Undoing seized nuts and bolts
Posted: Tue Apr 27, 2021 10:06 pm
Undoing seized bolts on a restoration can be a challenge, but there are a number of ways to do it.
WD40 for a few hours and trying to turn with a decent spanner is the best way.
If that doesn't work, heating the body of the unit with a blow torch to allow the metal around the bolt to expand is always worth a try - tapping the body of the unit with a hammer as you turn the bolt can also help loosen any corrosion - it is also worth doing half a turn, turning back the other way and going forward and reverse a few times slowly and steadily which helps.
If the head snaps off, you have a number of options - there's drilling out and re-tapping, but another way is to weld a nut on to the end of a snapped thread effectively making a new bolt head. I decided to try this first in this particular case pictured, which has to be about the most stubborn bolt I've ever come across. It came out in the end. It was embedded in cast aluminium.
Just in case these techniques are of any use to anyone. There's always a way.
WD40 for a few hours and trying to turn with a decent spanner is the best way.
If that doesn't work, heating the body of the unit with a blow torch to allow the metal around the bolt to expand is always worth a try - tapping the body of the unit with a hammer as you turn the bolt can also help loosen any corrosion - it is also worth doing half a turn, turning back the other way and going forward and reverse a few times slowly and steadily which helps.
If the head snaps off, you have a number of options - there's drilling out and re-tapping, but another way is to weld a nut on to the end of a snapped thread effectively making a new bolt head. I decided to try this first in this particular case pictured, which has to be about the most stubborn bolt I've ever come across. It came out in the end. It was embedded in cast aluminium.
Just in case these techniques are of any use to anyone. There's always a way.