Well, I am helping a friend replace his water pump in a 1980 115 V-4 crossflow.
The problem is that of the 7 bolts holding the lower unit on, 5 are stuck solid.
I know we are going to break them if we force them.
All four on the sides of the gearcase, and the 9/16 head bolt way up under the trim tab are the five that are stuck. The trim tab is off, and the one 5/8" bolt under the trim tab is out.
I have searched here, and find many many posts on removing broken bolts, but nothing on how to free up stuck bolts holding the L/U on, and avoid breaking them in the first place.
Using a torch, can I heat the heads up hot enough to have the heat penetrate at least 1.5 inches down the bolt and into the midsection to effectively free it up?
I don't see how to even get the torch in to the bolt up under the trim tab.
Should I heat the crap out of the heads, and then deliberately try to shear the heads off? When the lower is down, then I would have at least an inch of bolt sticking out to work with.
Or will simply heating the heads, allowing cooling, then a strong socket and breaker bar do the whole task?
Also, would a hand impact driver on the bolts help by transmitting the shock of a hammer blow, without shearing the heads of the bolts off?
Two of the bolts are not "gettable" with a socket due to cav plate interference.
Help please!!! Ideas welcome!!!
The problem is that of the 7 bolts holding the lower unit on, 5 are stuck solid.
I know we are going to break them if we force them.
All four on the sides of the gearcase, and the 9/16 head bolt way up under the trim tab are the five that are stuck. The trim tab is off, and the one 5/8" bolt under the trim tab is out.
I have searched here, and find many many posts on removing broken bolts, but nothing on how to free up stuck bolts holding the L/U on, and avoid breaking them in the first place.
Using a torch, can I heat the heads up hot enough to have the heat penetrate at least 1.5 inches down the bolt and into the midsection to effectively free it up?
I don't see how to even get the torch in to the bolt up under the trim tab.
Should I heat the crap out of the heads, and then deliberately try to shear the heads off? When the lower is down, then I would have at least an inch of bolt sticking out to work with.
Or will simply heating the heads, allowing cooling, then a strong socket and breaker bar do the whole task?
Also, would a hand impact driver on the bolts help by transmitting the shock of a hammer blow, without shearing the heads of the bolts off?
Two of the bolts are not "gettable" with a socket due to cav plate interference.
Help please!!! Ideas welcome!!!