TR3driver
Great Pumpkin - R.I.P
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That is actually quite typical of all automotive service manuals, Ed. The assumption is not that they are all the same size, but rather that you know to put all of the parts back together as they were before you took them apart. This is one of the "basic mechanical skills" that the books (silently) assume the reader has.LexTR3 said:I have checked everymanual that I own, and none speak of some of the bolts being shorter or longer. The assumption is that all of them are the same size.
As a rule, I try to get a copy of the factory service manual for all of my cars. The GM manuals in particular contain lots of warnings, that amount to only saying "put the bolts back where you found them". Sometimes the diagrams will have bolt dimensions, but not often. They actively discourage substituting the orginal bolts with common hardware-store stuff, which frequently is not made to the same standards as the original fasteners. There is a lot more to a bolt than just "Grade 5" (and common hardware store hardware is typically only Grade 2 if that).
GM seems particularly prone to using fasteners that are engineered specifically to the application, if it will save a couple of pennies by (for example) eliminating a lock washer (I don't think there is a single lockwasher on my Buick) or making it easier to assemble the car. One of my favorite examples is the bolts that held the front swaybar brackets to the frame on my Chevy Citation. They were about 3" long and fully threaded (so they could be used to compress the sway bar bushings into place), plus a rounded triangular shape instead of round (so they acted like a Nyloc nut in the hole), and tapered literally to a point (so they would pull the bracket into alignment with the nut).