What spares should I carry with me all the time?
What spares should I carry with me all the time?
Hello All
I'll be picking up my Sprint in a week or so and I thought I would be handy to draw up a list of the spares that I should carry with the car wherever I go. I'm not suggesting that I would be able to make all of the repairs myself at the roadside, but I don't want to get stuck for the lack of a £2.00 part.
The car is a 1974 Sprint with Lumentronic electric ignition fitted.
What sort of spare parts would you reccomend as essential for being in the boot of the car at all times?
Thanks
Chris
I'll be picking up my Sprint in a week or so and I thought I would be handy to draw up a list of the spares that I should carry with the car wherever I go. I'm not suggesting that I would be able to make all of the repairs myself at the roadside, but I don't want to get stuck for the lack of a £2.00 part.
The car is a 1974 Sprint with Lumentronic electric ignition fitted.
What sort of spare parts would you reccomend as essential for being in the boot of the car at all times?
Thanks
Chris
- SprintMWU773V
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Speaking as someone who has had an electronic ignition failure before carrying a set of points and a condensor is always a handy spare. Other useful spares:
Fan Belt
Set of spanners (imperial AF obviously)
Pipe Clips
Wire
Spare fuses
Screwdrivers
Length of hose e.g. fuel hose
Spare oil
Spare Antifreeze
Foor pump and inflatable bed adapter (great for blowing muck out of fuel lines)
Fuel additive if your car needs it.
Besides those I can't think you really need anything else. Spark plugs rarely go wrong so can't see the point in those. There's no real point in carrying masses of spares or tools just enough to help you get by in the event you have a problem. Always a plan to have Breakdown cover in any case, my free cover with my insurance proved very useful once.
Fan Belt
Set of spanners (imperial AF obviously)
Pipe Clips
Wire
Spare fuses
Screwdrivers
Length of hose e.g. fuel hose
Spare oil
Spare Antifreeze
Foor pump and inflatable bed adapter (great for blowing muck out of fuel lines)
Fuel additive if your car needs it.
Besides those I can't think you really need anything else. Spark plugs rarely go wrong so can't see the point in those. There's no real point in carrying masses of spares or tools just enough to help you get by in the event you have a problem. Always a plan to have Breakdown cover in any case, my free cover with my insurance proved very useful once.
Mark
1961 Chevrolet Corvair Greenbrier Sportswagon
1980 Dolomite Sprint project using brand new shell
2009 Mazda MX5 2.0 Sport
2018 Infiniti Q30
1961 Chevrolet Corvair Greenbrier Sportswagon
1980 Dolomite Sprint project using brand new shell
2009 Mazda MX5 2.0 Sport
2018 Infiniti Q30
You want an old but known good set of plugs, points, cap, arm, condenser, leads plus a new fanbelt and a yellow plastic card or equivalent thereof. The very nice men will carry fit all hoses. IMO.
Tin
Tin
1978 Pageant Sprint - the rustomite, 1972 Spitfire IV - sprintfire project, 1968 Valencia GT6 II - little Blue, 1980 Vermillion 1500HL - resting. 1974 Sienna 1500TC, Mrs Weevils big brown.
I carry a few basics plus tools and trolley jack and fluids, and have very little room left in my boot! Plus, my fan belt went a week or two ago and I thought, ooh clever me, got a spare in the boot, but didn't have anything to tension it with so had to call breakdown recovery anyway! Just not possible to carry everything. I reckon a relaxed attitude is the best thing, and a warning triangle as I don't have hazard lights....
A wire coathanger. Very very useful if one of your exhaust hanger rubbers breaks. A spare fanbelt fits nicely into one of the cutouts in the vertical inner face of the bootlid - you'll always have it with you and it wont be in the way. When you change your HT leads, keep the longest one in your glovebox if it was working when you took it off. A hi-vis vest and a warning triangle. A torch or home-made worklight that plugs into the cigar lighter. WD40. Some money, even if its just a few quid to buy some sweeties while you wait for the tow-truck. An old sweatshirt and maybe a lightweight rain mac, pop them in a carrier bag and leave them in the boot with the spare wheel. Some rags. A fuel can.
