Broken bolt extraction help.

Broken bolt extraction help.

Author
Discussion

pesty

Original Poster:

42,655 posts

256 months

Tuesday 24th February 2004
quotequote all

Hello,

A crash protector snaped off my motorbike(basicaly a big bolt)

Now the probelm is some absolute muppet tried to get it out by drilling a hole in the remaining stud and using a stud extractor/easy out.

Thing is all was going well until said muppet was distracted by an amzing amount of someone elses stupidity whilst doing said job.

And the extractor snaped I cant drill into that as its hard as nails

Any ideas?

boosted ls1

21,187 posts

260 months

Tuesday 24th February 2004
quotequote all
Well the bolt shouldn't be under tension any more. I'd see if I could soak in some WD40. Then I would try to tap it with a centre punch until I could grip it or use a chisel.

pesty

Original Poster:

42,655 posts

256 months

Tuesday 24th February 2004
quotequote all
Thats what I thought But it is stuck Thats why the easy out snapped.

Was merrily turning away thinking the bolt was coming out while talking to someone else (which I normaly wouldnt do but they got me mad ) and the easy out snapped.

Also I cant get at it to tap it round with a punch etc. as its recest inside the frame

Basicaly Its F****D and I'm severly annoyed at my own stupiduty. Removed load of things like this at work and when I do it on my own bike I F**K it up

deltaf

6,806 posts

253 months

Tuesday 24th February 2004
quotequote all
Spark erosion perhaps?

greenv8s

30,198 posts

284 months

Tuesday 24th February 2004
quotequote all
deltaf said:
Spark erosion perhaps?


or glue it back on and sell the thing before anybody notices!

boosted ls1

21,187 posts

260 months

Tuesday 24th February 2004
quotequote all
Sure it's not a left hand thread?

Roy_S2

654 posts

276 months

Tuesday 24th February 2004
quotequote all
Get a T-bar type thing welded to the bit thats broken off in the stud. Hopefully that will enable you to turn it and get it out.

Roy.

pesty

Original Poster:

42,655 posts

256 months

Tuesday 24th February 2004
quotequote all
good idea roy That is probably the only way its gonna come out.

thanks

Anyone know any welders

grahambell

2,718 posts

275 months

Tuesday 24th February 2004
quotequote all
Like Deltaf says, spark erosion is probably your best bet if you can find a local firm to do it.

Alternatively, something that worked for me in a similar situation was to use a small cylindrical grinding wheel end on and gradually grind the broken bolt and extractor away.

As this also got rid of the thread (M8) I then drilled the hole oversize, tapped it M10 or M12, screwed and Loctited a bolt in, cut and ground it flush and then drilled and tapped it M8.

wedg1e

26,803 posts

265 months

Wednesday 25th February 2004
quotequote all
You need a broken-easyout-extractor...

PIERSY

143 posts

246 months

Wednesday 25th February 2004
quotequote all
Similar thing happened to a cylinder head bolt years ago. Drilled it out with a very hard 'cobalt' tipped drill and retapped it oversize. Best of luck mate

trevorpj

1 posts

240 months

Saturday 3rd April 2004
quotequote all
Here's a method similar to Roys. Lay a nut over the sheared stud and weld through the center of the nut, welding the nut to the bolt. Not only have you a nut to swing on but the heat from the welding should help loosen up the threads.

deltaf

6,806 posts

253 months

Saturday 3rd April 2004
quotequote all
Except that you cant weld to an easyout as theyre just too brittle.

Big Al.

68,863 posts

258 months

Saturday 3rd April 2004
quotequote all
For what it's worth, the easyout is a piece of hardend tool steel! If you heat it up and let it cool down slowly you will be able to drill into it.

nel

4,765 posts

241 months

Thursday 8th April 2004
quotequote all
Nothing like a bit of diesel for soaking in and getting things moving again. I'll grant you that WD40 penetrates faster, but diesel has much greater lubricity ooer missus.

Let the diesel soak in, then use a punch and hammer it round. If that fails then you could apply heat, but then you probably don't want to torch your frame .

Failing that it HAS to be drilled and with the sh*gged easyout you'll have to get a pillar drill onto it preferably. Can you put said bike up on a workbench?

Best of luck

Nel