Spinning tricks...
|
What are the tricks you have used (effectively) to get a bolt to spin (for removal) when it just won’t budge. |
|
A squirt 'o water from a (French's, 12 oz) mustard bottle. I guess a Sriracha bottle would also work. |
|
Lube. Lots of lube. Gregger Man wrote:Out of curiosity, why do y'all use a bottle like that as opposed to a spray bottle? Is it just because that's what you had on hand or does it work better for some reason? I've seen people use a flexible bladder and a bottle with a squirt thing (like the old tall Gatorade bottles) but never seen anybody using a spray bottle, which is what I use because it works well for cooling down a drill bit. |
|
20”+ breaker bar... reef on that, somthing will give. So you know it may break the bolt first and in some instants you just have to put in a new hole. |
|
|
|
eli poss wrote: Lube. Lots of lube. I've used spray bottles in the past. They are more fragile and prone to leaking into my tool bag or not working after a while. A sturdy squeeze bottle is simpler. |
|
Well the water in a mustard bottle worked great! Perhaps the problem was this was not a wedgebolt. See below. I didn’t even end up spinning it or using the doodad. Once I got it to turn with a wrench on the spinning tool, I was able to pull it out by hand. Some odd non expansion bolt. Unfortunately, part of my spinner seems permanently attached to its mangled threads. |
|
dnoB ekiM wrote: Well the water in a mustard bottle worked great! Perhaps the problem was this was not a wedgebolt. See below. I didn’t even end up spinning it or using the doodad. Once I got it to turn with a wrench on the spinning tool, I was able to pull it out by hand. Some odd non expansion bolt. Unfortunately, part of my spinner seems permanently attached to its mangled threads. Nice! I ran into a few of those either this winter and did the same thing, tried to spin it. They're split shaft compression bolts. One of them that I pulled was placed in a patch of bad rock in our already kinda soft sandstone and it was scary how little it took to pull it with the hurley jr. It was a bolt that got replaced but never got pulled, in that somebody placed a 3rd bolt at the anchor and people just stopped using that one. |
|
eli poss wrote: Interesting...I guess I have always looked too quickly at pics of splitshafts. I thought they were a actually split. Well, glad these are not commonly used anymore. Especially in soft Red Rock stone. |
|
dnoB ekiM wrote: Unfortunately, part of my spinner seems permanently attached to its mangled threads. I’m having this same issue with getting threaded rods in an out of the bolt puller. I’ve tried using 2 sets of pliers but had no luck. What do you guys use? |
|
Jon Rhoderick wrote: I had this issue with the hurley jr. I was able to get 2 nuts on the threaded rod right next to each other and then wrench hard on the bottom nut while holding the coupler nut in place (with another wrench) until the threaded rod started moving. It totally stripped the threaded rod I was using, but it was only like a buck at the hardware store so I just got a new one. |
|
A vise helps. |
|
Split Shanks rock! |
|
dnoB ekiM wrote: Well the water in a mustard bottle worked great! Perhaps the problem was this was not a wedgebolt. See below. I didn’t even end up spinning it or using the doodad. Once I got it to turn with a wrench on the spinning tool, I was able to pull it out by hand. Some odd non expansion bolt. Unfortunately, part of my spinner seems permanently attached to its mangled threads. I ran into the same issue last year. I never could get them to spin (very hard quartzite) and finally as a last resort, I tried the puller. Ended up pulling fairly easily to my surprise. |
|
Russell Bangert wrote: youtube.com/watch?v=PLl59N-… Is there a video of something similar for a 5 piece Powers+ bolt removal? |
|
This shows removal of a rusty 1/2" Pwers 5-piece - skip the first ~30s |
|
dnoB ekiM wrote: What are the tricks you have used (effectively) to get a bolt to spin (for removal) when it just won’t budge. |
|
A good set of vise grips is standard in my kit. Will serve as extra wrench for jam nutting etc. |