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I really enjoy fixing things, and getting more use out of discarded (or cheap!) items. As a complement to the "What was the last thing you made" thread, to start things off here's my latest effort.
We got a pedal-powered digger toy for free, probably because it was missing the steering wheel and mechanism. I finally got around to putting something together:


Works a treat! At some point I should sort out those sticking-out bolts.
The little boy initially burst into tears because it wasn't a steering wheel, but he soon got over it. Might be fun to make some kind of trailer next.
not in your league but fixed my non functioning dishwasher by tilting at a 45 degree angle, freeing up the float trip switch. Saved me a £60 call out charge 🙂
Oven knobs had split so they rotated on the spindle. 5 minute epoxy and job's a good'un.
Repaired a broken floor tile in the kitchen along with putting a support under the break to hopefully prevent it happening again.
About to try and diagnose then fix an issue with the screen on a friends Lenovo laptop. I suspect the screen cable to be to blame - we'll see.
Not exactly a repair, but the extending tv wall bracket I bought was poorly designed which allowed the second arm to dip under the weight of the tv as the bushes that held the spindle about which it rotated were loose fitting plastic. This meant that if the tv was horizontal when against the wall, it listed about 5degrees to the left when extended and if adjusted to be horizontal when extended, it listed against the wall.
So I made an alloy bush that cured the problem. I don’t have a lathe so bought some thick walled alloy tube, drilled it out and then reamed it to the correct size by hand V. happy that it has worked.
We've been given one of those exact same diggers. The red bits for hooking the arm up in front of the steering wheel broke, so I just removed the whole arm piece. Our 4yo boy is finds it difficult to play with as it's so big for him but removing the arm mechanism helped. I really want to steal the wheels off it to make a barrow for the garden though!
I put new batteries in the TV remote
At some point I should sort out those sticking-out bolts.
You should do it sooner rather than later, they look like an accident waiting to happen.
Replaced condenser and compressor on my Honda civic air conditioning system.
A black car with no AC is orrible.
Washing machine, worked out the motor needed new carbon brushes, never done it before, bit fiddly and awkward but managed it, fired up first time.
+5 husband points for me.
Shower was cutting out during the wife’s mega showers - replaced the solenoid for a tenner and all’s working again.
I healed after my last injury if that counts
Last thing was the oven, fixed the pressure switch on the door and replaced the fan motor. Prior to that was a heating pipe that I slightly drilled into 😇
Fixed my track pump(rubber washer had cracked) new washer I found in my box of tricks. Pumping away an normal now 🙂
Replaced the elements in a Dualit toaster. Ordered spares from the factory and watched a 'how to' video on YouTube.
The lift off bit of our vacuum cleaner fell over and the tab keeping it shut snapped off...
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I designed these bits in Fusion 360, printed them and fitted them.
Still going about 3 years on...
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Washing machine rubber door gasket. Needed a new jubilee clip to hold it on, so bodged it with a chain of zip ties while I waited for it to arrive. Zip ties still holding well, six months later.
Pedal bin linkage.
I'm not sure repairs above involving buying a replacement part and fitting it should get a full point.
Made a new choke lever/mechanism for my petrol leaf blower....
Yep baby Robin death machine
I put new batteries in the TV remote
S*** never thought of that just ordered a new TV 🙂
Glued a glass oven door back on recently can't believe they are only held on by glue.Also sourced and replaced the carbon bushings for the motor on the washer.
Still can't get the fridge light to work.It's not the bulb but something to do with switch that turns the light on when you open the door but it's a built in and I can't be arsed dismantling everything to get it out.Similar problem with the oven light,the housing disintegrated when i tried to change the bulb.Mind you the hob ignition is also goosed.I know this as it wouldn't stop clicking even when not in use so I pulled all wiring out to cure it.Think it's probably time for a white goods upgrade.
Cheap crap exercise bike for the MIL. Belt had snapped, £5 for a new one and half hour or so of tinkering = maximum brownie points 😄
Just this evening helped my daughter replace the wiper motor in her aging clio. And un-bung the drain holes which meant it had been sitting in a trough of water.
AA man had told her it would cost £300 at a garage. £25 for a new motor, sorted.
Only tricky bit was getting the leverage bits in the right place so the wipers went up not down. Which we only realised once we'd reassembled all the plastic covers etc doh!

