Snapped off an exhaust bolt
#111
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Snapped off an exhaust bolt
Mike Romain writes:
> ... who came on this group insisting he 'knew better' than
> the mechanical design engineers ... hope he doesn't kill too many people
> ...
Tsk, tsk. Citing imaginary authorities and misquoting to support our
peeves, are we?
My light-duty hitch still performs flawlessly, by the way.
Copies of the plans downloaded in 2006: 932.
Deaths, injuries, lawsuits, etc., attributed to it: 0.
http://www.truetex.com/jeep_trailer_hitch_bracket.htm
> ... who came on this group insisting he 'knew better' than
> the mechanical design engineers ... hope he doesn't kill too many people
> ...
Tsk, tsk. Citing imaginary authorities and misquoting to support our
peeves, are we?
My light-duty hitch still performs flawlessly, by the way.
Copies of the plans downloaded in 2006: 932.
Deaths, injuries, lawsuits, etc., attributed to it: 0.
http://www.truetex.com/jeep_trailer_hitch_bracket.htm
#112
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Snapped off an exhaust bolt
Mike Romain writes:
> ... who came on this group insisting he 'knew better' than
> the mechanical design engineers ... hope he doesn't kill too many people
> ...
Tsk, tsk. Citing imaginary authorities and misquoting to support our
peeves, are we?
My light-duty hitch still performs flawlessly, by the way.
Copies of the plans downloaded in 2006: 932.
Deaths, injuries, lawsuits, etc., attributed to it: 0.
http://www.truetex.com/jeep_trailer_hitch_bracket.htm
> ... who came on this group insisting he 'knew better' than
> the mechanical design engineers ... hope he doesn't kill too many people
> ...
Tsk, tsk. Citing imaginary authorities and misquoting to support our
peeves, are we?
My light-duty hitch still performs flawlessly, by the way.
Copies of the plans downloaded in 2006: 932.
Deaths, injuries, lawsuits, etc., attributed to it: 0.
http://www.truetex.com/jeep_trailer_hitch_bracket.htm
#113
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Snapped off an exhaust bolt
Mike Romain writes:
> ... who came on this group insisting he 'knew better' than
> the mechanical design engineers ... hope he doesn't kill too many people
> ...
Tsk, tsk. Citing imaginary authorities and misquoting to support our
peeves, are we?
My light-duty hitch still performs flawlessly, by the way.
Copies of the plans downloaded in 2006: 932.
Deaths, injuries, lawsuits, etc., attributed to it: 0.
http://www.truetex.com/jeep_trailer_hitch_bracket.htm
> ... who came on this group insisting he 'knew better' than
> the mechanical design engineers ... hope he doesn't kill too many people
> ...
Tsk, tsk. Citing imaginary authorities and misquoting to support our
peeves, are we?
My light-duty hitch still performs flawlessly, by the way.
Copies of the plans downloaded in 2006: 932.
Deaths, injuries, lawsuits, etc., attributed to it: 0.
http://www.truetex.com/jeep_trailer_hitch_bracket.htm
#118
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Snapped off an exhaust bolt
On Jan 28, 7:59 pm, "DougW" <post.repl...@invalid.address> wrote:
> "wb" wrote...
> > Yeah, I realized the WD40 is not the best for rust. I actually have plenty of bolt left to grab on to, but not enough that it is
> > still usable. It snapped, with a little less than half remaining. Should I be able to unscrew it from the manifold fitting,
> > assuming I get it hot enough and soak it enough with the right kind of lubricant? Do I replace it with a headless bolt (do they
> > have a proper term for these), screwed in from underneath?
>
> The term your looking for is "stud".
>
> Apply PB blaster, tap lightly with a hammer, wait half
> an hour, put on some more pb blaster, tap again, then
> use some vice grips to turn it out.
>
> --
> DougW
What I actually ended up doing is this..
