When Cars Attack: Cautionary Tales from The Hack Mechanic
As I’m not wrenching much this winter (a situation caused by not really having a proper winter project, as well as using that as an opportunity to give my nagging back injury a chance to heal), I thought I’d write about the spectrum of wounds, cautionary tactics, near misses, and emergency room visits that the decades of wrenching have produced. Considering the amount of wrenching I’ve done over the past 45 years, I’ve had surprisingly few serious injuries—no ambulances have visited my house. But there has been blood and one near catastrophe.
Cautionary Tactics
Racers talk about losing their judgement when the red mist (adrenaline) flows and they begin doing things they know they shouldn’t do. When you’re removing some stuck bolt or recalcitrant component, it’s easy to get influenced by “mechanic’s red mist” and go all Cole Trickle on it (“This part is goin’ DOWN!”). Because of both impaired judgement and the larger forces at play when you’re pushing or pulling hard, this is when you’re likely to hurt yourself. For example, when gripping on a wrench or a ratchet handle and pushing it to loosen a bolt, if the ratchet slips or the bolt breaks, it’s the back of your hand that’s likely to smack against something sharp or pointy. The tendons back there are very close to the surface; you can plainly see them whenever you flex your fingers. Pushing a wrench or ratchet with the open palm of your hand instead of the closed fist can make the difference between a few stitches versus surgery and months of physical therapy.
Helicoptering up a bit, it’s good to be in the habit of approaching any repair with a degree of situational awareness. What are the hazards in the area you’re about to stick your hands into? Are there jagged edges? Hot hoses? Frayed wires or ends of cables that can cause a painful puncture that gets infected? Are there rotating parts you need to be aware of? Is the thing that you’re removing going to drop down and pin your hand? Simply taking a moment and scoping this stuff out is time well spent.
The phrase “gas and spark” is often used to describe the necessary precursors for an internal combustion engine to run, but it’s also a cautionary phrase, as you really don’t want these things combined outside of the engine’s combustion chamber. Spilled or leaking gas can easily be ignited by a stray spark from either an electrical connection being made or broken, or cutting something with a spinning wheel. So don’t, for example, use a Dremel tool to cut a metal clamp off a fuel hose.
But that’s all small stuff. In my opinion, the most serious vector for automotive injuries is jacking up a car and working under it. I believe I’ve told the story on these pages about how my physics professor for my sophomore mechanics class (and part of mechanics is statics—the study of the forces on things that aren’t moving) was killed when his car fell on him, forever imprinting on me that intelligence and common sense don’t necessarily go hand in hand. To be fair, I don’t know the details of what went wrong, but ever since that event, I’ve “double-jacked” cars. That is, if you’re going to crawl under a car, be sure to put it on a hard level surface (concrete, not asphalt, and definitely not hot asphalt), jack it up, position the jack stands, let it down onto the stands, and then leave the floor jack in place as a backup.
Near-Misses
There are five that stand out.
The lift incident: By far the scariest thing that ever happened to me while fixing cars was the time my mid-rise lift nearly killed me. A chain of three unlikely events—the design of the lift that makes it possible to defeat the safety latch (the thing that supports the weight of the car mechanically instead of relying on the hydraulic pressure in the cylinders), my having flipped that latch and not flipped it back into the auto-lock position, and, while I was under the car, my legs having accidentally kicked one of the car’s removed wheels, by pure chance sending it rolling into the lift’s pressure release lever—caused the hydraulics to depressurize and the lift to slowly drop while I was under it. Fortunately, I was under the back of the car, and due to it coming to a stop on its brake drums, there was enough space that my chest cavity didn’t get crushed. (You can read the details in the link above.)
At the time, I was stoic about it and simply finished the repair, but with hindsight, I could’ve been killed, and I’d be lying if I said that that didn’t rattle me. Obviously I no longer move the latch from its auto-lock position, and I’m assiduously careful to make certain that, when a car is on the lift, the lift is resting on one of the stops and not on hydraulic pressure.
