Results 1 to 8 of 8

Thread: Help - Info required from the knowledgeable

  1. #1
    Join Date
    27th December 2005 - 10:43
    Bike
    2 black ones..black is alway's good
    Location
    Wellingtoon
    Posts
    2,423

    Help - Info required from the knowledgeable

    I took off the exhaust to do some work on the bike. 1 of the nuts holding the exhaust flanges to the block came off no bother. 2 others unscrewed the stud out of the block. Unfortunately, the last one snapped the stud which is still in the block. I have managed to get the stud out of the one that the nut came off but how can I get the last stud out.

    Luckly for me, it snapped at the nut end rather than the block. There is about 12mm protruding from the block and I have spayed it with CRC for a couple of days now. I don't want to snap the last stud in the block so am very wary of just putting grips on it and trying to unscew it.
    Is it safe to heat up the block around the stud prior to using the grips?

    Any help would be much appreciated.
    Last edited by Hawkeye; 18th June 2007 at 19:03. Reason: As OAB pointed out - CRC (not CFC)
    I'm only wearing black until they develop something darker




    We came, We listened, And in one voice we answered
    BULLSHIT!! BULLSHIT!! BULLSHIT!! BULLSHIT!! BULLSHIT!!

  2. #2
    Join Date
    25th October 2002 - 17:30
    Bike
    GSXR1000
    Location
    Christchurch
    Posts
    9,291
    Spraying it with CFC? Surely you mean CRC, they band CFC's a while back . If it's snapped off it's probably pretty stuck in there, buy an 'easy-out' to remove it.

  3. #3
    Join Date
    27th December 2005 - 10:43
    Bike
    2 black ones..black is alway's good
    Location
    Wellingtoon
    Posts
    2,423
    Quote Originally Posted by onearmedbandit View Post
    Spraying it with CFC? Surely you mean CRC, they band CFC's a while back . If it's snapped off it's probably pretty stuck in there, buy an 'easy-out' to remove it.
    Thanks for pointing that out OAB. I nearly put DW40 which is what I used in the UK.

    What is an 'easy-out'? I've never heard of them!
    I'm only wearing black until they develop something darker




    We came, We listened, And in one voice we answered
    BULLSHIT!! BULLSHIT!! BULLSHIT!! BULLSHIT!! BULLSHIT!!

  4. #4
    Join Date
    7th May 2006 - 00:35
    Bike
    07 Hayabusa
    Location
    Prague at the moment
    Posts
    299
    Blog Entries
    5
    you're going to need to drill the centre and use an "easy out" to get it out, and it's not all that easy sometimes...
    Has it ever bothered you that Therapist is The Rapist if you break the word in two? It bothers me, especially when they suggest hypnosis.

  5. #5
    Join Date
    25th October 2002 - 17:30
    Bike
    GSXR1000
    Location
    Christchurch
    Posts
    9,291
    It's a tool which after drilling a pilot hole in the stuck bolt you screw it into the bolt, then reverse it out.

    Here ya go. (pic of 'easy out' 2/3 down the page.)

  6. #6
    Join Date
    19th October 2005 - 20:32
    Bike
    M109R, GS1200ss, RMX450Z, ZX-12R
    Location
    Near a river
    Posts
    4,308
    Bolt the exhaust up again with the other studs, start the bike up run it till warm, spray CRC in around the broken stud then remove the exhaust again. The heat of running the engine will heat the stud from the cylinder head out and spraying CRC on it when it's hot will draw the CRC into the thread, then have a go with vice grips. Aluminium heats faster that steel so the cylinder head will expand more than the broken stud.

    If that doesn't work then weld a tang onto the broken stud and use that as a lever

    The stud is only heat fused into place and wont take much to get started, it's just the initial bite to get it moving that's the trouble

  7. #7
    Join Date
    13th September 2005 - 18:20
    Bike
    Crashed it.
    Location
    Auckland
    Posts
    2,043
    So the stud is broken off proud of the head, not flush with it?

    Use a stud remover. It's like a deep socket, but instead of having a hex in the end it has 3 rollers that operate like a sprag (one way) clutch and grip the stub because they're each in a spiral flute and as it turns they move inwards and grip the stud. It's what's used for installing the studs in the first place.

    I'll get a photo of one onto here for you tonight, when I get home. I'm sure you'll be able to borrow one locally (most decent mechanics have them) but if you get stuck let me know and I'll lend you mine & courier it down (work satchels are great, aren't they!)

    In the meantime keep saturating it in WD40 (CFC 5.56 is pretty useless).

    When you put it back together use some chrome antiseize (local bearing resellers stock it in small plastic tubs). It reduces galvanic corrosion between the stud and the head which is what causes it to get 'frozen' in the first place. I can go easily 3 years without removing the wheel nuts from my boat trailer using that stuff, and once I crack them loose they spin off easily by fingertips along the rest of the stud length.
    If it wasn't for a concise set of rules, we might have to resort to common sense!

  8. #8
    Join Date
    13th September 2005 - 18:20
    Bike
    Crashed it.
    Location
    Auckland
    Posts
    2,043
    Here they are.
    If it wasn't for a concise set of rules, we might have to resort to common sense!

Thread Information

Users Browsing this Thread

There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •