The Last Bolt on My Two-Year Cobra Build Was One I Could Touch But Could Not Turn
The Last Bolt on My Two-Year Cobra Build Was One I Could Touch But Could Not Turn

Two years of weekends. Every panel on by hand, and one bolt still between me and first fire.
If you are building a Cobra, or any kit car, there is a bolt on it right now that you can see, put a finger on, and cannot get a tool onto. You just have not reached it yet.
For me it was the driver's side header flange bolt, a finger's width off the head. For a guy in my club it was the passenger sidepipe collector, a sixteenth of an inch off his fresh paint. Same problem, different corner of the car.
Here is what a builder with two hundred cars behind him taught me about the one bolt nobody warns you about.
Two years of weekends, and one bolt stopped the whole thing
I built the entire car with my own two hands. Every panel, every line, every wire, on weekends and the quiet hours after work. I am the guy who reads the whole forum thread before he buys anything. I do a job once and I do it right. That is half the reason I build my own cars instead of buying one finished.
The engine went in. All that was left was to torque the header flanges and hear it run for the first time. A five minute job, the kind you do not even think about. Then I got to the driver's side. The primary tube sweeps down off the port and sits a finger's width from the head. I could see the bolt. I could put a finger on it. I just could not get a single tool onto it that would turn.
Nothing was rusted. Nothing was seized. The whole car was brand new. It is pure geometry, the swing arc a ratchet needs simply does not exist back there. And on a header, a bad seal means you do the whole job twice.

Everything laid out, the manual open. And one header bolt I could see and could not turn.
Every tool I owned, and what each one did
- Ratchet. No room for the handle to travel between the primary and the head.
- Stubby ratchet. Caught two clicks and hit the tube.
- Crow's foot. Reached it, but a torque wrench on a crow's foot no longer reads true.
- Open end wrench. Only caught part of the flats, one flat at a time.
- Wobble socket and u-joint. Cammed off the head every time I loaded it.
The shop wanted to pull the headers to reach one bolt
I looked up what a shop would charge, and it was almost funny next to what the build was about. A hundred and fifty to two hundred an hour, two hours to pull and re-hang the headers, plus gaskets, to turn a bolt I could already touch. And that is the cheap end. Round off a twelve point head or strip an aluminum thread and you are looking at a machine shop repair or a new head, well over a thousand, on the good motor you just built.
Nobody at a shop was ever going to sweat my build the way I would. That is the whole reason I do this myself. Not the whole thing minus one bolt.
Then a builder named Bill set me straight
Bill, two hundred cars behind him, crouched next to my engine and said the problem was not me, it was the build. Then he reached into his bag and set a flat steel bar on the fender. No ratchet head, no knuckle, nothing sticking out to hit the pipe.
You have been trying to solve a space problem with tools that need space, he said. You do not need more leverage. You need a tool that does not swing at all. I pressed my thumb into the drive and felt it turn, a roller chain sealed inside the steel, carrying the twist around the bend without giving an inch.

“The chain takes the bend for you.”
The bend holds solid and the sealed chain carries the torque dead square to the socket, so it slides flat into a gap a socket cannot reach and turns with your own ratchet from out where your hand fits. Nothing in it flexes, so it does not slip off and round the head.
The sealed chain is the trick
A roller chain inside the steel body carries torque around the bend, so it never folds like a flex-head or walks like a u-joint.
Fits behind the primary tube
A slim flat bar slides into the finger-width gap by the head, behind the collector, wherever a ratchet has no room to swing.
Your own sockets
Square drive takes the sockets and ratchet already in your kit, twelve point included. No proprietary anything.
It reaches. It is honest.
This solves access to a bolt you cannot get a tool on. It is the right geometry for a tight gap, not a miracle for a bolt rusted to nothing.
It only comes from one place
You will not find the real one at the parts store or on the tool truck. The maker sells it direct from their own site only, www.thesavary.com, shipped to your door. That is a fraction of one shop visit, and a rounding error next to a cracked aluminum head and a build that sits for a month.
What happened next

Finished the way the rest of it was built. By hand, torqued right, not a mark on it.
Other builders who stopped denting their headers

“I had already bought two wobble sockets and a set of crow's feet trying to reach the bolts behind my headers. None of them pulled a real torque number. This dropped a socket square on the head and clicked to spec on the first try. Three days from stuck to running.”

“Mine was the passenger side collector, sitting a sixteenth of an inch off fresh paint. Every tool I owned wanted me to drag steel down the panel to reach it. The flat bar reached in without ever touching the body. Not one mark.”

“I run the locking twelve point bolts so they never rattle loose, and they are almost impossible to get a socket square on. I nearly rounded one into an aluminum head. This was the only thing that seated flat and true in that gap. First tool I hand a buddy starting his build.”
Get yours before the next hard bolt finds you
If you are building a Cobra or any kit car and you have ever stood over a bolt you could touch and could not turn, the header, the collector, the starter, any of the ones these cars hide on purpose, now you know there is something that reaches it.
Garage Build Notes is a reader-supported publication. This is a first-person account from a home car builder and reflects his personal experience. The Savary offset extension wrench is a hand tool designed to reach fasteners in tight, blind locations. It improves access to a bolt; it is not represented as a remedy for fasteners that are rusted or seized beyond normal service. Always follow proper service procedures and torque specifications. Results vary by build and condition.
This is an advertisement and not an actual news article, blog, or consumer protection update.