Unblocking scuttle drain holes is a regular part of the car washing routine at Nosh Towers,
Replacing the piezo ignition lead for one of the burners on the hob. Fixing a new drain hose on the seconds hand washing machine as the previous owner, my dad, decided to cut it off 🙄. Fixed the garden fence, post and gate that were rotten by replacing them all. Oh and a new bulb for the number plate light on the car so it passed the MOT.
God I'm such an awesome middle aged, middle class white bloke 🤣
aging clio
Have you checked the bonnet catch recently/ever? They're known to fail if not maintained and it's a fault Renault acknowledges can happen
Today was unusual because I repaired/fixed a couple of things.
1) The U bend on the bath waste. It's been leaking for months, with an empty ice-cream container underneath it collecting the drips. Today I fixed it (I think) with a replacement costing the princely sum of £5.18
2) My son's schoolfriend's bike. A bmx with the rear wheel nuts slightly loose so the wheel had been pulled up the sliding dropouts and the chain had gone slightly slack. The poor lad's dad died in his sleep a couple of months ago so I was more than happy to help.
Recent successes:
- The kid's Dirt jump - needed a bit of a kicker on it and lengthening
- Water main - we have a 350m driveway, after it was graded there was a significant leak. In trying to locate it I created an even bigger leak, which i eventually fixed before finding the original leak (operative had driven into a valve causing an underground connection to loosen) and fixing that. A weekend i'll never get back.
Failures:
- Waeco fridge ... i'll just get the casing off to replace the thermostat - nek minute covered in refrigerant.
- Youngest's bike's headset clicking 🙁
The lip/handle of the lid of the chest-freezer. 6:30am and it stinks of epoxy in here. So far 2021 feels like being stuck in the worst parts of the 1970s.
Replaced the ignition switch in my van with one from an Austin Metro. Required some cutting and crimping to the old multiplug
Hand drilled out the pinlock hole in my motorbike helmet visor to fit a pinlock branded insert so now I can see through a non scratched and non foggy visor
Kitchen cabinet downlighter
Bathroom fan
Oven fan
Washing machine brushes
^ they've all been this week. I generally find 2 or 3 things I need to fix per week.
Annoyingly it's always something new so I'm learning from scratch every time. Guess it means my fixes generally work!
Mercedes
I generally find 2 or 3 things I need to fix per week.
Same. It's good to do, but once you realise you can then you have endless jobs.
10 year old 55" TV. Lost a little brightness at the bottom and would occasionally turn off. New back (side actually) lights from China (the only place with new parts) and 3 hours later and we have a nice functional TV again. No landfill!
Old Hope Mono M4 brakes from 2008. They'd been languishing in a box for 10 years. Stripped them down cleaned all the pistons and replaced the reservoir cap. A full bleed and new pads and they are as good as new.
I had the apparently known mazda rattly speaker issue in the car.
Took the door card out, removed the speaker and glued the speaker cone back to the frame.
Probably cost 50p and half an hour of my time against £100 or so for a new speaker.
Crap design
My track pump
Replaced the o-ring on the piston and then undid all the damage I did by greasing the wrong parts
15 year old gore waterproof jacket - velcro cuff adjusters were delaminating so I've literally just super glued them back together. Glue is drying as I type.
Nintendo Switch joycon repaired for my lad. L1 button wasn't working. Stripped and cleaned and still not working so £6 for a new button and ribbon cable. Replaced that and one happy son. And one happy me saving £40 for a new joyon.
Also replaced the sticking timer on our 14yr old Dualit toaster, but they're designed so that you can do that. Does it still count?
Fixed my 1/2" router which was cutting out under load. I thought I'd just killed the cutter fitting oak worktops and was pushing it too hard, but it did it with a new cutter too, and with minimal load. Thought maybe the brushes needed replacing, but it seems one of the holders was just loose. Nice to see that you can still buy pretty much any part of it as a spare though (DeWalt 625E, same as the Trend T10).
Fixed my track pump as well... sort of. I replaced the O-ring on the piston which had come off, stuck inside the cylinder and disintegrated, with one from my generic O-ring selection but it doesn't seal perfectly, so while it works as pump, it does let some air out. Need to replace it with the proper size.
Our not very old but no longer in warranty AEG dryer was throwing the same fault code for months and it had gotten to the point where a reset wasn't fixing it. Pulled the board and resoldered the cracked soldered joints. Then did the rest of them as I figured they wouldn't be far behind. Been washing and drying EVERYTHING this past week.
