M
McBad
Guest
Rear box of my tdi 90's exhaust fell apart at the w/e. Bought a new section
today and prepared to remove the old...
Working from the back of the l/r I could see the rusted bolts through the
compressing rings holding the middle and rear sections together and thought
sod them; I'll just replace them. Thirty seconds with the angle grinder saw
them sorted and the old bit of exhaust on the ground. Then I discovered
they are studs, not bolts.
Now I've got a free floating circle of metal on the middle section of the
exhaust with the remains of two stud bolts very firmly jammed / welded /
whatever into it. For the time being I've wired the new rear section and
old mid-section together but that's not going to last more than a few days.
Why couldn't they just use bolts; I'm sure they were just bolts on my old
l/r...
Any suggestions for a remedial sort out? I suppose I should really remove
the mid-section, put it on a firm surface and drill out the studs... How
easy are they going to be to drill - any better method? I was wondering
about trapping the heads of two new bolts with a jubilee clip on the mid
section which would then let me tighten to the disc on the new rear section,
but I doubt this would be strong enough.
Does anyone have any advice. Worst case scenario would be to replace the
mid-pipe which will no doubt cost a further £70...
(
TIA,
M.
today and prepared to remove the old...
Working from the back of the l/r I could see the rusted bolts through the
compressing rings holding the middle and rear sections together and thought
sod them; I'll just replace them. Thirty seconds with the angle grinder saw
them sorted and the old bit of exhaust on the ground. Then I discovered
they are studs, not bolts.
Now I've got a free floating circle of metal on the middle section of the
exhaust with the remains of two stud bolts very firmly jammed / welded /
whatever into it. For the time being I've wired the new rear section and
old mid-section together but that's not going to last more than a few days.
Why couldn't they just use bolts; I'm sure they were just bolts on my old
l/r...
Any suggestions for a remedial sort out? I suppose I should really remove
the mid-section, put it on a firm surface and drill out the studs... How
easy are they going to be to drill - any better method? I was wondering
about trapping the heads of two new bolts with a jubilee clip on the mid
section which would then let me tighten to the disc on the new rear section,
but I doubt this would be strong enough.
Does anyone have any advice. Worst case scenario would be to replace the
mid-pipe which will no doubt cost a further £70...
TIA,
M.