How am I getting engine into boot of Golf?
How am I getting engine into boot of Golf?
Author
Discussion

CoolHands

Original Poster:

21,773 posts

215 months

If I take engine out of a car (modern mini) with an engine crane, how will I get it into the boot of eg a VW golf? As I know I won t have the height, the big arm will be in the way even if the engine will fit.

Engine going to engine builder for rebore / crankshaft bearings etc.

I suppose I could take head off to lighten, maybe take sump off?

Working on my own biggrin

Edit I suppose I could hire a transit van if necessary, might be easier all round.

droopsnoot

13,896 posts

262 months

If you can get it so that the engine is as close as possible to the crane arm, will that give you enough room to get the arm under the tailgate?

Hiring a van will save a lot of hassle, not least if the engine tips over and drops oil all over the place.

njw1

2,611 posts

131 months

Just lift it in with a couple of mates.

Edit; Didn’t read the the op properly (d'oh!), are there definitely not a couple of strong men that you could borrow for five minutes?

Edited by njw1 on Friday 12th December 21:53

cliffords

3,211 posts

43 months

I smashed the tail gate glass of my car doing exactly this some years ago . I think you should hire a van .

tux850

1,956 posts

109 months

For the last engine I transported on my own I took the front passenger seat out and popped it in there...




(I had to lift the car up to get the crane legs underneath)



I do seem to recall having to reset the airbag warning light afterwards though as I think it detected the missing seatbelt pretensioner and wasn't content it just being plugged back in.

Edited by tux850 on Friday 12th December 22:43

GreenV8S

30,993 posts

304 months

Check the dimensions to confirm it will actually fit first, also agree with the recipient how you're going to get it out at the far end.

If you have an engine crane you can use that to place it on a board at the right height for your boot entry, then slide it along until it's in the boot. A workmate or similar saw horse can support the far end of the board at about the right height. If you have a high lip into the boot you'll need to slide it down another board to get into the boot. Getting it out will usually be the harder job and may involve putting a board under it and using the boot lip as a pivot to lift it up.

DaveF-SkinnysAutos

75 posts

4 months

Saturday
quotequote all
Often removing the supporting gas struts on a hatchback boot lid and getting someone to push and hold the boot lid back further allows enough room for the engine crane upper arm to fit far enough into the car to drop the engine cleanly into the boot.

ARH

1,427 posts

259 months

Saturday
quotequote all
Why not just hire a van?

normalbloke

8,335 posts

239 months

Saturday
quotequote all
Engines, awkward buggers.


Hondapower

21 posts

54 months

Saturday
quotequote all
You can get a k20 in the back of a 205



I did this single handed with an engine crane. Had to attach the beam as low as possible to the engine, and remove the exhaust manifold to get it close enough to the back seat to be able to shut the boot lid.

Did the same a few years later but with a Fabia VRS and the back seats down.

Edited by Hondapower on Saturday 13th December 20:22

paul_c123

1,440 posts

13 months

Saturday
quotequote all
You need to have a good idea of what the height of:

engine crane boom +
engine crane chain +
connections, eg spreader bar, hooks, etc +
engine

is. If this is smaller than the height of the boot opening (with protection for the floor, eg wooden boards, rubber mats, etc, AND the engine crane's legs can go under the car's bumper/lower trim and not be obstructed by the wheels, you should be okay.

I've loaded an engine into the back of a Merc E class estate in the past, AND been able to also take the engine crane itself. Ie, visit a place where they had the engine on the floor to collect it including loading. I doubt if a folded engine crane would fit into the back of a Golf though.

fooman

413 posts

84 months

Saturday
quotequote all
Van, it's probably not as expensive as you think and you won't go dinging your car swinging an engine about.

Novexx

371 posts

94 months

Yesterday (19:59)
quotequote all
Crane makes for a pain in the ass & the potential for much damage.

Get a shot of a pair of hands for 5 minutes, two guys will lift it off the deck or from the crane & get it in without too much trouble. The narowness of the boot (wing to wing) may be a problem, but with some carefully placed wood or whatever the engine can be temporarily sat on the rear bulkhead while people rearrange themselves.