SJS Cycles or BikeTart are your friends for Topeak spares
I got all my partner's window hinges cleaned and lubed up, and stuck new handles on them all.
She thought they were broken as a few couldn't open for 5+ years... just needed a bit of TLC!
DrP
a puncture!
Am about to fix my lawnmower. On the last mow of the season (hopefully) the front wheel fell off. Looked like it had sheared the metal rod, but I tried to remove the other side to check and it looks the same. Think it just needs two crimp washers (£100). A job for the weekend.
EDIT: Love fixing stuff.
As much as I hate Mr Dyson I do like the fact that you can get all the bits for his Hoovers.
5 years daily use and the motor was grumbling. £250 for a new hoover or £60 for a new motor.
10 minute swap over and good to go.
Fixed a few things lately,
Broken window handle, the metal insert inside had broken off, had a spare in the garage which needed to be cut down but nice easy fix and job done.
Nan-in-laws petrol lawn mower, turns out it had been stood still for a while, needed the petrol tank draining and flushing, new spark plug, tank cleaned out and its like new.
BBQ - we have a decent sized bowl which then had wooden tray area to the side, BBQ is about 10 years old so wood had seen better days, got some treated 6x1 for about a tenner used the old pieces as a template and its come up well, now neatly stored for winter.
Sons favourite monster truck - top came off and wouldnt click in, bit of glue and bobs your mothers brother.
Dyson vacuum, dyson wanted £80 for a call out charge as its quite old, stripped it down myself found the part online which was £5 and we now have a fully working vacuum.
Its always good to have a go at fixing stuff.
Dyson vacuum, dyson wanted £80 for a call out charge as its quite old, stripped it down myself found the part online which was £5 and we now have a fully working vacuum.
Whilst the modern world with its culture of continually changing products, designed to be made cheaply, last only until a "better" version comes out, and to be thrown away rather than repaired has a lot to answer for... it has to be said that the internet has made fixing things so much easier, and in many cases possible.
Need an obscure part for a 10 year old hoover? Probably one on eBay with next day delivery.
Oven flashing an error code at you? Someone on YouTube has probably made a video explaining why and how to fix it.
Very true. A while ago I broke the hinge on our washing machine door. Searched the part number and replaced for a few quid.
My inflatable paddle board. Years of fixing punctured inner tubes came in useful.
The joys of moving house, I've done nothing but fix many relatively minor issues since November (aside from assembling Ikea and throwing paint about). Random example, the front door wouldn't close because the striker plate had come loose; 30 seconds with a screwdriver. I'm coming to the conclusion that the entire place has been bodged to a high standard.
Most recently: replaced the fan in the oven (which was a prick of a job to get at); fixed the lighting in the extractor hood; fixed (there's a theme here) my mum's cooker and extractor fan; replaced all the locks at my OH's daughter's new place.
I admitted defeat on the tumble dryer and got someone to come look at it, mostly because there's absolutely no space inside it to work. I'm glad I did, the main bearing had disintegrated, there's no way I'd have diagnosed and fixed that. £45 all in.
The toilet in my office. Stopped flushing because the diaphram has died - £1 part and a bit of time dismantling and putting back together and all is good again.
Lady across the roads door lock, dismantled and rebuilt with some of my basement hoard of useful junk. Saved her from having to get a handyman in which from some of the bills she has had in the past is no bad thing.
Coffee grinder. This infernal machine was built with no screws and 2 'safety' switches. The top one of which stopped engaging when the lid was fitted. Opening up up the machine involved 3x blind clips on one dial and 4 internal clips on the base. It's definitly designed to be binned if anything stops working. Once in bypassing the switch was easy.
Now with the safey switch bypassed I have a machine where if I take the top off, empty the coffee beans, remove the top burr, reach right in and turn it on I might get hurt. We like living dangeriously in our household!
Feeling slightly impressed as I managed to fix a whistling toilet cistern (admittedly the fix was to replace the part, but I managed to stop the water/drain the cistern/replace the part all without spilling a drop of water or flooding the house. The fix was very simple but have also checked the pipes and they aren't leaking either so a decent job at the fix.