I went and bought some PB blaster. I sprayed it all over the stud
from top and bottom one night one and let it sit for a couple of
hours. Tapped it with a hammer and resprayed and let it sit over
night. I pulled out the vice grips the next day and could not budge
it. So I applied more PB Blaster, ventilated the garage (this stuff
is pretty noxious), and let it sit for a couple of hours. Tapped it
again and tried again with the vice grips. Nothing. Did this every
3-4 hours for the next couple of days. After wearing off all the
threads and having nothing left to grip on the stud, I went to Sears
to have a gander at stud extractors. This was after the local part
stores had nothing to loan out and nothing that looked promising on
the shelf. I came across a sud extractor that you tap onto a stuck
stud. It has what looks like a small star pattern in it. You tap it
onto the stud and the points of the star cut right into the stud.
>From there it has a firm grip; something I wasn't getting with the
vice grips. I was able to put an impact socket with extension over
the top of that. From there I put the impact wrench in reverse, said
a small prayer that this wouldn't get any worse, and fired it up.
After several seconds of hitting on it it broke free. A few seconds
later it had screwed on out. I was so pumped that the impact wrench
came in handy again (just got it a few weeks ago to help in removing
the flywheel). A few minutes of cleaning up the area and screwing in
the new stud, and the muffler was assembled and the jeep was ready to
fire back up. Now my only problem is getting that stud out of my
extractor tool.... for some reason they did not include directions on
that : )
Thanks to everyone for the help. I think I bought my last can of
WD40.
> "wb" wrote...
> > Yeah, I realized the WD40 is not the best for rust. I actually have plenty of bolt left to grab on to, but not enough that it is
> > still usable. It snapped, with a little less than half remaining. Should I be able to unscrew it from the manifold fitting,
> > assuming I get it hot enough and soak it enough with the right kind of lubricant? Do I replace it with a headless bolt (do they
> > have a proper term for these), screwed in from underneath?
>
> The term your looking for is "stud".
>
> Apply PB blaster, tap lightly with a hammer, wait half
> an hour, put on some more pb blaster, tap again, then
> use some vice grips to turn it out.
>
> --
> DougW
What I actually ended up doing is this..
I went and bought some PB blaster. I sprayed it all over the stud
from top and bottom one night one and let it sit for a couple of
hours. Tapped it with a hammer and resprayed and let it sit over
night. I pulled out the vice grips the next day and could not budge
it. So I applied more PB Blaster, ventilated the garage (this stuff
is pretty noxious), and let it sit for a couple of hours. Tapped it
again and tried again with the vice grips. Nothing. Did this every
3-4 hours for the next couple of days. After wearing off all the
threads and having nothing left to grip on the stud, I went to Sears
to have a gander at stud extractors. This was after the local part
stores had nothing to loan out and nothing that looked promising on
the shelf. I came across a sud extractor that you tap onto a stuck
stud. It has what looks like a small star pattern in it. You tap it
onto the stud and the points of the star cut right into the stud.
>From there it has a firm grip; something I wasn't getting with the
vice grips. I was able to put an impact socket with extension over
the top of that. From there I put the impact wrench in reverse, said
a small prayer that this wouldn't get any worse, and fired it up.
After several seconds of hitting on it it broke free. A few seconds
later it had screwed on out. I was so pumped that the impact wrench
came in handy again (just got it a few weeks ago to help in removing
the flywheel). A few minutes of cleaning up the area and screwing in
the new stud, and the muffler was assembled and the jeep was ready to
fire back up. Now my only problem is getting that stud out of my
extractor tool.... for some reason they did not include directions on
that : )
Thanks to everyone for the help. I think I bought my last can of
WD40.
#119
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Snapped off an exhaust bolt
On Jan 28, 7:59 pm, "DougW" <post.repl...@invalid.address> wrote:
> "wb" wrote...
> > Yeah, I realized the WD40 is not the best for rust. I actually have plenty of bolt left to grab on to, but not enough that it is
> > still usable. It snapped, with a little less than half remaining. Should I be able to unscrew it from the manifold fitting,
> > assuming I get it hot enough and soak it enough with the right kind of lubricant? Do I replace it with a headless bolt (do they
> > have a proper term for these), screwed in from underneath?
>
> The term your looking for is "stud".
>
> Apply PB blaster, tap lightly with a hammer, wait half
> an hour, put on some more pb blaster, tap again, then
> use some vice grips to turn it out.
