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- protege5
Before grinding any screws, I would use an impact driver. You can pick one up at harbor freight for about 10 bucks and they pretty much always work.
Before grinding any screws, I would use an impact driver. You can pick one up at harbor freight for about 10 bucks and they pretty much always work.
I don't think there's any room to get in there with an impact driver.
If not, I like to keep a few pairs of needle-nose vise grips. Work great for stuff like that, if there's enough room for a dremel in there there's enough room for those!
... To add to the problem is no one makes an official JIS bit/screwdriver anymore, it's a combo JIS/Phillips bit, a compromise, but better than a straight phillips in a JIS screw...
... the left front I can get, the other 3, not so much. To add to the...
This is what I meant by impact driver.
https://www.lowes.com/pd/craftsman-...zsyA3cnpLywlT5OofVhoCPvEQAvD_BwE&gclsrc=aw.ds
I'll look into the impact driver shown at Lowes, at $19.99 US, it's a good price and may have something a bit better than the old standard Phillips bit but who knows though.
Huh. JIS. I never knew. Explains a few things.
This page has a great write up on it:
http://rtstools.com/jis-vs-phillips-screwdrivers-and-where-to-buy-a-jis-screwdriver/
So my plan is once I get that chowdered screw out, remove, clean and put back on using original gasket, if there is one and hope it's still OK and later can replace as needed, ..
.
Now to get the idle to work, unless the IAC is toast, but I'd see a code for that won't I?