Originally Posted by IMGTX
Originally Posted by Sniper
Originally Posted by Cab_Burge
Originally Posted by 5thAve
Impact wrench is the quickest way. You rarely have to hold anything.

You can thread a couple bolts into the pulley holes and be creative with a pry bar against those and the ground also to hold it in place while going after the crank bolt by hand.
Do this only if you are wanting problems that are very avoidable with all the proper tools and up twocents scope wrench puller


He's not talking about pulling the balancer, but how to keep it from rotating.

I pull one plug, stuff about 3 feet of 3/8" nylon rope into the cylinder and that will keep it from rotating. Just tie a knot on one end to keep you from stuffing all the rope in.



Yes an impact is quick and simple. I should have suggested that. thumbs I guess I have done it so many times where I didn't have an impact it wasn't the first on my mind. Good suggestion.

I'm with cab on the bolts to hold the harmonic balancer. It can be done but I have seen people run them into the timing cover damaging it and other times they have broken off making another issue. By other people I have had to fix other peoples mistakes and I have done it myself too, so I quit using that technique. I did buy a cam gear holder that works on some Harmonic balancers but not all.

I like the rope trick up but call me paranoid I am always afraid I will accidentally load it into the cylinder on the wrong stroke, wedge it in a valve and bend the valve. It is a good method but I don't trust MYSELF to not mess it up. In junkyards I have pulled stereo amp cables and used that instead of rope and it worked too.



I didn't mean to run the bolts through the balancer. I thought I described it pretty well. With a couple longer bolts sticking out the front you can use a rod of some sort against them and the ground to stop it from turning the same way you use a pry bar or big screw driver between the fan bolts to stop it from turning. It works better then bumping the starter hoping the socket stays put. But neither are as easy as an impact.

I've never done the rope in the spark plug hole but that's the way I've read the most to do it.