Also managed to replace the transformer to the bathroom lights and those are now working - transformer was hidden amongst the roof insulation and was a pain to get at and rewire the new one, I've pulled one of the lights attachments out so I'm going to need a longer ladder to get inside the roof space so I can reconnect it all.
Both jobs turned out to be very straightforward, the toilet took me 3 weeks to get round to fixing as I reckoned I could dismantle the existing part and replace a diaphragm - turned out it was properly sealed so not possible. The bathroom lights were about 2 years as I couldn't locate the transformer (despite lifting and moving the insulation!) - Gas man was in to install a new boiler and whilst he was up there he discovered the transformer, so I was able to get it replaced after he'd left...annoyingly he took his ladder so I can't get in the loft space easily, but I'll get that sorted at the weekend.
Plenty stuff is dead simple to do when you get round to doing it...I just need to get stuck in rather than doing all the thinking but none of the doing.

A lawnmower, The dead mans handle was buggering up (its 20+years old) so I removed it and fitted a simple on/off switch.
The conservatory roof.
Used to leak. Had been badly made in the first place (with an undersized roof panel) and was relying on an external rubber seal which had long since failed to do the job it was never really intended to do - a thorough well done and slow hand clap to the original installer.
The roof panel now has the necessary lip formed on it with the might of some outdoor sealant. Bodge-tastic... but dry.
Good news for fans of not having buckets to catch drips indoors.
£10 and two hours.
… it has to be said that the internet has made fixing things so much easier, and in many cases possible.
Yep, I diagnosed a burnt out element in our cooker - ordered and fitted new part within 24 hours.
Wife is slightly annoyed though. I think she wanted a new oven 😆
@BillMC - nice door! How much for double glazing windows??
I think you lot in this thread are going to appreciate this new feature, which I’m intending will be an ongoing series:
https://singletrackmag.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/10/back-from-the-dead-maxle-rescue-and-rebuild/
I discovered that if you have an annoying hissing leaky PCL compressed air line quick release you can unscrew the collar, flip over a little rubber seal, screw the collar up again... good as new. I'd have never have guessed they unscrew - the flats for a spanner are barely perceptible.
Wish I'd known that twenty years ago and countless air-line couplers ago.
Wife is slightly annoyed though. I think she wanted a new oven
Consider it a part-work. You're 3% of your way to a new oven.
Can’t claim it’s a finished project yet but I’m part way through a complete strip down and repair of a Meddings Driltru pillar drill from about 1965.
Twrch- dunno, I was paid with an elephantine bar tab.
The last thing which I fixed that was the remote control car of my son. I fixed its door with the help of some nuts or fixing glue and also followed some tricks.
kitbashed 2 old hedge cutters into one working one. Very satisfying, even had a little bit of a fire to liven it up.
Not so much fixing but this week has been mostly about rehashing old furniture into a new house. Highlight of that was getting confused while rebuilding an old rackmount unit my brother built about 20 years ago, extending it and widening it for my 3d printer (the printer's been in it for a while but it was always a bit too small) Turned out half of the old contiboard was imperial, and the shelf unit and ikea cd tower that were giving their lives for the shelves and back extensions were all slightly different metric sizes, talk about a pain in the bum, and the plexiglass door turned out to be the wrong size too. Looks horrendous but it worked out well. Certainly easier than dismantling and rebuilding the 40 year old MFI wardrobes that my dad had apparently assembled with an axe.
Broken main pivot bolt on my wife's trek remedy. Couldn't get a part from trek in time for our holiday so found a semi suitable fine pitch bolt at a specialists and added a couple of extra threads with a die. It wasn't elegant or light weight, but it saved the holiday.
Correct alloy bolt has since been purchased and installed.
I think the last thing I fixed was a leaky kettle my late partner had thrown out. It’s a Morphy Richards, a sort of rounded cone shape with a semi-circular handle, and it has a rather delightful rising and falling whistle. There’s a clear plastic ‘window’ at the back to show the water level, and that had been leaking for some time, so being a rather unsentimental soul, it went out the back to join her old broken sewing machine and other random bits I need to take to the recycling centre. She’d had the kettle for ages, and I really liked it, so a couple of months after I lost her, I thought I’d try to fix it, just because it was something of hers that had a practical purpose, and was an attractive item in its own right.
