yea i thought so to. I tried it about 10 min ago but i never could get it small enouph. then it started raining. I'll try again here in a little while.
I did something very similar last time I had to change hinge pins on one of my GM's. I put the spring in a bench vise and squeezed it down tight. Slipped a zip-tie through it and tightened it down. I only used one zip-tie, not three. Got it in place, closed the door partially, then used dikes to snip the zip-tie. It worked pretty well, but I would recommend shielding your face when you cut the tie since it seemed like the spring MIGHT pop out to me.
Ok well it stopped raining outside long enouph for me to give it another try. I went through a whole stack of black zip ties and they kept breaking. I even tried using four to no avail. I then remembered from the video that he used white zip ties. I dunno if it really matters but i had some on hand and decided to give it yet another try. Using three of the white ties i was able to squeeze it down enough to barley fit in there. I little coercing with a screw driver and it went in then cut the ties. I haven't had that spring in there for almost two years and kept putting it off. So many times the door hit my leg from a gust of wind. But no more!
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