My Td5 Defender Had a Nut I Could Touch But Could Not Turn
My Td5 Defender Had a Nut I Could Touch But Could Not Turn

The Landy on the drive the evening the starter went. The whole job came down to one nut.
If you run a classic Defender, there is a bolt on it right now that you can see, put a finger on, and cannot get a tool onto square. You just have not met it yet.
For me it was the top nut on the Td5 starter, tucked up against the bellhousing. For the bloke down the lane it was the bottom manifold nuts, and the clutch cylinder bolts jammed behind the servo. Same problem, different corner of the truck.
Here is what twenty years of keeping a Landy on the road taught me about the one job that should not be this hard.
Twenty years I've kept her running myself
She's a proper Landy. Two hundred and something thousand on the clock, half of her built back up by my own hands on wet Sunday mornings. She's not a car to me, she's twenty years of knuckle skin and quiet satisfaction sat on the drive. Built, not bought.
So when the starter finally gave up, I did what I always do. I did not ring the Stealership. I jacked her up, slid underneath, and had a look. Two of the three bolts came out fine. And then I met the top nut.
That top 15mm sits on the flange where the starter meets the bellhousing, invisible from up top. The only way at it is flat on your back, reaching blind over the front prop shaft. I could touch it. I could rest a socket on it. What I could not do was turn it.

Flat on your back, reaching blind over the prop shaft, at a nut you can feel and cannot turn.
Every tool in the box, and what each one did
- Ratchet. No room to swing the handle behind the bellhousing.
- Stubby ratchet. Two clicks and it fouled the casting.
- Ring spanner. Caught two flats, then hit the transmission tunnel.
- Wobble extension. Put the socket on cock-eyed, and it slipped the second I loaded it.
- Universal joint. Cammed off the shallow 15mm nut every single time.
What the Stealership actually costs
I looked up the shop route and it's almost funny. An independent Land Rover specialist is a hundred quid an hour plus VAT, with three to five weeks on the waiting list. The main dealer is a hundred and forty an hour and up, four to eight weeks out.
So it's your daily off the road for a month, waiting for a slot, to turn one nut you're lying underneath right now. And if you round it or snap the stud forcing it, now it's a mobile extraction bloke and a bill north of five hundred. Nobody at a shop was ever going to care about that truck the way I do. That's the whole reason I do this myself.
Then a bloke on the forum set me straight
Twenty years in these trucks, he left one reply. Stop trying to swing a tool in there. Get a flat offset extension wrench, and here's the only place that does a proper one. A week later a flat steel bar turned up, about the length of a ruler, a square drive on the end and a sealed chain running through it. No ratchet head, no knuckle, nothing to foul on the casting.
“The chain takes the bend for you.”
The bar lies flat in the gap and a sealed chain carries the torque dead square to the socket, so it slides into a space a ratchet cannot swing in and turns from out where your hand fits. Nothing flexes, so it does not slip off and round the nut.
The sealed chain is the trick
A roller chain inside the steel carries torque around the bend, so it never folds like a flex-head or walks like a u-joint.
Fits behind the casting
Slides flat behind the bellhousing, under the manifold, past the brake servo, wherever a ratchet has no room to swing.
Your own sockets
Square drive takes the sockets and ratchet already in your box, twelve-point included. No proprietary anything.
It reaches. It's honest.
It gets a socket square on a bolt you can see but can't reach straight. It won't crack a bolt that's rusted solid, nothing will but heat.
It only comes from one place
You won't find the real one in Halfords or on the usual marketplaces. The maker sells it direct off their own site, www.thesavary.com, shipped to your door. That's a fraction of one specialist visit, and nothing next to a rounded nut and a truck stuck on a ramp.
What happened next

Back on the road the same evening, for the price of a part and half an hour.
Other owners who stopped rounding nuts

“The starter top nut against the bellhousing had me beat for a week with a wobble bar. This dropped a socket on it dead square and it came off in under a minute. Wish I'd had it years ago.”

“Clutch master cylinder behind the servo, with the AC pipes across the gap. A twenty-quid part I couldn't fit. The flat bar got both bolts out square. Back on the road that evening.”

“Did the warped manifold, bottom row on cylinder five. Used to be a twelfth of a turn with an open spanner, knuckles on the bulkhead. Now it's a socket, square, to spec. Lives in the truck.”
Get yours before the next hard bolt finds you
If you run a Td5 or a Tdi and you've ever laid under her cursing a nut you could feel but couldn't turn, the starter, the manifold, the clutch cylinder, any of the ones these trucks hide on purpose, now you know there's something that reaches it and turns it square.
Green Lane Gazette is a reader-supported publication. This is a first-person account from a Land Rover Defender owner 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 vehicle and condition.
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