this post was submitted on 05 Sep 2023
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[Outdated, please look at pinned post] Casual Conversation
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This is how it starts. Soon, you'll start putting together a small collection of tools, and more knowledge about how the car is put together, and you will be driving a perfectly maintained and operational car that has a ton of miles on it, and it won't give you any trouble - or at least, it won't give you trouble you can't solve.
That's how I got started. I took the few hundred dollars I saved on my first project and bought a ratchet set, a hydraulic jack, and jack stands. The second repair I bought an air compressor and impact driver set because fuck, working on cars is hard! All that allows me to fix about 95% of my car's issues and I can borrow tools for free from the parts store for the odd 5%.
The parts store tool rental program is a lifesaver. I don't need to keep a bunch of obscure and expensive weird special tools around, and I don't have to do sketchy or dangerous things that risk tearing up another part, or hurting myself.
I maintain that the best way to learn to mechanic is a 20 year old truck (any make) and a Harbor Freight socket set.