Who has a good idea to get these studs out of the chassis?
drill them out, by far the easiest and very often if you enlarge the drill size by small steps then when you virtually only have thread left the remains of the bolt screw out with only slight damage to the remaining thread, only time it does not work so easy is in a blind hole, done it hundreds of times, Rick
I have a project to remove a screw that holds a Eurolock in a UPVC door, the screw is tight, and I have used screw extractors which look like a reverse countersink, and now I have a screw with a countersink :doh
The screw is M5 approx and 50mm long, so drilling that far will be a challenge.
ANY ideas guys?....:nenau
Best regards, Rustic
the screw goes through the metal lock mechanism then into the lock, it simply stops it sliding out, most that I have come across are brass so easy to drill, if you have a steel one it will still drill OK even if you make the hole through the mechanism larger in the process once you have drilled right through the lock barrel use the key and remove it, bin it, fit a new one, even if the screw is sloppy it will not affect the security of the lock as it cannot be withdrawn with the screw in place, hope that helps, Rick
drill them out, by far the easiest and very often if you enlarge the drill size by small steps then when you virtually only have thread left the remains of the bolt screw out with only slight damage to the remaining thread, only time it does not work so easy is in a blind hole, done it hundreds of times, Rick
Daved,
You are not the only one who is a bit thick. :lol Can you post a pic of the parallel extractor or a link (via PM) to where I can buy them?
Never heard of them and a search on the internet is not very fruitfull. Maybe I am just very thick.
So I have been looking for cobalt drills and you got two choices, either 5% (m35) cobalt or 8% (m42) cobalt. Reading various threads on the net the 8% cobalt drills are stronger (and more brittle) however what are you using?
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