How to rebuild an engine

Jump to: navigation, search
(Transportation)
m (Reverted edits by 216.220.23.176 (Talk) to last revision by 97.82.245.218)
Line 136: Line 136:
 
'''How to ship an engine through a third-party shipping service. And, how to safely load, secure, transport, and unload an engine.'''
 
'''How to ship an engine through a third-party shipping service. And, how to safely load, secure, transport, and unload an engine.'''
  
An engine, because of the oil and gasoline residue it holds, is considered hazardous material in the United States and comes under special requirements for shipping documentation. If you do not already know how to do this, it isn't worth your while for one engine. Get somebody who does this regularly (maybe a friendly auto dealer or salvage yard) to do it for you. If you are going to transport the engine/transmission in your own truck, get one or two car tires to sit the item(s) on. It's non-skid, protects the item(s) being transported and allows stabilization when the item(s) are strapped bitch with a whip.
+
An engine, because of the oil and gasoline residue it holds, is considered hazardous material in the United States and comes under special requirements for shipping documentation. If you do not already know how to do this, it isn't worth your while for one engine. Get somebody who does this regularly (maybe a friendly auto dealer or salvage yard) to do it for you. If you are going to transport the engine/transmission in your own truck, get one or two car tires to sit the item(s) on. It's non-skid, protects the item(s) being transported and allows stabilization when the item(s) are strapped down.
  
 
== Disassembly==
 
== Disassembly==

Revision as of 17:07, 30 March 2011

Personal tools
Namespaces
Variants
Actions
Navigation
Categories
Toolbox