heybusdriver
Member
Today I was removing head studs from my head , unfortunately 1 broke off at head , see picture, I am hoping to get advice from TOH or Zane or some-one that has had this expience.
(quoted from post at 19:24:04 02/07/13) Today I was removing head studs from my head , unfortunately 1 broke off at head , see picture, I am hoping to get advice from TOH or Zane or some-one that has had this expience.
(quoted from post at 04:50:05 02/08/13)(quoted from post at 19:24:04 02/07/13) Today I was removing head studs from my head , unfortunately 1 broke off at head , see picture, I am hoping to get advice from TOH or Zane or some-one that has had this expience.
IMO they typically wring off because the threads that protrude into the water jacket get a thick layer of rust and scale on them. That crud causes the threads to bind up when you try to unscrew the stud and cranking up on the stud simply exceeds it's tensile strength and "pop". I have found that working the stud back and forth cleans the crud off and helps prevent binding but it can be tedious - 1/4 turn out, 1/4 turn in, repeat ad nauesem trying to get it to turn "just a little further" out on each iteration. Resist the temptation to force it or you will get to the "pop" stage ;-)
OK - so you already popped it. If the threads are coated in rust and jammed up - and that is almost surely the case - the welded nut won't get you anywhere. Time to drill baby drill!! Ideally you would like to grind (or mill if you could) the top of the fracture off flat - at least in the center where you will be starting the drill. Then get yourself a #3 machinists center drill/countersink - cost you about $5 - and use it to put in a pilot hole in the center That will help prevent your twist drill bit from wandering. You don't need to drill a full depth countersink - a slight flare is enough - but get as close to center as possible. Once you have the pilot hole in drill out it in a couple steps until you get close to the threads in the block. From there pick the remnants out. Good luck!!
TOH
PS> If you have ANY doubts about your abilty to do it without screwing up teh block take it to a machine shop. They charge less toremove broken bolts than they do to repair the damage from a botched attempt at removing one.
WHUT HE SAID,,, center it (the most important step) and use sharp bits...
BTW I do not price these jobs I tell'em it can go real good are real fudgen bad,,, normally it goes real fudgen bad when they fudge with it before they haul it to me... A man that knows what he is doing can have it ready for service in 20 min. are about,,, I would not hesitate to drill baby drill...
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