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Turning a hard to access nut?


Should a washer go on nut side, or the bolt side?How do I tighten/loosen this recessed nut and bolt?Why my gas stove delays in turning on?Over-tightened nut, bolt broken?Fire place and stove turning themselves offWhy does my gas stove smell like burnt gas when turning on the oven and burnersAccess Panel to gas stove shutoff valve on other side of wall in laundry room to code?How to identify a nutWhy are my oven knobs turning pink?How to adjust 'frozen' venturi tube in stove?













9















Working on the propane conversion of my gas stove. One of the orifices to be changed is in a very hard to access location - shown in the photo. The orifice is the "nut" I'm referring to, which you can fit a wrench onto.



Although it is possible to get a wrench on it there is a very limited range of motion due to surrounding apparatus. I've tried to mark this in the photo with the red lines. The very short arc that the wrench can turn in means that it never gets a 'bite' on the orifice / nut and I can't even loosen it.



It would be much more work to disassemble the other parts in this area, so I'm hoping for a solution to remove and then reinstall just the orifice part. Maybe there's a specialty type of wrench... or something else I'm not thinking of.



Thanks



enter image description here










share|improve this question

















  • 2





    Before going to buy a new tool, have you tried turn the wrench over? I’ve had places where I kept having to flip the wrench to get in on the nut.

    – UnhandledExcepSean
    15 hours ago















9















Working on the propane conversion of my gas stove. One of the orifices to be changed is in a very hard to access location - shown in the photo. The orifice is the "nut" I'm referring to, which you can fit a wrench onto.



Although it is possible to get a wrench on it there is a very limited range of motion due to surrounding apparatus. I've tried to mark this in the photo with the red lines. The very short arc that the wrench can turn in means that it never gets a 'bite' on the orifice / nut and I can't even loosen it.



It would be much more work to disassemble the other parts in this area, so I'm hoping for a solution to remove and then reinstall just the orifice part. Maybe there's a specialty type of wrench... or something else I'm not thinking of.



Thanks



enter image description here










share|improve this question

















  • 2





    Before going to buy a new tool, have you tried turn the wrench over? I’ve had places where I kept having to flip the wrench to get in on the nut.

    – UnhandledExcepSean
    15 hours ago













9












9








9


1






Working on the propane conversion of my gas stove. One of the orifices to be changed is in a very hard to access location - shown in the photo. The orifice is the "nut" I'm referring to, which you can fit a wrench onto.



Although it is possible to get a wrench on it there is a very limited range of motion due to surrounding apparatus. I've tried to mark this in the photo with the red lines. The very short arc that the wrench can turn in means that it never gets a 'bite' on the orifice / nut and I can't even loosen it.



It would be much more work to disassemble the other parts in this area, so I'm hoping for a solution to remove and then reinstall just the orifice part. Maybe there's a specialty type of wrench... or something else I'm not thinking of.



Thanks



enter image description here










share|improve this question














Working on the propane conversion of my gas stove. One of the orifices to be changed is in a very hard to access location - shown in the photo. The orifice is the "nut" I'm referring to, which you can fit a wrench onto.



Although it is possible to get a wrench on it there is a very limited range of motion due to surrounding apparatus. I've tried to mark this in the photo with the red lines. The very short arc that the wrench can turn in means that it never gets a 'bite' on the orifice / nut and I can't even loosen it.



It would be much more work to disassemble the other parts in this area, so I'm hoping for a solution to remove and then reinstall just the orifice part. Maybe there's a specialty type of wrench... or something else I'm not thinking of.



Thanks



enter image description here







gas stove bolts wrench orifice






share|improve this question













share|improve this question











share|improve this question




share|improve this question










asked 15 hours ago









DaveInCazDaveInCaz

1,259730




1,259730







  • 2





    Before going to buy a new tool, have you tried turn the wrench over? I’ve had places where I kept having to flip the wrench to get in on the nut.

    – UnhandledExcepSean
    15 hours ago












  • 2





    Before going to buy a new tool, have you tried turn the wrench over? I’ve had places where I kept having to flip the wrench to get in on the nut.

    – UnhandledExcepSean
    15 hours ago







2




2





Before going to buy a new tool, have you tried turn the wrench over? I’ve had places where I kept having to flip the wrench to get in on the nut.

