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Just had a starter bolt break off. How hard is it to get the broken part out of the block? What size easy out do I need?
Thanks for any help.
Thanks for any help.
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Thanks that explained a lot.Broken Starter Bolt
So somehow during the process of reinstalling my starter today one of the starter bolts broke. It was already installed and was cranking the motor over and when I got out of the truck I saw a bolt laying on the floor, it sheared off inside the block. Two questions, what size bolt are these (they...www.steelsoldiers.com
Hum ok never would have thought the bolt would be loose enough for that to work. ThanksThe broken part of the bolt is loose. If you've got a hot glue gun or some super glue you could glue a dowel or rod to the end of the bolt and unthread it.
Haven't heard anyone talk about this. Would it be beneficial to put a lock washer on the new starter bolts?Hum ok never would have thought the bolt would be loose enough for that to work. Thanks
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Ok, I won't use any. Got bolt out with easy out. Putting brand new bolts in. Will be getting the bracket off my old M1009 and putting on my truck very soon.Yeah no lock wahers. The problem is the bolts are not very thick and the starter is very heavy. Just the way it is.
Mark
You only need the left hand bit if the bolt is in a through hole where the opposite side is unaccessible. The left hand bit prevents the bolt from being run through the hole and into that place you won't be able to get it out of.I've had good luck extracting broken bolts with lefthand drill bits.
.If a solution has a long history of success, why pretend it doesn't? If something is too expensive but isn't really expensive at all, why pivot into calling it extra? When people offer advice to others that are asking, why try to trample the advice when theres nothing to gain? If a bolt is broken and loose, its pretty common sense to simply unthread it. Since we are addressing a struck/broken bolt, my advce is quite relevant and affordable. I am not surprised at all to hear that OP removed the bolt by drilling it and using an easy out. It is even less of a surprise that hot glue wasn't considered or used. Anyone that has a decent amount of experience removing broken bolts has likely had an extractor break inside the drilled hole and therefore further complicated the extraction. Lefthand bits will often pull the broken piece right out without need for the extractor. If you can get the hole centered well, it is also possible to continue drilling with incrementally larger bits and the piece will free up. I have a drawer in one of my toolboxes that has lefthand bits, square and spiral extractors, taps, punches, etc. The hot glue gun is not in that toolbox. infact, it is not in the shop at all, it is inside the house with my wife and kid's craft project supplies.
While you may have missed the point in my diminishing the hot glue, you have demonstrated it perfectly..
I keep a few sticks of hot glue and a Bic in my toolbox.
Amazing how often some glue melted and stuck to a chunk of metal - or a broken bolt - will solve a problem.
I do but it's on another M1009 that's not running. I need to get it off there and put on new truck.Are you saying you don't have a rear bracket for the starter. That is a buttload of weight to be cantilevered out supported only by two starter bolts. Like I just read about the Space X test vehicle's explosion today.
Rapid unscheduled disassembly
What a great line that it.
Mark