>
> --
> DougW
What I actually ended up doing is this..
I went and bought some PB blaster. I sprayed it all over the stud
from top and bottom one night one and let it sit for a couple of
hours. Tapped it with a hammer and resprayed and let it sit over
night. I pulled out the vice grips the next day and could not budge
it. So I applied more PB Blaster, ventilated the garage (this stuff
is pretty noxious), and let it sit for a couple of hours. Tapped it
again and tried again with the vice grips. Nothing. Did this every
3-4 hours for the next couple of days. After wearing off all the
threads and having nothing left to grip on the stud, I went to Sears
to have a gander at stud extractors. This was after the local part
stores had nothing to loan out and nothing that looked promising on
the shelf. I came across a sud extractor that you tap onto a stuck
stud. It has what looks like a small star pattern in it. You tap it
onto the stud and the points of the star cut right into the stud.
>From there it has a firm grip; something I wasn't getting with the
vice grips. I was able to put an impact socket with extension over
the top of that. From there I put the impact wrench in reverse, said
a small prayer that this wouldn't get any worse, and fired it up.
After several seconds of hitting on it it broke free. A few seconds
later it had screwed on out. I was so pumped that the impact wrench
came in handy again (just got it a few weeks ago to help in removing
the flywheel). A few minutes of cleaning up the area and screwing in
the new stud, and the muffler was assembled and the jeep was ready to
fire back up. Now my only problem is getting that stud out of my
extractor tool.... for some reason they did not include directions on
that : )
Thanks to everyone for the help. I think I bought my last can of
WD40.
> "wb" wrote...
> > Yeah, I realized the WD40 is not the best for rust. I actually have plenty of bolt left to grab on to, but not enough that it is
> > still usable. It snapped, with a little less than half remaining. Should I be able to unscrew it from the manifold fitting,
> > assuming I get it hot enough and soak it enough with the right kind of lubricant? Do I replace it with a headless bolt (do they
> > have a proper term for these), screwed in from underneath?
>
> The term your looking for is "stud".
>
> Apply PB blaster, tap lightly with a hammer, wait half
> an hour, put on some more pb blaster, tap again, then
> use some vice grips to turn it out.
>
> --
> DougW
What I actually ended up doing is this..
I went and bought some PB blaster. I sprayed it all over the stud
from top and bottom one night one and let it sit for a couple of
hours. Tapped it with a hammer and resprayed and let it sit over
night. I pulled out the vice grips the next day and could not budge
it. So I applied more PB Blaster, ventilated the garage (this stuff
is pretty noxious), and let it sit for a couple of hours. Tapped it
again and tried again with the vice grips. Nothing. Did this every
3-4 hours for the next couple of days. After wearing off all the
threads and having nothing left to grip on the stud, I went to Sears
to have a gander at stud extractors. This was after the local part
stores had nothing to loan out and nothing that looked promising on
the shelf. I came across a sud extractor that you tap onto a stuck
stud. It has what looks like a small star pattern in it. You tap it
onto the stud and the points of the star cut right into the stud.
>From there it has a firm grip; something I wasn't getting with the
vice grips. I was able to put an impact socket with extension over
the top of that. From there I put the impact wrench in reverse, said
a small prayer that this wouldn't get any worse, and fired it up.
After several seconds of hitting on it it broke free. A few seconds
later it had screwed on out. I was so pumped that the impact wrench
came in handy again (just got it a few weeks ago to help in removing
the flywheel). A few minutes of cleaning up the area and screwing in
the new stud, and the muffler was assembled and the jeep was ready to
fire back up. Now my only problem is getting that stud out of my
extractor tool.... for some reason they did not include directions on
that : )
Thanks to everyone for the help. I think I bought my last can of
WD40.
#120
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Snapped off an exhaust bolt
On Jan 28, 7:59 pm, "DougW" <post.repl...@invalid.address> wrote:
> "wb" wrote...
