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Far less hassle to just carefully drill out the broken bolt then clean up thread with a tap than take the the crossmember off.
I have to do this loads, they often rust up and break.
Start off with a small drill, make sure its centered best you can with a center punch first, then gradually use bigger drills till most of the bolt is gone, and then just clean out the thread with a tap.
4x4toys.co.uk - Keeping you on and off the road...
Far less hassle to just carefully drill out the broken bolt then clean up thread with a tap than take the the crossmember off.
I have to do this loads, they often rust up and break.
Start off with a small drill, make sure its centered best you can with a center punch first, then gradually use bigger drills till most of the bolt is gone, and then just clean out the thread with a tap.
I take it he needs the water running aswell then Tony...
Far less hassle to just carefully drill out the broken bolt then clean up thread with a tap than take the the crossmember off.
I have to do this loads, they often rust up and break.
Start off with a small drill, make sure its centered best you can with a center punch first, then gradually use bigger drills till most of the bolt is gone, and then just clean out the thread with a tap.
This is what I wish I'd done with my wingmirror... instead I used a stud extractor, that snapped. and it's no fun drilling through a hardened steal shaft in softer cast metal! Still not found a replacement!
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