– UnhandledExcepSean
15 hours ago





Before going to buy a new tool, have you tried turn the wrench over? I’ve had places where I kept having to flip the wrench to get in on the nut.

– UnhandledExcepSean
15 hours ago










9 Answers
9






active

oldest

votes


















6














What you may be overlooking, or what may not be present on your wrench, is the the open wrench is not square to the shaft. It is canted by 1/24 of a circle (15 degrees).



enter image description here



That means you only need a 30 degree arc of motion, not a 60 degree arc. When you run out of travel, remove the wrench, flip it over, raise it 1/12 of a circle (30 degrees), and it will fit on the next flat.



If your range of motion is being compromised by the wrench being all loosy-goosey on the nut (that's a technical term), then you have the wrong size wrench. In particular, watch out for English vs. Metric. The only wrench sizes that match up are 3/4=19mm, all others will be sloppy.



An adjustable wrench (commonly called a 'monkey wrench', inaccurately) is one answer, but you have to get that tight and might have to retighten on every turn.



enter image description here



It certainly looks like you have more than 30 degrees of motion there (though perhaps not quite 60 degrees). If you are tighter than 30 degrees, first stop and think about how the manufacturer intended this thing to be serviced, because not least, they had to build it and they certainly didn't want their factory workers spending 10 minutes fastening this one thing. If the range of motion is simply impossible, then you need the extreme options offered by others, or perhaps a "stubby" (short length) wrench that allows you to work inside the obstructions...



enter image description here






share|improve this answer
































    6














    A Crowfoot Wrench would work nicely. A 10 piece set of these is only $15.00



    enter image description here






    share|improve this answer
































      4














      An open end Ratchet wrench is likely the best tool for this job.



      Something like this:
      enter image description here






      share|improve this answer
































        2














        The best tool I have found for the type of application you are working with is a 12-point split-box wrench. These are also available in a 6-point design.



        enter image description here



        (Picture Source: http://constructionmanuals.tpub.com/14256/css/Types-and-Uses-Continued-156.htm)



        The split end lets the wrench get onto a fitting even when a tubing is inline. The box construction also gets better grip on the fitting than trying to use a conventional open ended flat sided wrench. The 12-point design and ability to flip the wrench over if needed from stroke to stroke makes this the tool of choice if the working angle to the fitting is small.






        share|improve this answer






























          1














          One solution I have is a set of wrenches with angled heads - you can see one end has a greater angle than the other, very handy in many situations :



          enter image description here



          Mind you, the set cost me quite a bit... But that was a long time ago.






          share|improve this answer























          • I don't see how that does anything at all for your range of motion. I'm assuming the builders of that tool were smart and made those two heads 1/12 of a circle (30 degrees) off from one another. But that just means you need to flip the tool end from end every 1/12, whereas with a normal wrench you just turn it over.

            – Harper
            12 hours ago











          • If you don't have them to use then you won't know...

            – Solar Mike
            12 hours ago











          • Maybe you can explain how you use this type of wrench to solve the "I don't have 30 degrees of arc" problem, which is OP. Because attaching to the next hex around doesn't really do anything for that problem. Do you alternate between this and a normal wrench?

            – Harper
            12 hours ago



















          0














          Crows foot attached to a universal join on the end of a long socket drive extension and a socket rachet wrench.






          share|improve this answer








          New contributor




          Mike is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
          Check out our Code of Conduct.















          • 1





            Hello, and welcome to Home Improvement. We usually prefer answers that are at least one complete sentence. Plus, others have already made these suggestions. Please take our tour to find out how better to contribute here.

            – Daniel Griscom
            5 hours ago


















          0














          EDIT this won't work because in this instance the fastener is obstructed by a pipe. Leaving for completeness.




          There appears to be plenty of width to the slot. How about a socket with a long extension bar and a universal joint?



          enter image description here



          They add slop but that's no more than annoying. You'd require a deep socket to go over any bolt too.






          share|improve this answer




















          • 3





            But it is a nut with a line going out the left side. It is a bit obscured but the wrench in the pic, but sockets won’t work.

            – UnhandledExcepSean
            10 hours ago











          • @UnhandledExcepSean Good point - I missed that in the photo.