> > Yeah, I realized the WD40 is not the best for rust. I actually have plenty of bolt left to grab on to, but not enough that it is
> > still usable. It snapped, with a little less than half remaining. Should I be able to unscrew it from the manifold fitting,
> > assuming I get it hot enough and soak it enough with the right kind of lubricant? Do I replace it with a headless bolt (do they
> > have a proper term for these), screwed in from underneath?
>
> The term your looking for is "stud".
>
> Apply PB blaster, tap lightly with a hammer, wait half
> an hour, put on some more pb blaster, tap again, then
> use some vice grips to turn it out.
>
> --
> DougW
What I actually ended up doing is this..
I went and bought some PB blaster. I sprayed it all over the stud
from top and bottom one night one and let it sit for a couple of
hours. Tapped it with a hammer and resprayed and let it sit over
night. I pulled out the vice grips the next day and could not budge
it. So I applied more PB Blaster, ventilated the garage (this stuff
is pretty noxious), and let it sit for a couple of hours. Tapped it
again and tried again with the vice grips. Nothing. Did this every
3-4 hours for the next couple of days. After wearing off all the
threads and having nothing left to grip on the stud, I went to Sears
to have a gander at stud extractors. This was after the local part
stores had nothing to loan out and nothing that looked promising on
the shelf. I came across a sud extractor that you tap onto a stuck
stud. It has what looks like a small star pattern in it. You tap it
onto the stud and the points of the star cut right into the stud.
>From there it has a firm grip; something I wasn't getting with the
vice grips. I was able to put an impact socket with extension over
the top of that. From there I put the impact wrench in reverse, said
a small prayer that this wouldn't get any worse, and fired it up.
After several seconds of hitting on it it broke free. A few seconds
later it had screwed on out. I was so pumped that the impact wrench
came in handy again (just got it a few weeks ago to help in removing
the flywheel). A few minutes of cleaning up the area and screwing in
the new stud, and the muffler was assembled and the jeep was ready to
fire back up. Now my only problem is getting that stud out of my
extractor tool.... for some reason they did not include directions on
that : )
Thanks to everyone for the help. I think I bought my last can of
WD40.
> "wb" wrote...
> > Yeah, I realized the WD40 is not the best for rust. I actually have plenty of bolt left to grab on to, but not enough that it is
> > still usable. It snapped, with a little less than half remaining. Should I be able to unscrew it from the manifold fitting,
> > assuming I get it hot enough and soak it enough with the right kind of lubricant? Do I replace it with a headless bolt (do they
> > have a proper term for these), screwed in from underneath?
>
> The term your looking for is "stud".
>
> Apply PB blaster, tap lightly with a hammer, wait half
> an hour, put on some more pb blaster, tap again, then
> use some vice grips to turn it out.
>
> --
> DougW
What I actually ended up doing is this..
I went and bought some PB blaster. I sprayed it all over the stud
from top and bottom one night one and let it sit for a couple of
hours. Tapped it with a hammer and resprayed and let it sit over
night. I pulled out the vice grips the next day and could not budge
it. So I applied more PB Blaster, ventilated the garage (this stuff
is pretty noxious), and let it sit for a couple of hours. Tapped it
again and tried again with the vice grips. Nothing. Did this every
3-4 hours for the next couple of days. After wearing off all the
threads and having nothing left to grip on the stud, I went to Sears
to have a gander at stud extractors. This was after the local part
stores had nothing to loan out and nothing that looked promising on
the shelf. I came across a sud extractor that you tap onto a stuck
stud. It has what looks like a small star pattern in it. You tap it
onto the stud and the points of the star cut right into the stud.
>From there it has a firm grip; something I wasn't getting with the
vice grips. I was able to put an impact socket with extension over
the top of that. From there I put the impact wrench in reverse, said
a small prayer that this wouldn't get any worse, and fired it up.
After several seconds of hitting on it it broke free. A few seconds
later it had screwed on out. I was so pumped that the impact wrench
came in handy again (just got it a few weeks ago to help in removing
the flywheel). A few minutes of cleaning up the area and screwing in
the new stud, and the muffler was assembled and the jeep was ready to
fire back up. Now my only problem is getting that stud out of my
extractor tool.... for some reason they did not include directions on
that : )
Thanks to everyone for the help. I think I bought my last can of
WD40.