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Stuck bolt!


richy_B
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I presume you've tried the obvious; turn the bolts clockwise to partcially tighten, before attempting to loosen.

 

Together with above but a good soak with penetrating oil first, leave and then quick blast with a bit more, before attempting the tighten & loosening.

 

Heat with decent blowtorch, then ratchet the thing off. If it goes all honey-shaped. You'll just have to drill and Helicoil.

Edited by TGB
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I presume you've tried the obvious; turn the bolts clockwise to partcially tighten, before attempting to loosen.

 

Together with above but a good soak with penetrating oil first, leave and then quick blast with a bit more, before attempting the tighten & loosening.

 

Heat with decent blowtorch, then ratchet the thing off. If it goes all honey-shaped. You'll just have to drill and Helicoil.

 

Just put a new drum on it

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You're sure it's not a left hand thread?

 

I am not familiar with the LM162 but many commercial vehicles have LH threads on the NS wheelnuts. Fooled me completely when (as a 17yo) I bought a twin wheel Transit!

 

If the nuts really are that tight you're going to need to replace the studs (at least) anyway so shearing them off really isn't such a problem. I'd go for a 3/4" or 1" drive socket and breaker bar and just go for it.

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I serviced Ifors for 5 yrs, it's not going to be a LH thread. Agree with those who have suggested hitting the bolt with a hammer, a shock works better than pen oil in this application. Same goes for when using a breaker bar, give it a good jerk. Also, heating up

the drum will not do your bearings one bit of good. Put the wheel bolts back in with a bit of copper grease on the thread to make your life easier when they next have to come off.

 

Sent from my D6503 using Arbtalk mobile app

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I serviced Ifors for 5 yrs, it's not going to be a LH thread. Agree with those who have suggested hitting the bolt with a hammer, a shock works better than pen oil in this application. Same goes for when using a breaker bar, give it a good jerk. Also, heating up

the drum will not do your bearings one bit of good. Put the wheel bolts back in with a bit of copper grease on the thread to make your life easier when they next have to come off.

Yep, I`m not suggesting a heating to the point of roasting the bearings, but a bit of heat applied quickly along with a whack usually works for me, but it`s the quick precise heating with the oxy that gets the two different bits moving and the separation lets the oil penetrate into the crack. In my work I couldn`t be without oxy-acetylene, cheers

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