            – Criggie
            5 hours ago


















          0














          Try an open-end ratcheting wrench. Here's a video showing how they work at about 30 seconds into it; manufacturer demo and not intended as an endorsement:



          https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QWBlQdporxE






          share|improve this answer






























            0














            I'm a gas fitter and service tech. My bag has the tools to do the job. Sometimes these tight spots require a bit of a turn with one tool and a bit of a turn with another. A lot of the available arc can be chewed up by lash, torsion and flex of components. The first tool I'd reach for, for something like this is a line wrench. I'd get a 12 point
            enter image description here
            Amazon



            After all, this is the tool made for this job



            If that didn't work it's the 6" or 8" Knipex Cobraenter image description here
            Home Depot



            These are amazing and are designed to avoid stripping and marring.






            share|improve this answer






















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              9 Answers
              9






              active

              oldest

              votes








              9 Answers
              9






              active

              oldest

              votes









              active

              oldest

              votes






              active

              oldest

              votes









              6














              What you may be overlooking, or what may not be present on your wrench, is the the open wrench is not square to the shaft. It is canted by 1/24 of a circle (15 degrees).



              enter image description here



              That means you only need a 30 degree arc of motion, not a 60 degree arc. When you run out of travel, remove the wrench, flip it over, raise it 1/12 of a circle (30 degrees), and it will fit on the next flat.



              If your range of motion is being compromised by the wrench being all loosy-goosey on the nut (that's a technical term), then you have the wrong size wrench. In particular, watch out for English vs. Metric. The only wrench sizes that match up are 3/4=19mm, all others will be sloppy.



              An adjustable wrench (commonly called a 'monkey wrench', inaccurately) is one answer, but you have to get that tight and might have to retighten on every turn.



              enter image description here



              It certainly looks like you have more than 30 degrees of motion there (though perhaps not quite 60 degrees). If you are tighter than 30 degrees, first stop and think about how the manufacturer intended this thing to be serviced, because not least, they had to build it and they certainly didn't want their factory workers spending 10 minutes fastening this one thing. If the range of motion is simply impossible, then you need the extreme options offered by others, or perhaps a "stubby" (short length) wrench that allows you to work inside the obstructions...



              enter image description here






              share|improve this answer





























                6














                What you may be overlooking, or what may not be present on your wrench, is the the open wrench is not square to the shaft. It is canted by 1/24 of a circle (15 degrees).



                enter image description here



                That means you only need a 30 degree arc of motion, not a 60 degree arc. When you run out of travel, remove the wrench, flip it over, raise it 1/12 of a circle (30 degrees), and it will fit on the next flat.



                If your range of motion is being compromised by the wrench being all loosy-goosey on the nut (that's a technical term), then you have the wrong size wrench. In particular, watch out for English vs. Metric. The only wrench sizes that match up are 3/4=19mm, all others will be sloppy.



                An adjustable wrench (commonly called a 'monkey wrench', inaccurately) is one answer, but you have to get that tight and might have to retighten on every turn.



                enter image description here



                It certainly looks like you have more than 30 degrees of motion there (though perhaps not quite 60 degrees). If you are tighter than 30 degrees, first stop and think about how the manufacturer intended this thing to be serviced, because not least, they had to build it and they certainly didn't want their factory workers spending 10 minutes fastening this one thing. If the range of motion is simply impossible, then you need the extreme options offered by others, or perhaps a "stubby" (short length) wrench that allows you to work inside the obstructions...



                enter image description here






                share|improve this answer



























                  6












                  6








                  6







                  What you may be overlooking, or what may not be present on your wrench, is the the open wrench is not square to the shaft. It is canted by 1/24 of a circle (15 degrees).



                  enter image description here



                  That means you only need a 30 degree arc of motion, not a 60 degree arc. When you run out of travel, remove the wrench, flip it over, raise it 1/12 of a circle (30 degrees), and it will fit on the next flat.



                  If your range of motion is being compromised by the wrench being all loosy-goosey on the nut (that's a technical term), then you have the wrong size wrench. In particular, watch out for English vs. Metric. The only wrench sizes that match up are 3/4=19mm, all others will be sloppy.



