father-in-law's Buick. It wasn't until it came back the day after Boxing Day that I realized there was a problem. I knew exactly what happened when I dropped the oil pan and there was red fuzz all through the engine. I generally use a rag in the valley to catch the scrapings from the gasket surfaces, and I had forgotten to remove it. To make matters worse is that the 3.8L V6 has a balance shaft in the valley which can apparently easily shred a rag, which tosses enough fuzz to block off the oil pickup screen and take out a crank . . .
That was a humbling experience, and a rather memorable lesson about double checking everything; complacence will bite you in the @$$. I second the above statement about being thankful for not having to be perfect - I would be so toast if I had to be.
aquaforce
11-15-2010, 06:29 PM
I generally use a rag in the valley to catch the scrapings from the gasket surfaces, and I had forgotten to remove it. To make matters worse is that the 3.8L V6 has a balance shaft in the valley which can apparently easily shred a rag, which tosses enough fuzz to block off the oil pickup screen and take out a crank . . .
:eek: :eek: :eek: :eek: :eek:
Makes me think about the 3.8L I have in my shop right now............ with the rag covering up the engine valley for the same reasons. WOW.
I will probably think about this story every time I do another 3800 intake now. :eek: :D
The car I'm doing is for a guy at work so I hope I don't mess it up. He bought a supercharged car for his wife and I'm getting it up to date on services.
Thanks for sharing that story. :)
B7100hst-d
11-15-2010, 07:49 PM
I was cutting C channel 6061 aluminum on a wood band saw (10x too fast, but usually works w/al ok) and was cutting w/the spine of the C facing me (open end toward blade) so it was cutting two surfaces at once. Well, you can see it coming, first, slightest vibration rolls channel over like lightning and punches a hole the size of a pencil eraser in the top of my right (dominant) hand thumbnail. It pushed the nail piece down into the soft underbelly of the nail bed.
Told my shop helper, "I think I need to go to the hospital on this one" and I towel wrapped it for our trip to the local Veterans Hospital. I don't recommend getting in a position that requires getting your thumbnail, or any fingernail, pulled from your body. It sucks. They pulled the nail, stitched up under the nail and then set the nail over the stitches to protect it and then did an X across the top to hold all that mess together.
Lessons learned:
-don't cut the open end of the C
-thumbs are not overrated at all
I've got pics around here somewhere, but will spare ya'll :D
Eric McCarthy
11-16-2010, 06:51 PM
Well I have done many stupid things over the years without really thinking and only one I really want to fess up to. I was tinkering around with a welder I had just bought and was learning how to weld with it. Mistake number one was siting down in a chair welding with jeans that had large holes in the legs. And mistake number two was taking a jacket and covering my jeans with the holes. Apparently after enough sparks later I had set the jacet on on fire. Couldent really see the flames with the welding hood on but I could damn sure smell it. LUCKLY I yanked it off and threw it on the floor before the flames went to far and burned myself!
brokersdad
11-16-2010, 08:10 PM
Was using this old school and very dangerous drill.
2 handles and a toggle switch.
I was leaning over to put pressure on the bit.
The handles got caught up in my clothing and squeezed me to the poing where I had trouble breathing.
I flopped around fighting to get loose and managed to unplug the damn thing.
LOL...i'm sorry, but I find that halarious...I can just picture it!:D
meanjean
11-18-2010, 06:40 AM
LOL...i'm sorry, but I find that halarious...I can just picture it!:D
I was flopping around like a fish, the fear of God in my eyes.
Atleast I was trying to "gain an inch" like DsBota.
Bought a new radial arm saw years ago and was using it without first reading all of the instructions. Fed a piece of wood through the wrong direction which it grabbed and shot out at a very high rate of speed. The projectile was traveling fast enough to go through the new ping pong table folded up in the corner of the garage. Fortunately, no injuries. The Lord looks after poor dumb fools.
Here is another one that wasn't done in a garage but is typical for me. We had a bathroom door which when opened would drag across the carpet. My wife and I took the door off the hinges so I could cut approximately an inch off the bottom of the door. I marked it with a pencil and plugged in my circular saw. Just before cutting my wife said "are you sure you are cutting off the right end?" Sarcastically, I said "yes I'm cutting off the right end." After cutting we started to hang the door and noticed we had a 1 inch gap at the top and the door still dragged on the carpet. That was about 40 years ago and I still get reminded about it.
