I can't tell you how many times I have removed a VW engine with the standard hydraulic jack over the last 34 years. I have had 3 classic vans stolen. I currently have 6 bugs and 2 vans. Most are yard ornaments out in the garden. I will not sell my vehicles due to the 3 stolen. I got one back through the corrupt court system. I usually found the best deals due to people who THOUGHT they could own a Volkswagen yet didn't know the fuel filter had an arrow for direction of flow. Simple things would stump an inexperienced owner until the point they give up and sell the car. That was before RUclips. I enjoyed watching you do that. Likewise, I have never had anyone help me with the task.
I never guessed I would watch a VW engine being removed. But this was an interesting video, it was great viewing. One man and two jacks for a cool job! Salute!
Jack the car up as high as possible and place it on 4 jack stands. Then when you start lifting the engine you won’t have the car also lifting and confusing the issue. You should also bolt your wood risers onto the jack in a fore and aft orientation
I don't have much to add, but I enjoyed the video. I'm glad you were able to get the engine out. Also, it's nice to hear that it is Springtime everywhere.
next time take one of the rear wheels off and slide it out through the fender well. you don't have to jack the car up as high and less risk of scratching things
I added a tilting table feature to the atv jack, that way I could keep the axis of the engine and transaxle aligned, that's why you had trouble getting the engine out.
Remove one rear wheel, that jack rolls sideways, there more clearance behind the drum.roll the motor sideways, less work one jack, No need for two expensive jacks, less highth
@@vintage76vipergreenBeetle Front wheels on the ground. Back wheels in the air, high enough to clear engine on a jack. Stands under car near left and right jack points to have stability. Remove rear cover plate from engine. Leave exhaust in place. Use tail pipes like wheelbarrow handles. Place garage jack undet engine, hooked in slot designed for this purpose. Jack up untill engine is stable on jack. Remove four mounting bolts = engine to gearbox. Undo all pipes, cables and electric wires. Second person operate jack. Jack up slightly while mechanic pull engine backwards by holding onto the tail pipes, and balancing engine on jack. Within five to eight seconds the engine is clear from the gear box. 2nd person carefully lowers jack while mechanic guides it clear from the body. Max 30 seconds to get engine down. Then mechanic pulls the engine on the jack from underneath the engine bay. The reason for using a garage jack instead of a rigid type of platform, is to have maneuverability, as if the engine is balanced on a ball. (Later years a four point car hoist eliminated the need for srands. It also made it easy to have the car horisontal while pulling the engine [still on the old type garage jack]. Not having to jack up and place stands saved some three minutes. Twelve minutes was the norm with a four poit hoist). I am not familiar with back yard methods. It took me way longer to type this than it ever took to "drop" the engine from the moment after all connections had been loosened. From parking the car to having the engine off the jack and on the floor takes no more than 15 minutes. 12 with four point hoist. I have done this prosedure hundreds of times, maybe thousands. From 1969 to 1998 I removed VW engines on a daily basis, from typy 1 through type 4. Type 2 was done on its wheels after removing the rear cross-member and bumper. It's a long time ago. Thanks for asking.
I can't tell you how many times I have removed a VW engine with the standard hydraulic jack over the last 34 years. I have had 3 classic vans stolen. I currently have 6 bugs and 2 vans. Most are yard ornaments out in the garden. I will not sell my vehicles due to the 3 stolen. I got one back through the corrupt court system. I usually found the best deals due to people who THOUGHT they could own a Volkswagen yet didn't know the fuel filter had an arrow for direction of flow. Simple things would stump an inexperienced owner until the point they give up and sell the car. That was before RUclips.
I enjoyed watching you do that. Likewise, I have never had anyone help me with the task.
I never guessed I would watch a VW engine being removed. But this was an interesting video, it was great viewing. One man and two jacks for a cool job! Salute!
Thank you for leaving a comment. Having the right tools is a big help.
That looks convenient. I want one.
Glad, I bought that jack 25 years ago.
Cheap On CL or marketplace. Got mine for free on CL years ago. Guy thought it was not working.