                  An adjustable wrench (commonly called a 'monkey wrench', inaccurately) is one answer, but you have to get that tight and might have to retighten on every turn.



                  enter image description here



                  It certainly looks like you have more than 30 degrees of motion there (though perhaps not quite 60 degrees). If you are tighter than 30 degrees, first stop and think about how the manufacturer intended this thing to be serviced, because not least, they had to build it and they certainly didn't want their factory workers spending 10 minutes fastening this one thing. If the range of motion is simply impossible, then you need the extreme options offered by others, or perhaps a "stubby" (short length) wrench that allows you to work inside the obstructions...



                  enter image description here






                  share|improve this answer















                  What you may be overlooking, or what may not be present on your wrench, is the the open wrench is not square to the shaft. It is canted by 1/24 of a circle (15 degrees).



                  enter image description here



                  That means you only need a 30 degree arc of motion, not a 60 degree arc. When you run out of travel, remove the wrench, flip it over, raise it 1/12 of a circle (30 degrees), and it will fit on the next flat.



                  If your range of motion is being compromised by the wrench being all loosy-goosey on the nut (that's a technical term), then you have the wrong size wrench. In particular, watch out for English vs. Metric. The only wrench sizes that match up are 3/4=19mm, all others will be sloppy.



                  An adjustable wrench (commonly called a 'monkey wrench', inaccurately) is one answer, but you have to get that tight and might have to retighten on every turn.



                  enter image description here



                  It certainly looks like you have more than 30 degrees of motion there (though perhaps not quite 60 degrees). If you are tighter than 30 degrees, first stop and think about how the manufacturer intended this thing to be serviced, because not least, they had to build it and they certainly didn't want their factory workers spending 10 minutes fastening this one thing. If the range of motion is simply impossible, then you need the extreme options offered by others, or perhaps a "stubby" (short length) wrench that allows you to work inside the obstructions...



                  enter image description here







                  share|improve this answer














                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer








                  edited 12 hours ago

























                  answered 12 hours ago









                  HarperHarper

                  73.7k448148




                  73.7k448148























                      6














                      A Crowfoot Wrench would work nicely. A 10 piece set of these is only $15.00



                      enter image description here






                      share|improve this answer





























                        6














                        A Crowfoot Wrench would work nicely. A 10 piece set of these is only $15.00



                        enter image description here






                        share|improve this answer



























                          6












                          6








                          6







                          A Crowfoot Wrench would work nicely. A 10 piece set of these is only $15.00



                          enter image description here






                          share|improve this answer















                          A Crowfoot Wrench would work nicely. A 10 piece set of these is only $15.00



                          enter image description here







                          share|improve this answer














                          share|improve this answer



                          share|improve this answer








                          edited 9 hours ago

























                          answered 13 hours ago









                          Jerry_ContraryJerry_Contrary

                          2,792319




                          2,792319





















                              4














                              An open end Ratchet wrench is likely the best tool for this job.



                              Something like this:
                              enter image description here






                              share|improve this answer





























                                4














                                An open end Ratchet wrench is likely the best tool for this job.



                                Something like this:
                                enter image description here






                                share|improve this answer



























                                  4












                                  4








                                  4







                                  An open end Ratchet wrench is likely the best tool for this job.



                                  Something like this:
                                  enter image description here






                                  share|improve this answer















                                  An open end Ratchet wrench is likely the best tool for this job.



                                  Something like this:
                                  enter image description here







                                  share|improve this answer














                                  share|improve this answer



                                  share|improve this answer








                                  edited 10 hours ago

























                                  answered 15 hours ago









                                  UnhandledExcepSeanUnhandledExcepSean

                                  1,50631624




                                  1,50631624





















                                      2














                                      The best tool I have found for the type of application you are working with is a 12-point split-box wrench. These are also available in a 6-point design.



                                      enter image description here



                                      (Picture Source: http://constructionmanuals.tpub.com/14256/css/Types-and-Uses-Continued-156.htm)



                                      The split end lets the wrench get onto a fitting even when a tubing is inline. The box construction also gets better grip on the fitting than trying to use a conventional open ended flat sided wrench. The 12-point design and ability to flip the wrench over if needed from stroke to stroke makes this the tool of choice if the working angle to the fitting is small.






                                      share|improve this answer



























                                        2














                                        The best tool I have found for the type of application you are working with is a 12-point split-box wrench. These are also available in a 6-point design.



