Update time!
I decided to use a combination of several suggestions on here -- especially smoke's. I couldn't get anything in there to break the wings off easily and my mini bolt cutters are too wide when open so I used some channel locks and I bent the wings up and squished the body of the drain cock until a 9/16 would fit over it. I had to put an extension on it and "encourage" it just a little with a hammer to seat all the way but it was just mild taps. Once on I was able to remove the drain cock easily.
The drain cock is as smoke said. Tighten it in and it is open. Loosen it until it stops and you have closed it. It didn't matter, lol, as the clog wasn't in the drain cock... It was in the elbow and the engine block...
I removed the 90 degree fitting and it is litterally caked with what looks like dry, oiled dirt. In the engine block hole I could see the same thing. I started with a flat blade screwdriver to clean as much as I could from the opening and then moved on to a pick with a slightly angled tip. I managed to get most of the crud out of the hole about 5" back from the block until I hit an obvious bend. I then cut a piece of 12 gauge solid copper wire and removed the plastic insulation about 6" back and bent the tip slightly. I managed to get that wire into the block about 8" and the deeper I went the more moist the crud was. After 15 minutes of scraping, I got a trickle of coolant...
Last step, pressurized air with a rubber tip and bam. I hit a gusher. The block emptied and I managed to catch about 90%. I'm off to Napa to get a new drain cock and some more carb cleaner and I'll flush it now that I have almost all of the old, brown, toxic antifreeze out. Pictures for the enquiring minds.
I decided to use a combination of several suggestions on here -- especially smoke's. I couldn't get anything in there to break the wings off easily and my mini bolt cutters are too wide when open so I used some channel locks and I bent the wings up and squished the body of the drain cock until a 9/16 would fit over it. I had to put an extension on it and "encourage" it just a little with a hammer to seat all the way but it was just mild taps. Once on I was able to remove the drain cock easily.
The drain cock is as smoke said. Tighten it in and it is open. Loosen it until it stops and you have closed it. It didn't matter, lol, as the clog wasn't in the drain cock... It was in the elbow and the engine block...
I removed the 90 degree fitting and it is litterally caked with what looks like dry, oiled dirt. In the engine block hole I could see the same thing. I started with a flat blade screwdriver to clean as much as I could from the opening and then moved on to a pick with a slightly angled tip. I managed to get most of the crud out of the hole about 5" back from the block until I hit an obvious bend. I then cut a piece of 12 gauge solid copper wire and removed the plastic insulation about 6" back and bent the tip slightly. I managed to get that wire into the block about 8" and the deeper I went the more moist the crud was. After 15 minutes of scraping, I got a trickle of coolant...
Last step, pressurized air with a rubber tip and bam. I hit a gusher. The block emptied and I managed to catch about 90%. I'm off to Napa to get a new drain cock and some more carb cleaner and I'll flush it now that I have almost all of the old, brown, toxic antifreeze out. Pictures for the enquiring minds.
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