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Forums › The Car › 206 Problems › Stripped bolt on the rear axle and drum to disc conversion |
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Posted: Sun Jun 01, 2014 3:01 pm |
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Joined: Mar 19, 2014 Posts: 17
Trade Rating: 0
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A little while ago I noticed that my cars ride height was a bit lop sided (About 1/2" lower on the drivers side), after doing some research I seem to be looking at a buggered up lowering job. So I thought, screw it, lets see if I can do a better job. I found and followed Ape's lowering guide, although I didn't get far. Drivers side the first bolt came off fine, move over to the passengers side, some b*****d stripped the damn bolt, no chance of any grip at all.
I've talked to a few garages and all of them have shunned me making a gagging noise when I tell them it's a Peugeot :/ even though I just need a bolt taken out.
So I was wondering what the best way to get this bolt out is. I don't need to replace the bolt because I want to convert the drums to discs which I've been recommended to replace the whole axle(?) so the torsion bar gets upgraded to a GTI one as well.
If anyone could give me some guidance to both getting the bolt out and doing the conversion that would be extremely helpful and I would be eternally grateful!
Thanks
~Rational
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Posted: Sun Jun 01, 2014 3:57 pm |
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Joined: Aug 22, 2013 Posts: 87
Trade Rating: 0
Location: Morecambe
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Should be an easy job for a garage, I think they are just being lazy.
There are a number of methods I use:-
1> Use a flat bladed screwdriver and hammer it into the bolt so it creates a slot and you can turn it, the hammer effect sometimes frees the bolt.
2> Use a hacksaw / grinder to cut a slot so you can use a screwdriver on it.
3> Hack / Grind it off if possible
4> Weld a 2nd nut onto it
5> Drill it out, go up in drill sizes starting with the smallest 1st
Hope 1 of the above methods work.
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Posted: Sun Jun 01, 2014 4:22 pm |
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Joined: Mar 19, 2014 Posts: 17
Trade Rating: 0
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Thanks for the info! I also thought it would be easy for a garage, but oh well I guess I'll just do it myself if I need to, but after having a look it seems that if I did the disc brake conversion and replaced the rear axle I won't need to get that bolt out. I might be very, very wrong though...
But thanks again for the advice!
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Posted: Mon Jun 02, 2014 1:25 am |
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Joined: Feb 08, 2010 Posts: 7045
Trade Rating: +5
Location: In the garage
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I hit mine with a sharp wood working chisel. It cut into the head nicely and turned the bolt. Mine weren't the originals though.
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| 2001 GTi 138, Bilstein Sprint dampers, H&R springs, 21mm Peugeot Sport torsion bars, 22mm rear ARB, Peugeot Sport Group A wishbones, 283mm discs, Goodridge stainless hoses, Maniflow 304 grade 4-2-1 2.5" manifold and system, 200 cell cat, Richard Longman head, 45mm Jenvey throttle bodies, 9.5mm TB spacers, 90mm air horns, Jenvey throttle linkage, Jenvey fuel rail, Aeromotive and Goodridge fuel fittings and braided hose, ITG sausage filter, Radtec custom radiator, Piper Ultimate Road cams, Piper vernier pulleys, Omex 600 ECU. Saxo electric PAS pump, Vibra Technics engine mounts. Samco coolant hoses, TTV steel flywheel, 4.76 final drive ratio, 307 CC 180 ratios. 2019 BMW 530i. 2017 Mercedes C300 convertible. | |
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