Michael
12-18-2010, 02:01 AM
Was doing a oil change on my wife's BMW. Drained the oil, Got the filter changed out and got up and went and got the oil and poured it in and heard a funny splashing noise, look under the car and the new oil was pouring out the drain hole into the catch basin, seems I forgot something, I think I had to screw in and tighten the damned oil drain plug.
think of this thread when u go for an operation or go see a doctor. :D
LRP
the mean fish
12-18-2010, 08:14 AM
I tried to drain the used oil out of my Cummins engine into a drain pan with the screw in plug still in it, the oil was hot so when I realized what was going on I tried to stick the plug back in causing a hot shower of nasty black motor oil into my face, eyes and mouth. I dumped about 6 quarts of it into my driveway, burned my hand with the oil.
hodge
12-18-2010, 11:19 AM
Bought a new radial arm saw years ago and was using it without first reading all of the instructions. Fed a piece of wood through the wrong direction which it grabbed and shot out at a very high rate of speed. The projectile was traveling fast enough to go through the new ping pong table folded up in the corner of the garage. Fortunately, no injuries. The Lord looks after poor dumb fools.
Here is another one that wasn't done in a garage but is typical for me. We had a bathroom door which when opened would drag across the carpet. My wife and I took the door off the hinges so I could cut approximately an inch off the bottom of the door. I marked it with a pencil and plugged in my circular saw. Just before cutting my wife said "are you sure you are cutting off the right end?" Sarcastically, I said "yes I'm cutting off the right end." After cutting we started to hang the door and noticed we had a 1 inch gap at the top and the door still dragged on the carpet. That was about 40 years ago and I still get reminded about it.
Ha! Be comforted! You aren't the only one- I am a flooring installer, and have taken a bazillion doors off in my career. I have seen MANY doors with a piece glued/nailed back on and painted over.
I like posts like this- not because it is funny to laugh at others, but because it shows that we are all human, all imperfect, and it is a sign of maturity when you can laugh at yourself, and be comfortable with people laughing at you.
I don't work in a shop, so I don't have any stories. But, as soon as someone starts a "what's the dumbest thing you have ever done?" post, I'll be there.
gktilton
12-18-2010, 12:43 PM
My most recent I posted on another forum here. Needed to weld a mount onto the frame of my loader, about 10 inches away from the fuel filter. OOOOPS, should have taken the piece off the tractor. Had a good fire extiguisher 10 feet away, the tractor no longer has any oil/diesel accumulated under the filter and all it well.
I do need to get a new extinguisher though.
meanjean
02-01-2011, 07:29 PM
My latest addition as of this past Friday.
Buddy figured he would teach me to weld.
I welded my new rims wearing short sleeved shirt.
Forearms are still beet red and tender to the touch.
Maybe it will turn into a nice tan.
Won't be doing that again.
vaskeet
02-01-2011, 07:52 PM
I was teaching a friend to reload shotgun shells he he asked if he could smoke I said sure but I was leaving first
got off a 12 hour night shift and went to change oil on wifes avalon pulled plug and noticed "oil" was very red (toyota has drain plug on transmission) had to go to advance auto to get atf
Threw away oil drain plug on truck while doing oil change
Lots of stupid stuff working the flight deck of aircraft carriers for 20 years Randy
tk1469
02-10-2011, 03:41 PM
Here's another bonehead move -
I washed the interior of an engine compartment and engine with a hose and degreaser and had left the dipstick / plug out of the FWD transmission unit !!:eek:
I was using an angle grinder with a steel brush to remove some rust from the bonnet of a car. I pressed really hard and slipped of the bonnet and the highly rotating steel brush caught my trousers next to my zipper. It was blocked by the fabric and made snarl noises. I felt nothing but was affried a shock cover the pain and that my manhood was brush away. :eek: I open my trousers, lower it und was so happy that the brush had only caught the fabric...
Never felt so affried before!
carl
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