Joined: Nov 2017 Posts: 10 Threads: 3
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hi all
going to dry drilling pilot hole today, thank you for the pdf, will come in usefull, yes the stud was a old rusted one, but i probably should i realised i was exerting a little to much force. will keep you updated, but thankyou for your help what ever the outcome
Joined: Aug 2017 Posts: 641 Threads: 29
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If put the head on as a guide spot the end of the stud with the largest drill that will go down the hole.This will give you a centre.then drill down through with say a 5 mm drill ,if you have a helper get them to "eye up" that you a still drilling square.
Check that the drilling you have made looks central,if so ,with or without the head on drill out to 6.8mm.
If the hole is true you should have reduced the stud to a spiral down the hole.
With a plug tap try to pick up the existing thread,this is where it gets tricky,sometimes I've used a tiny chisel to pick up the start.You have to be really careful,bit at a time.
If all else fails providing you don't break the tap in it,you can helicoil it back to size
Joined: Aug 2017 Posts: 989 Threads: 6
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Location: Scottish Borders
When removing rusted head studs I try to shock them to free them up. I do this by dropping the head onto the engine and then hammering the stud as if it were a nail. I put the head in place to help avoid bending the stud.
Shocking studs this way often loosens them.
Jim
Joined: Aug 2017 Posts: 143 Threads: 30
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Location: New Forest
Car type: 27 Chummy
Hello Ollie
Whereabouts are you. Do you know of anyone with a TIG welder.
Welding a nut to the broken stud, or if it has sheared off flush, build up the stud with weld and then add a nut.
This method has never failed to get the stud out. Welding causes the stud to shrink and loosen itself.
Adrian.
Joined: Nov 2017 Posts: 4 Threads: 1
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There is a tool called a stud extractor you could use, bit like a tapered left handed tap, drill a hole in the centre of the broken stud, put point of the extractor in the hole and turn anti-clockwise. The extractor will bite into the stud and wind it out. I did lots of these when I as an engineer. Cheers. Burky
Joined: Aug 2017 Posts: 2,748 Threads: 31
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Location: Auckland, NZ
Someone on the old website commented that the so called Easy Out was the most inappropriately named tool ever and I fully agree. Primarily intended for bolts or studs broken by tension not torsion and not tight in the bore. A broken hard steel Easy Out hugely compounds problems and best avoided.