Every mechanic has been there—that split-second of horror as a bolt slips from your fingers and disappears somewhere deep into the engine bay. One TikTok mechanic has a fix for that, and it's so simple you’ll kick yourself for not having thought of it on your own. The Magnetic Finger Trick In a viral video, Bryan (@gearheadbryan) demonstrates a trick that could save you in a pinch. In the video, he deliberately drops a bolt into a tight spot to show the trick in action, then pulls out a small magnet, drops it into a glove, and slips the whole thing onto his finger. "Now you have a magnetic finger you could fit into tight spots," he says in the video. He reaches into the area where the bolt dropped, the bolt latches right onto the magnet through the glove, and just like that, problem solved. The caption says it all: "The Mechanic Trick Nobody Talks About." Why This Actually Matters Dropping a bolt into an engine isn't just annoying; it can be dangerous if left unaddressed. As Hagerty explains it, a loose bolt rattling around in the engine is the kind of thing that will haunt you every time you hit a bump, because there's always the chance it bounces into the oil pump or timing chain and does serious damage. The standard retrieval toolkit mechanics include telescoping magnetic wands (rigid or flexible) in various lengths, and retractable claw grabbers for fasteners that aren't magnetic. OnAllCylinders has a solid rundown of the options, noting that some heavy-duty telescoping magnetic tools can hold up to 30 pounds. There's also the borescope, basically a tiny camera on a snake cable you plug into your phone, for situations where you can't see where the bolt even landed before you start fishing for it. What makes Bryan's glove trick clever is that it solves a specific problem the standard magnetic wand doesn't: reach. A wand is great for open spaces, but when you need to get a finger into a genuinely tight gap, there's no substitute for actually fitting in there. Dropping a small magnet inside a glove finger turns your actual hand into the retrieval tool. It's also worth noting that this only works on steel fasteners—aluminum, stainless steel, and brass bolts won't respond to a magnet. A Useful Trick Or A Gimmick? People were, in turn, impressed and skeptical of the magnet-in-glove bolt retrieval trick. A fan wrote, "It ain’t a dumb idea if it works!" "Mine usually fall through a portal and are never seen again," another joked "Magnet on a stick is faster and less painful," a third said. "I used the wrong magnet, it was too powerful and I lost my glove," another wrote. "Brave of you to assume I can find the nut/bolt that dropped," a fifth added. Motor1 reached out to Bryan for comment via Instagram and Facebook direct message. We’ll update this if he responds. We want your opinion! What would you like to see on Motor1.com? Take our 3 minute survey. - The Motor1.com Team