Vindicator Sprint, Honda Fireblade RRX 919cc, re-powered by AB Performance. Quick.
...a pair of old socks with the toes cut, these go nicely over your sleeves when groping about under the bonnet.
a couple of lengths, maybe 1ft, of un-terminated 2.5mm mm cable, a stanley knife, some zip ties, and latex gloves. dont laugh, this all helps stop you getting gunge on your steering wheel and interior.

a couple of lengths, maybe 1ft, of un-terminated 2.5mm mm cable, a stanley knife, some zip ties, and latex gloves. dont laugh, this all helps stop you getting gunge on your steering wheel and interior.

Thanks guys for all your suggestions. I particularly like the idea of the sox for protecting sleeves, the latex goves the high-vis vest and rain mac. Good ideas all of them. I will add those to the tools and parts that fit in a small army bag I have.
Just to clarify one point though: If I have Lumnetronic Ignition and this goes wrong while Im on my travels, which ignition parts do I need with me to revert back to standard ignition to get me going again? Is it just the points and condenser?
Also, If one of my giant 8mm Magnacore HT cables fail, can I use a cable of lesser diameter for a short period to get me going again, or do I need a spare 8mm cable?
Thanks
Chris
Just to clarify one point though: If I have Lumnetronic Ignition and this goes wrong while Im on my travels, which ignition parts do I need with me to revert back to standard ignition to get me going again? Is it just the points and condenser?
Also, If one of my giant 8mm Magnacore HT cables fail, can I use a cable of lesser diameter for a short period to get me going again, or do I need a spare 8mm cable?
Thanks
Chris
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- Toledo Man
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I'm gonna fly in the face of all this and say that since I bought LCG off Mark it has done about 500 trouble-free miles which included the trip to Rimmer Bros. Most of the niggles have been sorted out.
Toledo Man
West Yorkshire Area Organiser
Meetings take place on the first Wednesday of the month at 8.00pm at The Railway, 1 Birstall Lane, Drighlington, Bradford, BD11 1JJ
2003 Volvo XC90 D5 SE (PX53 OVZ - The daily driver)
2009 Mercedes-Benz W204 C200 CDI Sport (BJ58 NCV - The 2nd car)
1991 Toyota Celica GT (J481 ONB - a project car)
Former stable of SAY 414M (1974 Toledo), GRH 244D (1966 1300fwd), CDB 324L (1973 1500fwd), GGN 573J (1971 1500fwd), DCP 625S (1977 Dolomite 1300) & LCG 367N (1975 Dolomite Sprint), NYE 751L (1972 Dolomite 1850 auto) plus 5 Acclaims and that's just the Triumphs!
Check my blog at http://triumphtoledo.blogspot.com
My YouTube Channel with a bit of Dolomite content.
"There is only one way to avoid criticsm: Do nothing, say nothing and BE nothing." Aristotle
West Yorkshire Area Organiser
Meetings take place on the first Wednesday of the month at 8.00pm at The Railway, 1 Birstall Lane, Drighlington, Bradford, BD11 1JJ
2003 Volvo XC90 D5 SE (PX53 OVZ - The daily driver)
2009 Mercedes-Benz W204 C200 CDI Sport (BJ58 NCV - The 2nd car)
1991 Toyota Celica GT (J481 ONB - a project car)
Former stable of SAY 414M (1974 Toledo), GRH 244D (1966 1300fwd), CDB 324L (1973 1500fwd), GGN 573J (1971 1500fwd), DCP 625S (1977 Dolomite 1300) & LCG 367N (1975 Dolomite Sprint), NYE 751L (1972 Dolomite 1850 auto) plus 5 Acclaims and that's just the Triumphs!
Check my blog at http://triumphtoledo.blogspot.com
My YouTube Channel with a bit of Dolomite content.
"There is only one way to avoid criticsm: Do nothing, say nothing and BE nothing." Aristotle