California
Super Star Member
- Joined
- Jan 22, 2004
- Messages
- 14,946
- Location
- An hour north of San Francisco
- Tractor
- Yanmar YM240 Yanmar YM186D
Thanks @California. Question, do you recall how hard you had to turn when removing the broken stud? I'm putting a fair amount of force on the extractor and it's not budging the bolt
I do have a maintenance question. I ended up draining the Trans/Hydr fluid and I was pleasantly surprised that it and the filter/screen were in excellent shape. However, I did notice a bit of small metal shavings in the old fluid and on the screen.
I don't have any good advice on either issue, the extractor or the metal flakes. Maybe someone else will respond.
As I recall I was using about the same amount of force as you would apply tapping new threads and are getting in deep, when that little stud finally loosened. I suspect it had threadlocker from the factory. Use a tap-handle on the extractor so all the force applied is rotational. Turning the tap with a wrench loads sideways force, increasing the risk of breaking it.
I like dirttoys' advice to keep drilling with your left-hand bits until you are risking the threads. That should allow a larger and more durable extractor.
With water pipe I've then crushed the weakened remnant with a narrow chisel but I don't know if that's applicable here. That approach might shake it loose if its weakened. There's also heat/cold as a tool to break it free. Heat the metal around it then jam ice into your hole in the bolt. And heating might break a threadlocker bond. But I'm an amateur, maybe a real machinist has better ideas.
The metal in the UTF may just be from clumsy shifts, grinding the gears. Nothing you can do about it.
Does this hole go directly into the engine block, so you couldn't put a nut behind a new bolt?