


Seems like easy-outs are the way to go, but I'm worried I'll stuff it up (never used them before).
Anyone got any advice?

Crash bandicoot wrote:hold an m10 nut over it and fill the center with weld using a mig and a high heat it will help to expand the bolt. as it cools and contracts put a socket on the nut and undo., the weld wont stick to aluminium. but doesn't mean it wont melt it also so be careful.
slide wrote:Probably a big consideration re removal is to why bolt snapped.
If it got bound real tight in thread, then drill and tap is probably your only option...
Drilling hole through broken bolt/ stud can help to relieve tension and help make removal possible.
Heat will help heaps to due to alloys greater expansion than the steel stud.
Try easyout with caution- snapping one will leave you without a paddle up that creek....
I've never seen a broken stud that lefthand drills will remove that an easyout won't....
Sometimes winding stud in further, then oversize drilling or retapping initial thread section can get rid of damaged section allowing stud to wind out.
But depend on what tools you've got, and why it broke/how tight it is...
Cheers,
Nath
Tarmac wrote:Also I havnt seen left hand drills, let alone used them but going by my exp I believe they wld be worth a try. Where did you get your LH drill bits to compare to eazyouts
pjb wrote:Not sure on the history of this bolt. Was replacing the trans mount, and discovered the bracket that bolts to the trans housing had one bolt missing completely, and the remaining one partially undone and seized! Took surprisingly little effort to break it off, so I'm guessing it had probably received quite a bit of damage from the bracket knocking around on it.
pjb wrote: so I've drilled out the stud ready for a #4 extractor. At least now I can get penetrating oil to both ends of the thread.
pjb wrote: my torch is too feeble to get the stud anywhere near glowing - the housing gobbles up all the heat.
Clinton wrote:A wild snapped stud appears:
Clinton uses 'Weld-a-nut' attack.
It's super effective:
pjb wrote:Well, I've torqued an extractor as much as I dare - no movement. Not really surprised. Looks like the bolt might have bent inside the aluminium boss - the surface of the boss is slightly deformed.
Next up: drill out to the threads, finish with a dremel, then tap threads.