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Try Doing It the Wrong Way

Today’s article is composed of two quick tips that are distinct and different, but interrelated because they’re used on the same items: the humble fasteners we remove and install hundreds of times daily. These tips are both geared to newer techs since we all must find...

Modern Power Window Switches: Smarter than You’d Think

When was the last time you rolled down the power windows in an older car or truck? I’m talking at least pre-2000. The older, the better. As a passenger, you’ll find that every door has a mix of buttons, switches, locks, and handles to mess around with, plus maybe a...

It’s All About the Process

Man, it feels like just yesterday you graduated with that Associate’s in Automotive Tech, but nope, it's been three months already, and you've landed a solid job at ABC Auto Repair back in your hometown. The boss has been taking it easy on you, dishing out a bunch of...

Dealing with “System Lean” DTCs

The Engine Control Module (ECM) is always keeping an eye on the amount of fuel it is adding to the cylinders, and it'll throw a code when it figures it can't keep the mixture right where it needs to be. You might see codes like "system rich" or "system lean," and they...

Back Away from the Wrenches

Today’s article is more of a philosophical one than a pragmatic one. You see, we’re in the business of buying and reselling auto parts, servicing automobiles, and getting paid for our efforts. But as automotive professionals, we merely delay the inevitable. The...

The Misunderstood Ford 6.0

My wife and I are RVers and started our RV adventure with a 23’ toy hauler. When we started, we pulled the trailer with a Ram 1500 equipped with the 5.7-liter Hemi engine, and for most outings, it handled the task just fine. It wasn’t until we took a trip to the North...

Side Business

If your shop is a typical one, you wouldn’t turn down easy, profitable work, right? Of course not. Maybe it’s time your foreman, techs, and service writers sat down and talked through the car that isn’t a car: side-by-side (SxS). Like other not-immediately-obvious...

Witness marks: your reassembly guide when the service manual isn’t enough

by | Jun 6, 2023

I believe we’re all familiar with the trope of the shadetree mechanic who has hardware left over, right?

While I’m sure you’re not sending vehicles out the door missing their hardware, I think it is safe to say we’ve all been slowed down by a pile of fasteners. A long time ago, a smart mechanic showed me a trick I’ll pass along for those of you who don’t know it. That tech showed me how to look for witness marks.

witness mark

Photo: Mike Apice.

Witness marks are, in their loosest definitions, visual indicators of how (or where) an item should be positioned relative to another item. Many witness marks are made intentionally, like the marks you probably make on a driveshaft to index it correctly when it’s reinstalled. However, in a looser interpretation, a witness mark can also be generated naturally. Often, parts like fasteners and the objects with which they interface generate visual evidence that indicates how the items were positioned or assembled.

That’s sort of a fancy way of saying “tools and fasteners leave marks, which can be used as clues.” For instance, most people working a parts counter have been trained to examine mounting ears on new rotating electrical parts to determine if it’s been installed. If there’s a telltale shiny circle made by a bolt when it was tightened against the part, odds are good that part has been on a car. That circle is a witness mark.

witness mark

Photo: Mike Apice.

Similarly, fasteners will often remove paint or other coatings from a surface against which they bear. You may also see fresh paint under the head of a fastener in a rusty area, or sun- or weather-faded areas of parts that give clues as to how they need to be assembled or what fastener is to be used in a given spot.

And, of course, even the diameter of the mark can help you match the correct washers or shouldered fasteners. Got a big mark around that hole? Probably had a big washer in there. Deep gouge at one spot? Maybe that was from a lock washer. Gouges all under the head of the fastener? Maybe there’s a serrated shoulder bolt in your pile of hardware. Witness marks can indicate that somebody has removed or adjusted something in the past, too. Rounded or well-worn bolts can let us know someone may have been inside an assembly before, and may also give clues that a particular job has either been a problem in the past or maybe wasn’t serviced correctly.

witness mark

Photo: Mike Apice.

And as a parting bonus tip I’ll offer, adding an index mark can help you retorque a fastener with field-level accuracy. Indexing to a previously scribed line will get you in the ballpark. I’ve had success with this method in a lot of venues: I’ve used these before disassembling electronics with delicate plastic housings that I didn’t want to crack. I’ve even found use for this system when retorquing torque-to-yield cylinder head bolts that loosened on a maiden voyage. And those of you working on Class 6-8 trucks probably visually check a thousand wheel nut indicators a week just out of habit—those are a type of witness mark, too!

Every part tells a story. Sometimes, it pays to listen.

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