                                        enter image description here



                                        (Picture Source: http://constructionmanuals.tpub.com/14256/css/Types-and-Uses-Continued-156.htm)



                                        The split end lets the wrench get onto a fitting even when a tubing is inline. The box construction also gets better grip on the fitting than trying to use a conventional open ended flat sided wrench. The 12-point design and ability to flip the wrench over if needed from stroke to stroke makes this the tool of choice if the working angle to the fitting is small.






                                        share|improve this answer

























                                          2












                                          2








                                          2







                                          The best tool I have found for the type of application you are working with is a 12-point split-box wrench. These are also available in a 6-point design.



                                          enter image description here



                                          (Picture Source: http://constructionmanuals.tpub.com/14256/css/Types-and-Uses-Continued-156.htm)



                                          The split end lets the wrench get onto a fitting even when a tubing is inline. The box construction also gets better grip on the fitting than trying to use a conventional open ended flat sided wrench. The 12-point design and ability to flip the wrench over if needed from stroke to stroke makes this the tool of choice if the working angle to the fitting is small.






                                          share|improve this answer













                                          The best tool I have found for the type of application you are working with is a 12-point split-box wrench. These are also available in a 6-point design.



                                          enter image description here



                                          (Picture Source: http://constructionmanuals.tpub.com/14256/css/Types-and-Uses-Continued-156.htm)



                                          The split end lets the wrench get onto a fitting even when a tubing is inline. The box construction also gets better grip on the fitting than trying to use a conventional open ended flat sided wrench. The 12-point design and ability to flip the wrench over if needed from stroke to stroke makes this the tool of choice if the working angle to the fitting is small.







                                          share|improve this answer












                                          share|improve this answer



                                          share|improve this answer










                                          answered 5 hours ago









                                          Michael KarasMichael Karas

                                          44.7k53486




                                          44.7k53486





















                                              1














                                              One solution I have is a set of wrenches with angled heads - you can see one end has a greater angle than the other, very handy in many situations :



                                              enter image description here



                                              Mind you, the set cost me quite a bit... But that was a long time ago.






                                              share|improve this answer























                                              • I don't see how that does anything at all for your range of motion. I'm assuming the builders of that tool were smart and made those two heads 1/12 of a circle (30 degrees) off from one another. But that just means you need to flip the tool end from end every 1/12, whereas with a normal wrench you just turn it over.

                                                – Harper
                                                12 hours ago











                                              • If you don't have them to use then you won't know...

                                                – Solar Mike
                                                12 hours ago











                                              • Maybe you can explain how you use this type of wrench to solve the "I don't have 30 degrees of arc" problem, which is OP. Because attaching to the next hex around doesn't really do anything for that problem. Do you alternate between this and a normal wrench?

                                                – Harper
                                                12 hours ago
















                                              1














                                              One solution I have is a set of wrenches with angled heads - you can see one end has a greater angle than the other, very handy in many situations :



                                              enter image description here



                                              Mind you, the set cost me quite a bit... But that was a long time ago.






                                              share|improve this answer























                                              • I don't see how that does anything at all for your range of motion. I'm assuming the builders of that tool were smart and made those two heads 1/12 of a circle (30 degrees) off from one another. But that just means you need to flip the tool end from end every 1/12, whereas with a normal wrench you just turn it over.

                                                – Harper
                                                12 hours ago











                                              • If you don't have them to use then you won't know...

                                                – Solar Mike
                                                12 hours ago











                                              • Maybe you can explain how you use this type of wrench to solve the "I don't have 30 degrees of arc" problem, which is OP. Because attaching to the next hex around doesn't really do anything for that problem. Do you alternate between this and a normal wrench?

                                                – Harper
                                                12 hours ago














                                              1












                                              1








                                              1







                                              One solution I have is a set of wrenches with angled heads - you can see one end has a greater angle than the other, very handy in many situations :



                                              enter image description here



                                              Mind you, the set cost me quite a bit... But that was a long time ago.






                                              share|improve this answer













                                              One solution I have is a set of wrenches with angled heads - you can see one end has a greater angle than the other, very handy in many situations :



                                              enter image description here



                                              Mind you, the set cost me quite a bit... But that was a long time ago.