It was a bugger to dismantle, because I had to undo screws inside the kettle where I couldn’t actually see what I was doing, or really feel, either. Eventually I got it apart and soaked all the internal bits and the level indicator in white vinegar to remove the limescale that had built up. The indicator was basically two bits of plastic bonded together with a flange, and small tubes that went through silicon gaskets into the kettle to allow water into the indicator. The plastic flange around the edge had aged and started to fracture, hence the leaking. I looked online for a spare, but couldn’t find one, so I had an idea and hunted down a tube of modelling glue, the stuff for aircraft kits, and tried that, reason being it works by melting the plastic and welds the joint. I put plenty on, let it set, then put a bit more on, left it for a couple of days, then reassembled it, with clear silicone caulk in the recess and all round the edge, wiped smooth, managed, after a significant amount of profanity, to get the sodding screws back into place, (at least, when I inevitably dropped them, they couldn’t disappear under the fridge, only into the kettle). After letting everything set for a couple of days, I filled it with water and turned it on.
To my absolute delight, it boiled, it whistled properly, and four months on, it hasn’t leaked!
So chuffed, I just wish I’d thought about fixing it while she was still with me, but every time it whistles it reminds me of Joey.
Looks like this, but it’s stainless steel rather than coloured. A bit of a copy of an Alessi kettle.
My old MagicShine light was sitting in my box of stuff to fix/do something with with, which badly needed a clear out. The cable had snapped internally by one of the connectors, which made it randomly go off at the slightest bump.
After a bit of searching, I found an extension cable with the proprietary plug on it online. Dismantled and soldered the new cable in whilst recovering from the worst hangover I've had in years this afternoon.
Shame, because it was a great day for riding, but at least I made something out of it.
So chuffed, I just wish I’d thought about fixing it while she was still with me, but every time it whistles it reminds me of Joey
Brilliant, CZ. Every time I see you post I think about your loss, and I hope the kettle is helping you to cope.
A puncture here too, although this was on the bike that's attached to the turbo. How? HOW?????
Heat build up.
again Bravo CZ.great read.
Our dryer yesterday. It's a fairly small 3kg load one, but just works, and lives in the porch. Made a grinding sound earlier in the week, and upon removing the washing, the drum was loose at the back. Hmm bearing. Opened it up and the axel and bearing had disintegrated. New kit was £8 with £7 for 24h delivery.
Easy to do, but putting the casing back on wa a fiddle as the casing is the structural rigidity, so it was easy to knock the front of the drum off the rollers. Managed to knock a spade connector off which resulted in no heat, so pulled to bits again and checked the connections. All working. Saved buying a new dryer.
I have just disassembled, cleaned and reassembled, with a new flame/overheat sensor, an Eberspacher D4 diesel heater. It was easy to do, the most difficult part was un-mounting it from the underside of the Motorhome where it has been, untouched for 10 years. It would be way easier to do if it could be serviced in-situ, but the mounting is all about saving internal space.
Must admit I skipped over your post CountZero - saw a picture of a kettle, thought "he's repaired a kettle, well done, I've tried in the past and failed". But having read it properly, it's a bit dusty in here. Makes you think about the value we place on things, or not, too doesn't it.
Wednesday morning the tumble dryer was making a horrible whining, screeching noise. The drum wasn’t turning either. A break in the rain I managed to get it out of the utility porch, no room to work in there, and have a look. I was expecting bearings or drive belt, maybe even the motor.
Turns out it was the foam sponge sealing ring around the front of the drum / casing had come unstuck and bunched up at one point. Pulled that debris out and it’s working fine.
It’s a 15 year old AEG Lavatherm that up until now has never missed a beat. I wasn’t looking forward to the expense of replacing it.
This thread proves that the old fashioned repair and mend attitude of old isn’t quite dead. Also the availability of spares open to those that have a mind to do it has allowed me to keep certain things running that others I know would have just bought a new thing and thrown something repairable away.
Just yesterday I had to replace the heating element in the washing machine
I'm looking forwards to replacing my worn front discs on my car. Until yesterday I had a dry garage to work in. Now I have an alfresco garage thanks to Storm Eunice.
A handmade incense burner/box that was badly finished, badly painted, and cracked. It was a shop - second but I made it better than new with a Swiss Champ, acrylic paints, and some Gorilla Glue. Then it became a gift.
Before that was patching the holed sills on the P-mobile. But we don’t talk about that since it failed to pass muster @ MOT 😳