The jack incident: While not nearly as serious as the lift incident, the jack incident viscerally demonstrated the importance of jack safety. On a hot late-summer day, I drove down to Cape Cod to have a look at a BMW 5 Series wagon. I met the seller in a CVS parking lot. I noticed that the lot was asphalt and had a very slight grade but didn’t think too much of it. I’d brought a medium-sized aluminum floor jack to check for front-end play, so I slid it under the nose of the car, found the jack point under the subframe, and gave it a few pumps to get the front wheels high enough to wiggle. As I was checking the first wheel, the seller said, “Look out, look out, LOOK OUT!” The combination of the jack sinking into the hot, malleable asphalt and the slight grade caused the car to topple off the jack and toward me. I was never in real danger—I was wiggling the wheel with no part of me under the car—but it alarmed both of us. Whenever I think about swapping a wheel with a car supported by only a jack, I remember this incident, and reconsider.
The wiper linkage that pinned my wrist: Decades ago, I was troubleshooting the non-functional windshield wipers on my BMW 3.0CSi. Doing so required me to pull the multi-prong plug off the wiper motor, turn the key to the accessories setting, switch on the wipers, and check for voltage and ground at the connector using a multimeter. When I was done, I pushed the connector back onto the wiper motor, which rewarded my efforts by suddenly springing to life. When it spun, it rotated the wiper linkage, which pinned my wrist against the piece of metal that the wiper motor mounts to. I’ve recreated the event in the photo below, which was instructive because the way I remembered it, it was the act of reaching in and plugging the connector back in that put my wrist in a position where it could’ve gotten pinned, but now I see that that’s highly unlikely. Regardless of exactly how it happened, my wrist was pinned, and the motor was still on.
The incident occurred in the late 1980s when my wife and I were still living at my mother’s house in Brighton. I stood there, watching my hand turn white as the unrelenting torque of the wiper motor cut off the blood flow and stood a good chance at slicing open my wrist, but because the garage was on street level and the house was a flight up from the sidewalk and my wife’s and my apartment was up on the third floor, my calls for help went unanswered. Fortunately, while looking around the engine compartment, I saw a wrench within reach, and I was able to use it to undo the negative battery cable, which killed the power to the wiper motor. Even with the power cut, though, it took quite a bit of wiggling to extricate my hand, and when I did, the crease on my wrist looked like a dull guillotine blade had bounced off it.
The vise that attacked my foot: I was installing a new exhaust in my car, replacing every piece except the catalytic converter. Unfortunately, one of the bolts holding the cat to the resonator was frozen in the flange and needed to be drilled out. At the time I didn’t own a drill press, so I put the cat in my car, changed into summer clothes, drove into work, and used the drill press there. I clamped the flange into a vise that sat on the flat surface of the drill-press table. The vise wasn’t secured to the table, though; it was free to move, allowing you to line up the drill bit with its target.
Drilling out a bolt is slow work, I got impatient, the mechanic’s red mist got the best of me, and I leaned a little harder on the drill press lever. I saw a little whisp of smoke, heard a little chirp from the bit, and then the bit grabbed the flange, causing both the catalytic converter and the vise to rotate and throw themselves on the floor. They landed about six inches from my left foot. As I looked down, I saw that I was wearing sandals. IDIOT!
Emergency Room Visits
It’s the two head wounds that rise above the background of hand stitches and metal filings and rust removed from my eye. Head wounds, of course, generate a lot of blood, making them very dramatic. And these two incidents were just so stupid.