Raise the front of the car to make it level .. it’ll come out and go in easier
I'll try that, when I install the engine.
Thanks for the tip. I jacked up the front of the bug, when I install the engine a few days ago, and it helped.
Love the bug and color. great job. Nice old school truck jack.
Jack the car up as high as possible and place it on 4 jack stands. Then when you start lifting the engine you won’t have the car also lifting and confusing the issue. You should also bolt your wood risers onto the jack in a fore and aft orientation
I don't have much to add, but I enjoyed the video. I'm glad you were able to get the engine out. Also, it's nice to hear that it is Springtime everywhere.
Spring is slowly approaching. Getting tried of the rain and cold weather.
next time take one of the rear wheels off and slide it out through the fender well. you don't have to jack the car up as high and less risk of scratching things
Good video. That jack did great work
Those jacks are great for a lot of things!
Yes, they are.
On the early 60's I normally I would take around 30 minutes to get a VW engine out of the car, they are extremely simple to work on them.
And 30 min to put another one in.And use the original pipes to manoeuvre it in and out.
I added a tilting table feature to the atv jack, that way I could keep the axis of the engine and transaxle aligned, that's why you had trouble getting the engine out.
I came up with the same idea. Make a hinged platform with a hand wheel adjuster at the back.
THAT was satisfying watching you get that wrench out of there! How long has it been back there again? You told me a while back.
The 8mm wrench has been there for 7 months. Surprised it didn't fall out during the times I test drove the bug .
nice beetle
Nice 👍
Thank you, for checking out my video.
👍🏻
Remove one rear wheel, that jack rolls sideways, there more clearance behind the drum.roll the motor sideways, less work one jack, No need for two expensive jacks, less highth
That works on early cars. The 74 and up bugs have the frame in the way.
Stop shaking the thing and figure out what’s stuck! Yikes.
The engine angle was off.
@@vintage76vipergreenBeetle
I need to drop the engine and transmission from my 914 this winter. Not really looking forward to it!
@@shawnbrennan7526 With the right tools it should help, remove the powertrain off the 914. Never own or worked on a 914.
He’s not to bright obviously!
U made this look hard buddy 😂😂😂😂😂😂im tired for u
Hopefully it will go back in a lot easier.
😅
Tá longe de ser mecânico tem que aprender mais um pouco
We all need to learn little more, every day.
Rec Super Beetle ruclips.net/user/shortsSHXFJ1C7-NU
Whoever thinks this is good, has no knowledge of cars.
How do you remove your vw type 1 engine?
@@vintage76vipergreenBeetle Front wheels on the ground. Back wheels in the air, high enough to clear engine on a jack. Stands under car near left and right jack points to have stability. Remove rear cover plate from engine. Leave exhaust in place. Use tail pipes like wheelbarrow handles. Place garage jack undet engine, hooked in slot designed for this purpose. Jack up untill engine is stable on jack. Remove four mounting bolts = engine to gearbox. Undo all pipes, cables and electric wires. Second person operate jack. Jack up slightly while mechanic pull engine backwards by holding onto the tail pipes, and balancing engine on jack. Within five to eight seconds the engine is clear from the gear box. 2nd person carefully lowers jack while mechanic guides it clear from the body. Max 30 seconds to get engine down. Then mechanic pulls the engine on the jack from underneath the engine bay. The reason for using a garage jack instead of a rigid type of platform, is to have maneuverability, as if the engine is balanced on a ball. (Later years a four point car hoist eliminated the need for srands. It also made it easy to have the car horisontal while pulling the engine [still on the old type garage jack]. Not having to jack up and place stands saved some three minutes. Twelve minutes was the norm with a four poit hoist).
I am not familiar with back yard methods.
It took me way longer to type this than it ever took to "drop" the engine from the moment after all connections had been loosened. From parking the car to having the engine off the jack and on the floor takes no more than 15 minutes. 12 with four point hoist. I have done this prosedure hundreds of times, maybe thousands. From 1969 to 1998 I removed VW engines on a daily basis, from typy 1 through type 4. Type 2 was done on its wheels after removing the rear cross-member and bumper. It's a long time ago.
Thanks for asking.