                                              share|improve this answer












                                              share|improve this answer



                                              share|improve this answer










                                              answered 15 hours ago









                                              Solar MikeSolar Mike

                                              4467




                                              4467












                                              • I don't see how that does anything at all for your range of motion. I'm assuming the builders of that tool were smart and made those two heads 1/12 of a circle (30 degrees) off from one another. But that just means you need to flip the tool end from end every 1/12, whereas with a normal wrench you just turn it over.

                                                – Harper
                                                12 hours ago











                                              • If you don't have them to use then you won't know...

                                                – Solar Mike
                                                12 hours ago











                                              • Maybe you can explain how you use this type of wrench to solve the "I don't have 30 degrees of arc" problem, which is OP. Because attaching to the next hex around doesn't really do anything for that problem. Do you alternate between this and a normal wrench?

                                                – Harper
                                                12 hours ago


















                                              • I don't see how that does anything at all for your range of motion. I'm assuming the builders of that tool were smart and made those two heads 1/12 of a circle (30 degrees) off from one another. But that just means you need to flip the tool end from end every 1/12, whereas with a normal wrench you just turn it over.

                                                – Harper
                                                12 hours ago











                                              • If you don't have them to use then you won't know...

                                                – Solar Mike
                                                12 hours ago











                                              • Maybe you can explain how you use this type of wrench to solve the "I don't have 30 degrees of arc" problem, which is OP. Because attaching to the next hex around doesn't really do anything for that problem. Do you alternate between this and a normal wrench?

                                                – Harper
                                                12 hours ago

















                                              I don't see how that does anything at all for your range of motion. I'm assuming the builders of that tool were smart and made those two heads 1/12 of a circle (30 degrees) off from one another. But that just means you need to flip the tool end from end every 1/12, whereas with a normal wrench you just turn it over.

                                              – Harper
                                              12 hours ago





                                              I don't see how that does anything at all for your range of motion. I'm assuming the builders of that tool were smart and made those two heads 1/12 of a circle (30 degrees) off from one another. But that just means you need to flip the tool end from end every 1/12, whereas with a normal wrench you just turn it over.

                                              – Harper
                                              12 hours ago













                                              If you don't have them to use then you won't know...

                                              – Solar Mike
                                              12 hours ago





                                              If you don't have them to use then you won't know...

                                              – Solar Mike
                                              12 hours ago













                                              Maybe you can explain how you use this type of wrench to solve the "I don't have 30 degrees of arc" problem, which is OP. Because attaching to the next hex around doesn't really do anything for that problem. Do you alternate between this and a normal wrench?

                                              – Harper
                                              12 hours ago






                                              Maybe you can explain how you use this type of wrench to solve the "I don't have 30 degrees of arc" problem, which is OP. Because attaching to the next hex around doesn't really do anything for that problem. Do you alternate between this and a normal wrench?

                                              – Harper
                                              12 hours ago












                                              0














                                              Crows foot attached to a universal join on the end of a long socket drive extension and a socket rachet wrench.






                                              share|improve this answer








                                              New contributor




                                              Mike is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                                              Check out our Code of Conduct.















                                              • 1





                                                Hello, and welcome to Home Improvement. We usually prefer answers that are at least one complete sentence. Plus, others have already made these suggestions. Please take our tour to find out how better to contribute here.

                                                – Daniel Griscom
                                                5 hours ago















                                              0














                                              Crows foot attached to a universal join on the end of a long socket drive extension and a socket rachet wrench.






                                              share|improve this answer








                                              New contributor




                                              Mike is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                                              Check out our Code of Conduct.















                                              • 1





                                                Hello, and welcome to Home Improvement. We usually prefer answers that are at least one complete sentence. Plus, others have already made these suggestions. Please take our tour to find out how better to contribute here.

                                                – Daniel Griscom
                                                5 hours ago













                                              0












                                              0








                                              0







                                              Crows foot attached to a universal join on the end of a long socket drive extension and a socket rachet wrench.






                                              share|improve this answer








                                              New contributor




                                              Mike is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                                              Check out our Code of Conduct.










                                              Crows foot attached to a universal join on the end of a long socket drive extension and a socket rachet wrench.







                                              share|improve this answer








                                              New contributor




                                              Mike is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                                              Check out our Code of Conduct.









                                              share|improve this answer



                                              share|improve this answer






                                              New contributor




                                              Mike is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                                              Check out our Code of Conduct.









