drill a small hole in the centre of the bolt, (doesnt have to be extremely deep)
hit a allen key bit into the hole you made, then use mole grips to twist the allen key until the bolt is out...
you may have to re-thread the hole if it has cross threaded, use a tap and dye set for this
hope this helps fella
Was that taking it off, or putting it back in.?
Thank you for the reply guys!
Ive just been on the phone to a mate who have a spare 182 rear hub so I think I'm just going to swap them over, might be easier.
that's not the hub, that's the caliper
that's not the hub, that's the caliper
Shouldn't be that tight really, unlucky.
If it's that tight, I doubt banging a allen key in a hole will do the job, but worth a try I guess.
Looks like a thin bead of weld round it ? maybe get the one off your mate
Looks like a thin bead of weld round it ? maybe get the one off your mate
Sometimes you got to tighten to loosen . cleans the thread as it goes just for future reference.
I would get some easy outs as Danny has said try your local places like Screwfix, Toolstation, Halfords etc so you get them tomorrow.
impact guns are so much safer for removing bolts, hanging off a bar puts a nasty constant stretching force on. Always try and use a jerking motion to crack off tight nuts and bolts. Being a steel bolt into aluminium really doesn't give you a good chance from the start. Bi-metallic corrosion is so hard to solve
Doesnt have to be an allen key, have you got an old torx bit or old screwdriver bit you can knock into the hole ?
Or if you can add a bit of heat but be carefull not to boil the brake fluid though
I'd just keep upping the drill size till the outer walls of the bolt were thin enough that you can push them inwards with a screwdriver.
Keep it perfectly straight to preserve the threads though.
I would still drill it out as much as possible, so you can use the biggest extractor.
That's my plan, just got in from work so going to get crackin!