the actual "cotter pin removal tool" is a very oddly shaped tool. it has a
screwdriver handle and it resembles a bizarrely contorted awl. it was at
one time a standard tool that came wtith evry sears craftsman tool set. i
have had mine from that set wich my mother bought for me back when i was in
high school in the early 70's. i have seen them listed in the mac, matco
and snap on tool catalogs with fancy ergonomically designed handles . yes
frank is right! most people use diagonal cutters to pull cotterpins. they
work quite well for that aplication.
chuck
"been there ...broke that"
-----Original Message-----
From: DLancer7676@cs.com <DLancer7676@cs.com>
To: cfchrist@earthlink.net <cfchrist@earthlink.net>; millerls@ado13.com
<millerls@ado13.com>; spridgets@autox.team.net <spridgets@autox.team.net>
Date: Friday, August 08, 2003 5:26 AM
Subject: Re: Rubber Grease
In a message dated 8/7/03 7:01:26 PM Pacific Daylight Time,
cfchrist@earthlink.net writes:
try using the "cotter pin removal" tool that
evryone sez is a useless tool.
Sounds like a useful tool to me. Where do you get one? I have the
concept in mind but have never seen one. Sounds makable.
--David C.
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