                                              answered 6 hours ago









                                              MikeMike

                                              1




                                              1




                                              New contributor




                                              Mike is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                                              Check out our Code of Conduct.





                                              New contributor





                                              Mike is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                                              Check out our Code of Conduct.






                                              Mike is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                                              Check out our Code of Conduct.







                                              • 1





                                                Hello, and welcome to Home Improvement. We usually prefer answers that are at least one complete sentence. Plus, others have already made these suggestions. Please take our tour to find out how better to contribute here.

                                                – Daniel Griscom
                                                5 hours ago












                                              • 1





                                                Hello, and welcome to Home Improvement. We usually prefer answers that are at least one complete sentence. Plus, others have already made these suggestions. Please take our tour to find out how better to contribute here.

                                                – Daniel Griscom
                                                5 hours ago







                                              1




                                              1





                                              Hello, and welcome to Home Improvement. We usually prefer answers that are at least one complete sentence. Plus, others have already made these suggestions. Please take our tour to find out how better to contribute here.

                                              – Daniel Griscom
                                              5 hours ago





                                              Hello, and welcome to Home Improvement. We usually prefer answers that are at least one complete sentence. Plus, others have already made these suggestions. Please take our tour to find out how better to contribute here.

                                              – Daniel Griscom
                                              5 hours ago











                                              0














                                              EDIT this won't work because in this instance the fastener is obstructed by a pipe. Leaving for completeness.




                                              There appears to be plenty of width to the slot. How about a socket with a long extension bar and a universal joint?



                                              enter image description here



                                              They add slop but that's no more than annoying. You'd require a deep socket to go over any bolt too.






                                              share|improve this answer




















                                              • 3





                                                But it is a nut with a line going out the left side. It is a bit obscured but the wrench in the pic, but sockets won’t work.

                                                – UnhandledExcepSean
                                                10 hours ago











                                              • @UnhandledExcepSean Good point - I missed that in the photo.

                                                – Criggie
                                                5 hours ago















                                              0














                                              EDIT this won't work because in this instance the fastener is obstructed by a pipe. Leaving for completeness.




                                              There appears to be plenty of width to the slot. How about a socket with a long extension bar and a universal joint?



                                              enter image description here



                                              They add slop but that's no more than annoying. You'd require a deep socket to go over any bolt too.






                                              share|improve this answer




















                                              • 3





                                                But it is a nut with a line going out the left side. It is a bit obscured but the wrench in the pic, but sockets won’t work.

                                                – UnhandledExcepSean
                                                10 hours ago











                                              • @UnhandledExcepSean Good point - I missed that in the photo.

                                                – Criggie
                                                5 hours ago













                                              0












                                              0








                                              0







                                              EDIT this won't work because in this instance the fastener is obstructed by a pipe. Leaving for completeness.




                                              There appears to be plenty of width to the slot. How about a socket with a long extension bar and a universal joint?



                                              enter image description here



                                              They add slop but that's no more than annoying. You'd require a deep socket to go over any bolt too.






                                              share|improve this answer















                                              EDIT this won't work because in this instance the fastener is obstructed by a pipe. Leaving for completeness.




                                              There appears to be plenty of width to the slot. How about a socket with a long extension bar and a universal joint?



                                              enter image description here



                                              They add slop but that's no more than annoying. You'd require a deep socket to go over any bolt too.







                                              share|improve this answer














                                              share|improve this answer



                                              share|improve this answer








                                              edited 5 hours ago

























                                              answered 10 hours ago









                                              CriggieCriggie

                                              1,063518




                                              1,063518







                                              • 3





                                                But it is a nut with a line going out the left side. It is a bit obscured but the wrench in the pic, but sockets won’t work.

                                                – UnhandledExcepSean
                                                10 hours ago











                                              • @UnhandledExcepSean Good point - I missed that in the photo.

                                                – Criggie
                                                5 hours ago












                                              • 3





                                                But it is a nut with a line going out the left side. It is a bit obscured but the wrench in the pic, but sockets won’t work.

                                                – UnhandledExcepSean
                                                10 hours ago











                                              • @UnhandledExcepSean Good point - I missed that in the photo.

                                                – Criggie
                                                5 hours ago







                                              3




                                              3





                                              But it is a nut with a line going out the left side. It is a bit obscured but the wrench in the pic, but sockets won’t work.