Chevy Suburban rear hatch: The gas struts on the rear hatch of my 2000 Suburban were getting weak, resulting in the hatch slowly closing after you raised it. I replaced one of them, smiled to see that the hatch was now holding itself up, reached inside the truck to get the second strut, didn’t expect the hatch to begin sagging during those few seconds, turned around, and the corner of the lowered hatch caught me right across the scalp line. I grabbed a handful of paper towels, mashed it against the wound, and staggered toward the house. A few minutes later my wife and kids arrived home to find me sitting on the front stoop with blood dripping from my face. “Father down!” I said. “Father needs assistance!” My wife looked at it and said, “Hospital, now.” (photo above)
The vicious driveshaft: I don’t work on other people’s cars for money, but I do favors for friends. The problem is that the more often you do this, the more you open up the possibility of something going wrong. In this case, prior to a road trip, one of my traveling companions asked if I could revive the A/C system in his BMW 2002. A pressure test revealed a single bad o-ring, so with a pump-down and a recharge, he had a cold car. But when we test-drove it, I noticed a very large amount of play in the shift lever. Tightening it up is usually a quick repair, so I put the car up on the lift and crawled under it while he moved the shift lever around. There are two metal-and-rubber bushings holding the shift platform to the back of the transmission, and the Allen-head bolt holding one of them had backed its way out. This was the left-hand bolt, which is usually the one that you’re able to get an Allen-key socket onto by using a wobble extension, but there was something about the five-speed installation in this particular car that made accessing that bolt difficult. Plus I could see that the hex hole was stripped. So to get at the bolt and replace it, the front of the driveshaft needed to be dropped.
It was the end of a long day of wrenching, and I was on automatic pilot. I undid the bolts securing the driveshaft’s center support bearing, and the three holding the giubo (the rubber flex disc) to the flange on the back of the transmission. I began lowering the driveshaft but immediately found that it hit the exhaust. Fortunately, the bolts holding the resonator to the exhaust headpipe weren’t seized. Unfortunately, as soon as the resonator was lowered, the center of the driveshaft dropped with it, which freed the front of the driveshaft to swing down and clonk me right in the face, just above my left eye.
Garage wounds fall into three categories (emphasis on the gory): 1. Press on regardless, 2. Non-urgent car ride to urgent care clinic or emergency room, or 3. Ambulance. I asked my wife to triage me. “It’s not awful,” she said, “but it’ll need stitches.” I asked her to call and find out the hours and the co-pay of the nearest urgent care facility and to put a gauze pad and tape over the wound so I could finish the repair, which only took about 15 minutes. My friend graciously paid the quoted $35 co-pay, and we joked about whether a medical facility had a standardized insurance code for “hit in the face by a driveshaft.” (A doctor-friend later told me that the code is likely W20.8xxA, “struck by thrown, projected, or falling object,” along with Y92.015, “private garage of single-family house as the place of occurrence of the external cause.” He then joked, “For completeness sake, I would probably add Z74.3: Need for continuous supervision.”)
That’s most of it. Except for the time I ran over my own foot, but I think I’ll stay mum on the details. I mean a guy has to have some secrets.
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Some of the stories gave me that uneasy feeling in my gut. Glad you have all your limbs intact.
I always think of that part in Phantasm where the lurker knocks the Cuda off the jack stands with Mike under the car.
Three pages of comments in one day! Clearly this is a topic that resonates with readers. I trust Hagerty has taken note.
It’s v-I-s-e, not vice, unless referring to a moral fault.
Lots of stupid stuff I have survived, but recently I had an odd one. My wrist started hurting and felt like electricity going through it when I moved it a certain way. I had been using a wire wheel on a grinder to clean some parts and I could see where a wire had went in my wrist, but not protruding out. I could touch and feel it under the skin. I attempted to cut and remove it, but quickly realized it is hard to deliberately cut myself. I went in, told my wife, I need to go to Urgent Care. They attempted, ultimately I had surgery three days later.
Another winning typo: “scared” knuckles. Who among us can’t relate?!
