Thought I would write up a little blurb on the barn-find 1963 Beetle I just rescued. I'm no stranger to rescuing long-sitting cars, but apparently I'm rusty and the gods were a little against me, lol.
Knowing it had flat tires, and hoping they would hold air for at least a while, I loaded my full (130psi) air tank, and my little 110V compressor, since it was in a garage) with an extension cord. Also a jump box (with a little compressor) if I needed to crank it over or move it on the starter for some reason. Extra wood blocks for chocking or whatever, my 2x12 tapered wooden ramps that lead up to my trailer ramps in case it's really low or on flat tires, charged my winch battery up full. Extra pair of gloves, a few tools, etc.
When I arrived, I aired up the tires from zero to around 25psi all around and still had about 40psi in the tank. Then plugged in the little air compressor (it and it's tank are so small it takes a lot longer to air up deflated tires using only it). Then I realized I forgot the hose for the compressor, so just put it back in the bed of the truck, sigh.
I backed up the trailer in the driveway to the garage. A shove on the bumper, and the Bug moved a little - brakes weren't frozen - yeah! I strung a sling strap around the axles and to the back to hook up the winch. Free spool the winch, pull the cable out, clip on to the strap, and plug in the remote and the winch - clicks. Try the remote again, wiggle connections, just a few clicks. Then nothing. Sigh.
So, I go to the truck, and pull out the come-a-long. Many, many years ago, before I had a winch on a trailer, I used a come-a-long hand winch as the only way to load non-running cars. I love having a winch on my trailer. This is a 9500lb one that has only been used on the trailer, on mostly small cars, but in the elements it's whole life. Only about, well, OK, it's 7 or 8 years old. Time to replace it.
So, hand winch it up onto the trailer. In the nice, hot, Colorado sun. Better than rain or snow. I'm lucky it rolled easy, the e-brake worked fairly well to help keep it from rolling downhill.
Now to get it washed, in the shop, and evaluate the next steps to ready it for sale.