986 Forum - The Community for Porsche Boxster & Cayman Owners

986 Forum - The Community for Porsche Boxster & Cayman Owners (http://986forum.com/forums/index.php)
-   Boxster General Discussions (http://986forum.com/forums/forumdisplay.php?f=5)
-   -   porsche emergency kit...what do you carry? (http://986forum.com/forums/showthread.php?t=55550)

mountainman 01-25-2015 08:37 AM

porsche emergency kit...what do you carry?
 
Having had Porsches and tons of other sports cars over the years I have learned by experience to always carry tools and emergency parts when I travel long distances from home. Over the last few years we have frequently done 2K to 6K mile trips and even with the increased reliability of Porsche I still carry a kit with a water pump, thermostat, gaskets, a couple of common relays, fuses , tire plug kit, and serpentine belt. I have now added an ignition switch. And of course the tools to change each.
I would be interested in hearing what others have found useful on the road.

thstone 01-25-2015 09:06 AM

I travel light. Very light. :)

http://i1114.photobucket.com/albums/...ps3c442653.jpghttp://i1114.photobucket.com/albums/...ps57709f89.jpg

Jamesp 01-25-2015 09:16 AM

Much like thstone, AAA card and a credit card, a spare tire with the factory tools. I do carry a small set of jumper cables but that's intended for others.

rick3000 01-25-2015 09:19 AM

I have never been stranded in the middle of nowhere, but I like to be prepared. If you take care of these cars they are very reliable, so I am more focused on the being able to deal with a flat tire and basic survival stuff. I would rather call AAA than try to change a water pump on the side of the road.

Among many other things, I carry: lug wrench, crescent wrench, screwdriver, pliers, extra fuses, gloves, mini air compressor, tire gauge, jumper cables, first aid kit, swiss army knife, flares, a blanket, and snow chains in the winter.

Porsche9 01-25-2015 09:19 AM

Same as thstone and Jamesp. While not the most durable cars if maintained properly they are reliable.

Timco 01-25-2015 11:59 AM

A very large survival knife, very bright flashlight, large Leatherman multi tool, and a high-capacity .45 auto.

No spare. No jack.

I carry more on longer trips.

coreseller 01-25-2015 12:33 PM

Every vehicle we use has a version of this with a few decent quality hand tools added to it:

Justin Case Premium Travel Pro Auto Safety Kit - Walmart.com

One of these:

http://www.amazon.com/Slime-1034--T-Handle-Tire-Plug/dp/B000ET525K/ref=sr_1_1/191-6774465-4709564?ie=UTF8&qid=1422221679&sr=8-1&keywords=tire+plug+kit

That plug kit has saved my bacon several times.

Large Roll of Duct tape, Heavy Wool Blanket, wind-up flashlight and a Multi-use tool / Leatherman knock off. Usually a used serpentine belt also.

Luv2Box 01-25-2015 12:50 PM

A bottle of wine with cork puller and glasses, some cheese and bread and a blanket with lawn chair so I have something to do while I wait for roadside service to arrive.:cheers:

Box4two 01-25-2015 12:51 PM

Maybe I'm being over cautious, but besides the usual emergency tools, I carry a new nicely folded small tarp and bungee cords in the event that I can't get my top back up, and it rains.:eek:

kjc2050 01-25-2015 01:53 PM

Jump 'n Carry 660 portable jump starter, factory tool kit, extra set of metric wrenches, serpentine belt, ignition switch and small screwdriver, AAA card, credit card, flashlight, extra fuses and bulbs, GPS.

Timco 01-25-2015 02:04 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Box4two (Post 433258)
Maybe I'm being over cautious, but besides the usual emergency tools, I carry a new nicely folded small tarp and bungee cords in the event that I can't get my top back up, and it rains.:eek:

This is genius.

To the serp belt guys, do you carry a 21mm socket & breaker bar?

78F350 01-25-2015 02:26 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Timco (Post 433272)
This is genius.

To the serp belt guys, do you carry a 21mm socket & breaker bar?

I have an old one-inch box end wrench and an a/c delete belt that I bought by accident. Adding the tarp. I suppose the tarp is not suitable for highway use.

Fintro11 01-25-2015 02:48 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by mountainman (Post 433227)
Having had Porsches and tons of other sports cars over the years I have learned by experience to always carry tools and emergency parts when I travel long distances from home. Over the last few years we have frequently done 2K to 6K mile trips and even with the increased reliability of Porsche I still carry a kit with a water pump, thermostat, gaskets, a couple of common relays, fuses , tire plug kit, and serpentine belt. I have now added an ignition switch. And of course the tools to change each.
I would be interested in hearing what others have found useful on the road.

you must be single? I removed my spare tire so my wife had more room in the trunk for the **************** she buys lol

Visa and BCAA card is all I need

kjc2050 01-25-2015 03:51 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Timco (Post 433272)
To the serp belt guys, do you carry a 21mm socket & breaker bar?

