um..
one other thing,
Remember the movie Fahrenheit 451? the fictional temperature at which
books self Ignite?
Well, your wood can be damaged by heat, but the locktite will release
possibly at a lower temperature than that which damages the wood.
Is it possible that 375 f wont hurt the wood bu
I have noticed bolts and nuts are most likely to seize if they are of the
same material, if corrosion is absent. Hence brass nuts on steel exhaust
studs won't seize.
Stainless on stainless seems to be the worst in my world, the two parts
commonly gall during assembly and seize upon a removal atte
Thanks all.
Mark Jones
Oldsmar, Fl
N771MJ “WunderBird”
www.flykr2s.com
flyk...@gmail.com
> On Jul 1, 2021, at 7:24 PM, Jeff Scott wrote:
>
> Heat. If it's through wood, then you are almost going to have to destroy
> the bolt rather than damage the wood. But if it is in steel or aluminu
Heat… yep that’s it. I’ll tell y’all the story at the campfire. Beer? Most
likely involved.
Mark Jones
Oldsmar, Fl
N771MJ “WunderBird”
www.flykr2s.com
flyk...@gmail.com
> On Jul 1, 2021, at 7:24 PM, Jeff Scott wrote:
>
> Heat. If it's through wood, then you are almost going to have to d
The best way to remove a bolt with loctite red is to heat it up.
Guy Maniscalco
From: mark jones
Sent: Thursday, July 1, 2021 4:07 PM
To: KRnet
Subject: KR>Bolt removal
I need to remove a bolt that is locked in place with high strength thread
lock. Yea don't ev
Mark….tried torching?
Bernie McLean
Sent from my iPhone
> On Jul 1, 2021, at 6:28 PM, Keith Wiese wrote:
>
> My first guess is use penetrate with the Impact 6 sided socket on low just
> enough to vibrate it, Use Fwd and Rev countless times and let it sit then do
> it again , and again, ect,,
My first guess is use penetrate with the Impact 6 sided socket on low
just enough to vibrate it, Use Fwd and Rev countless times and let it
sit then do it again , and again, ect,, Its the vibrations you want to
release the lock compound loose. After that, someone may have a
additional idea.
K
Heat. If it's through wood, then you are almost going to have to destroy the
bolt rather than damage the wood. But if it is in steel or aluminum, apply
heat with a torch.
-Jeff Scott
> Sent: Thursday, July 01, 2021 at 6:07 PM
> From: "mark jones"
> To: "KRnet"
> Subject: KR>Bolt removal
>
>
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