Once they’re permanently scarred, they’re also permanently scared…
One thing that happened to me that I want others to be careful of…I was checking the diff fluid level with my finger and then it was like Chinese finger cuffs. I couldn’t pull my finger out of the hole. The skin on my finger would just bunch up around my knuckle and not allow me to pull my finger out. Here I am, under my car, no one else home, no phone within reach. I learned a bunch of things here. I manage to pull back on the skin on my finger with my opposite hand so that it wouldn’t bunch up as much when trying to remove it from the hole. Basically, I pulled back on the skin as much as I could before trying to pull my finger out.
Haven’t done that one again…
Been wrenching my whole life. Never heard of the open handed open end wrench trick until I joined the service and a Navy Chief showed me. Best advice.
Good article.
A hazard too often ignored or minimized is toxic chemical exposure. Many folks bemoan the lack of “oomph” on today’s cleaners. A friend recently died from liver complications- she and her husband were career mobile mechanics and serviced commercial trucks needing repairs on the road. Her job on team was primarily parts cleaning.
Read the label on the cleaner and apply appropriate due diligence.
Move work out side. Put a fan to blow air across surface and open windows for fresh air in and to exhaust bad air. Put on a respirator as appropriate.
As a young man, I worked in a shop where we routinely put bare hands in solvents to clean parts and strip paint – that was what the old pros did and was the expectation. They’re all dead now – cancer. Huh….
Once had a Rambler station wagon jacked up, safely on jack stands, as I swapped U-joints in the barracks parking lot. All went well, but had to slide under the car to get to the jack stands. First stand, no problem, but after pulling the second when I hit the ‘down’ latch on the bumper jack it broke and 4000 pounds of Rambler dropped like a stone onto where I had just been 10 seconds earlier. Too close for comfort!
I don’t do much on cars these days, but I can’t count the busted knuckles, etc. back in the day. Big deal you say? You’re right, except that in real life, I’m a pianist. No the best combination.
But the worst tragedy is one that thankfully, DIDN’T happen.
I was installing headers into my Cuda with a 440. Required a lot of wiggling from below. Now, a NORMAL person would have found a garage that would let me put the car on their lift and do the job. Notice I said a NORMAL PERSON. I was not that person (young and stupid).
I don’t recall exactly what I did to get the front end high enough, but I know it was rigged like crazy with a floor jack and numerous things to increase the height. I remember looking at it and thinking there’s no way this will ever hold. And then I proceeded to get under the car and get to work, pushing and pulling and yanking them into place. Somehow I got it done without the car coming down and killing me. To this day, I have no idea why I’m alive. Like I said….young and stupid.
The wiper incident reminded me of when I decided to work on my own car after hours at the mechanic shop I worked at. My driver’s power window didn’t want to work properly and I did the exact same thing except it involved a power window regulator rather than a wiper transmission. I was able to throw a handy wrench through a window that set off the alarm.
I might also add that when I was 18 (in Gallup, NM) I spent a week in a coma due to working under an unstabilized jacked up car. Fortunately, the gas station was a block from the hospital.
After becoming an EMT with an ambulance service, I found out that this behavior happens a lot more than I thought it would. I also realized that I was one of the lucky ones.
Be aware and stay safe my wrenching friends…
…….. and that time I slammed the car door shut on a finger
The first valve adjustment on any newly acquired vintage BMW motorcycle is the most dangerous — the Previous Owner — who is the most dangerous person in the world — always tends to overtorque the lock nuts on the adjusters. BMW, being German, makes beautiful fasteners with deep, well-machined threads which, by definition, have very sharp edges.
When that overtorqued adjuster lock nut finally breaks free, they are the perfect blade to remove quite a bit of flesh off the back of one’s hand. The resulting wound isn’t enough to require sutures or superglue (!), but it is gory, hurts like a b*tch, and takes about 5 months to fully heal.
All of the above insight is purely theoretical, ‘natch. 😉
2 times (yes i’m a Donkey) metal in my eye and to the hospital to remove it. Now i always use glasses. For the rest mostly bolts that are stuck and cause injuries.