Yes. I bought a large 21mm/24mm box wrench for this specific job, and it's in the car.

PaulDash 01-25-2015 05:35 PM

Has anybody here ever used the jumper cables for their Boxster any other place than their garage? Or a screwdriver?

I second the wine and glasses, Luv2Box!

The different countries here in Europe mandate you carry different obligatory accessories like reflective vest, warning triangle, fire extinguisher, bulbs, fuses, first aid kit.

Retroman1969 01-25-2015 05:46 PM

I was going to say "My AAA card" but half a dozen people beat me to it. ;)

litespeedp 01-26-2015 02:46 AM

2 cans of Fix a flat.The extra is in case the first is defective.They make it now in a tire pressure sensor safe version.Not a problem for my Box as it is a year 2000.

If is is real cold outside,the pressure in the container is inadequate;so I CAREFULLY monitor the time when I place it near the engine area to heat it up for a few minutes.

The stuff will save your butt as long as the tire is not too wrecked.

mountainman 01-26-2015 04:57 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by rick3000 (Post 433235)
I have never been stranded in the middle of nowhere, but I like to be prepared. If you take care of these cars they are very reliable, so I am more focused on the being able to deal with a flat tire and basic survival stuff. I would rather call AAA than try to change a water pump on the side of the road.

Among many other things, I carry: lug wrench, crescent wrench, screwdriver, pliers, extra fuses, gloves, mini air compressor, tire gauge, jumper cables, first aid kit, swiss army knife, flares, a blanket, and snow chains in the winter.

I never even contemplated changing a waterpump on the side of the road, but having one with me gives me the option of renting someone's lift for a few hours and changing it or paying him to do it while I watch. After all, it isn't rocket science.
Our travels are not not centered around big cities and we may do thousands of miles without getting close to one. Try finding a Porsche dealer in Colorado or western Kansas.
A case in point is last week we were traveling with another couple who have a boxster when the tiptronic went into emergency mode. It was a weekend and the closest Porsche dealer was over 3 hours away. We could have called AAA and had it towed to the dealership and rented a car for the 2 or 3 days. Instead, I have a duremetric pro and it took less than 15 minutes to hook it up, find the fault and clear it. Drove it a bit and rechecked it and all was fine. Last year on the fall tour another couple had the same thing happen and they called AAA had it towed to the dealership and guess what they did..... cleared the fault, charged them almost $200 and sent them on their way. And they missed an event they had paid for and were looking forward to.
In less than 30 minutes I can change a belt, relay, fuse. In an hour I can change the ignition switch or a headlight switch. And if I can get to any garage with a lift a waterpump and thermostat takes 2.5 hours. And that is why I try to carry emergency parts even though I rarely need them. I also have 3 Porsches and many parts fit at least 2 of them and some all 3 so I will eventually need those parts in the emergency kit for routine maintenance.

kk2002s 01-26-2015 06:28 AM

Last long trip 2000+ miles I bought and carried with me a new AOS with cable clamp pliers.
Gave me something to think about - how I would change that on the side of the road on a hot engine

Along with Belt, sockets, breaker bar, Can of Fix-o-Flat, fuses, Fuel pump relay, gal. distilled water, quart of oil
Even for short trips 100-200 miles I carry some tools, water and always a fully charged flashlight

I always carry a piece of wood with me to knock on

Next long trip I'm adding the bottle of wine, cheese /crackers so I can relax a bit, let things cool down before working on the road side repairs

I figure if I have it, it won't break.

Perfectlap 01-26-2015 07:10 AM

1. Two cans of flax fix. Have never used this product on the 986 though.
2. electric air pump.
3. Cobra battery jump start pack. Highly rated on Amazon will start an SUV. Fits in rear shelf cubby. Can charge cell phone.
4. X type lug wrench.
5. LOL 10 qts of oil, wrench and spare filter. Stupid but Boxster has so much space. I need to take that out.
6. waterproof packable ski jacket.
7. Usually distilled water jug.
8. utility knife and scissors.
9. antacid and advil.
10. fuse kit stashed in spare tire.
11. I had one of those tire plug kits, lost track of it. Need to replace.

I only drive weekends but it's usually hour plus drives. Friends live in the boonies or in the seaside communities.


All times are GMT -8. The time now is 01:52 AM.

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.7
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.
Content Relevant URLs by vBSEO 3.6.0
Copyright 2025 Pelican Parts, LLC - Posts may be archived for display on the Pelican Parts Website