Bilstein Wrench Loan

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  • vectorsc
    Advanced Member
    • Jan 2007
    • 134

    #1

    Bilstein Wrench Loan

    Anyone have the Bilstein wrench I could borrow? Esp on the south side of Denver or the springs?
  • Todd Black 88
    No R3VLimiter
    • Oct 2007
    • 3449

    #2
    Phone Bilstien in California and have one sent to you. It's less than $5 shipped.
    Originally posted by codyep3
    I hope to Christ you have looks going for you, because you sure as fuck don't have any intelligence.
    2001 silver/Blk 325 cabby. SOLD
    1988 Blk/Blk e30 factory wide body kit car SOLD
    1992 DS/BLK 325 m-tech II apperance pack cabby SOLD!
    2002 325xit Sil/blk. SOLD
    2012 328i xdrive touring. Wht/blk. SOLD
    2009 135 cabby. monacoblue/blk leather SOLD
    2007 Z4m coupe. Silver grey/black/ aluminum. 1of50
    2010 F650gs twin
    2016 M235i cabby. Mineral grey/Red leather

    Comment

    • nrubenstein
      No R3VLimiter
      • Feb 2009
      • 3148

      #3
      Or just grab a bigass pipe wrench.
      2006 GMC Sierra 2500HD 4WD LBZ/Allison
      2002 BMW M3 Alpinweiß/Black
      1999 323i GTS2 Alpinweiß
      1995 M3 Dakargelb/Black
      - S50B32/S6S420G/3.91
      1990 325is Brilliantrot/Tan
      1989 M3 Alpinweiß/Black

      Hers: 1996 Porsche 911 Turbo Black/Black
      Hers: 1988 325iX Coupe Diamantschwartz/Black 5spd

      sigpic

      Comment

      • vectorsc
        Advanced Member
        • Jan 2007
        • 134

        #4
        was hoping to do this job over the weekend, hence the desire to borrow if possible.

        Comment

        • iamsam
          Advanced Member
          • Jun 2008
          • 172

          #5
          use a flathead screwdriver and a hammer.

          Comment

          • codrum
            Wrencher
            • Jan 2011
            • 279

            #6
            Channel locks also work great.

            Comment

            • iamsam
              Advanced Member
              • Jun 2008
              • 172

              #7
              Originally posted by codrum
              Channel locks also work great.
              ...and when that doesn't work, hammer and flathead screwdriver.

              Comment

              • codrum
                Wrencher
                • Jan 2011
                • 279

                #8
                Originally posted by iamcreepingdeath
                ...and when that doesn't work, hammer and flathead screwdriver.
                Not entirely sure why you think it wouldn't work, but channel locks provide good grip and leverage for tightening down the locking nut. I used them on my own install (blunt's bilstein packages doesn't include the wrench) and had/have no issues.

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