                                              – UnhandledExcepSean
                                              10 hours ago





                                              But it is a nut with a line going out the left side. It is a bit obscured but the wrench in the pic, but sockets won’t work.

                                              – UnhandledExcepSean
                                              10 hours ago













                                              @UnhandledExcepSean Good point - I missed that in the photo.

                                              – Criggie
                                              5 hours ago





                                              @UnhandledExcepSean Good point - I missed that in the photo.

                                              – Criggie
                                              5 hours ago











                                              0














                                              Try an open-end ratcheting wrench. Here's a video showing how they work at about 30 seconds into it; manufacturer demo and not intended as an endorsement:



                                              https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QWBlQdporxE






                                              share|improve this answer



























                                                0














                                                Try an open-end ratcheting wrench. Here's a video showing how they work at about 30 seconds into it; manufacturer demo and not intended as an endorsement:



                                                https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QWBlQdporxE






                                                share|improve this answer

























                                                  0












                                                  0








                                                  0







                                                  Try an open-end ratcheting wrench. Here's a video showing how they work at about 30 seconds into it; manufacturer demo and not intended as an endorsement:



                                                  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QWBlQdporxE






                                                  share|improve this answer













                                                  Try an open-end ratcheting wrench. Here's a video showing how they work at about 30 seconds into it; manufacturer demo and not intended as an endorsement:



                                                  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QWBlQdporxE







                                                  share|improve this answer












                                                  share|improve this answer



                                                  share|improve this answer










                                                  answered 3 hours ago









                                                  R..R..

                                                  4092415




                                                  4092415





















                                                      0














                                                      I'm a gas fitter and service tech. My bag has the tools to do the job. Sometimes these tight spots require a bit of a turn with one tool and a bit of a turn with another. A lot of the available arc can be chewed up by lash, torsion and flex of components. The first tool I'd reach for, for something like this is a line wrench. I'd get a 12 point
                                                      enter image description here
                                                      Amazon



                                                      After all, this is the tool made for this job



                                                      If that didn't work it's the 6" or 8" Knipex Cobraenter image description here
                                                      Home Depot



                                                      These are amazing and are designed to avoid stripping and marring.






                                                      share|improve this answer



























                                                        0














                                                        I'm a gas fitter and service tech. My bag has the tools to do the job. Sometimes these tight spots require a bit of a turn with one tool and a bit of a turn with another. A lot of the available arc can be chewed up by lash, torsion and flex of components. The first tool I'd reach for, for something like this is a line wrench. I'd get a 12 point
                                                        enter image description here
                                                        Amazon



                                                        After all, this is the tool made for this job



                                                        If that didn't work it's the 6" or 8" Knipex Cobraenter image description here
                                                        Home Depot



                                                        These are amazing and are designed to avoid stripping and marring.






                                                        share|improve this answer

























                                                          0












                                                          0








                                                          0







                                                          I'm a gas fitter and service tech. My bag has the tools to do the job. Sometimes these tight spots require a bit of a turn with one tool and a bit of a turn with another. A lot of the available arc can be chewed up by lash, torsion and flex of components. The first tool I'd reach for, for something like this is a line wrench. I'd get a 12 point
                                                          enter image description here
                                                          Amazon



                                                          After all, this is the tool made for this job



                                                          If that didn't work it's the 6" or 8" Knipex Cobraenter image description here
                                                          Home Depot



                                                          These are amazing and are designed to avoid stripping and marring.






                                                          share|improve this answer













                                                          I'm a gas fitter and service tech. My bag has the tools to do the job. Sometimes these tight spots require a bit of a turn with one tool and a bit of a turn with another. A lot of the available arc can be chewed up by lash, torsion and flex of components. The first tool I'd reach for, for something like this is a line wrench. I'd get a 12 point
                                                          enter image description here
                                                          Amazon



                                                          After all, this is the tool made for this job



                                                          If that didn't work it's the 6" or 8" Knipex Cobraenter image description here
                                                          Home Depot



                                                          These are amazing and are designed to avoid stripping and marring.







                                                          share|improve this answer












                                                          share|improve this answer



                                                          share|improve this answer










                                                          answered 3 hours ago









                                                          Joe FalaJoe Fala

                                                          3,629224




                                                          3,629224



























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