--
*Acupuncture is a jab well done*
Dave Plowman da...@davenoise.co.uk London SW
To e-mail, change noise into sound.
>I've got a couple of very small self tappers which have broken off flush
>with a blind housing made of thin mild steel - car bodywork. Due to being
>rusted in place. What's the best way to remove them with minimum damage to
>the bodywork?
Angle grinder.
--
Frank Erskine
> I've got a couple of very small self tappers which have broken off flush
> with a blind housing made of thin mild steel - car bodywork. Due to
> being rusted in place. What's the best way to remove them with minimum
> damage to the bodywork?
Carefully. <ouch>
Squirt with PlusGas and leave for a day, or a spot of diesel if you
have no PlusGas. Then I'd try the one of the JML Screw Removers that
Homebase are (were?) selling for £4.99/set. But being self tappers
they might be too hard for the remover to cut into to get a grip.
--
Cheers
Dave.
> Angle grinder.
You could at least have modified it for small and made it a Dremel?
--
*A woman drove me to drink and I didn't have the decency to thank her
I raise you "thermite"
:)
--
Tim Watts
This space intentionally left blank...
> I've got a couple of very small self tappers which have broken off flush
> with a blind housing made of thin mild steel - car bodywork. Due to being
> rusted in place. What's the best way to remove them with minimum damage to
> the bodywork?
>
How small?
Axminster do 3mm tungsten burrs which I used when I broke a drill inside a
stud I was trying to drill out.
AJH
Not nice or easy which ever way you choose.
Bob
Cobalt drill bit
NT
Angle grinder, make them flat & flush, leave the wreckage in place.
Ideally move the new fastener location sideways to dodge the mess.
To do this, you will need two things.
An extreamly hard drill and some means of stopping the twist drill from
going off the centre of the self tapper and through the softer metal
around it.
The twist drill could have to be a solid tungsten carbide one (or
possibly a C 1150 or D 200, but I have hit a brick wall in finding a
source of them. They are considerably harder than a cobalt drill.) and
the only way you can prevent it taking the easy way through the softer
body metal is to use a hardened bush that can be clamped onto the body
metal, to guide it through the screw. Unless you are very adept at
making the drill stay on course.
An alternative, but maybe expensive way, would be to find someone who
can electrically erode it, by spark erosion.
Good luck. If it was a local job, I would get out my hard drills and do
it for you.
Dave
> To do this, you will need two things.
> An extreamly hard drill and some means of stopping the twist drill from
> going off the centre of the self tapper and through the softer metal
> around it.
> The twist drill could have to be a solid tungsten carbide one (or
> possibly a C 1150 or D 200, but I have hit a brick wall in finding a
> source of them. They are considerably harder than a cobalt drill.) and
> the only way you can prevent it taking the easy way through the softer
> body metal is to use a hardened bush that can be clamped onto the body
> metal, to guide it through the screw. Unless you are very adept at
> making the drill stay on course.
I do have tungsten carbide drills I use for drilling PCBs. But not sure
I'd risk them on this - even if I could rig things up to use the PCB drill
press.
> An alternative, but maybe expensive way, would be to find someone who
> can electrically erode it, by spark erosion.
> Good luck. If it was a local job, I would get out my hard drills and do
> it for you.
Thanks for the offer. ;-)
> Dave
--
*Strip mining prevents forest fires.
Why do you need to remove them at all? Are there no other fixing points?
The 'if there are four screws two will do' syndrome? ;-)
Suppose they could be repositioned - but not until I'm certain they can't
be removed.
--
*Snowmen fall from Heaven unassembled*
Personally I'd _angle grind_ (TM) flat and drill 'next door'
Or use CARBODYFILLER (TM)
Do I get extra points?
You might be able to drill them and replace... failing that:
1) Completely drill the entire area and weld in new metal with appropriate
hole (pain in the backside, but perhaps appropriate if restoring something
"properly")
2) Move the fixing points as mentioned (cheap and cheerful, hopefully
do-able in such a way that someone in the future could still do point one
above if they wanted)
cheers
Jules
Have you ever tried drilling a self tapper?
--
*(on a baby-size shirt) "Party -- my crib -- two a.m
Snag is they are the fixing for a rubber seal - clamped between the body
and a steel section. It's already a rust trap so I'd rather not have any
extra holes.
--
*Half the people in the world are below average.
Going back to your comments about having tungsten carbide drills for
PCB's, could you get a pilot hole in the screws and open it up with the
right sized cobalt bit, freshly ground, of course?
My thinking is, that if you have one of those 12 V and tiny hand drills,
it would be ideal to control where the twist drill can wander. Just
angle the drill slightly, at 90 degrees to the direction of error, until
the tip is pointing down the centre of the screw and bring it upright again.
That didn't look right. If the twist drill is wandering to the left, you
angle it to the left, until the drill cuts back to the middle of the screw.
Dave
Can't you just chip away at the rust until it falls out of its own
accord ?
--
geoff
Luckily the bit the screws go into is in pretty good nick. And I want to
keep it that way.
--
*There are 3 kinds of people: those who can count & those who can't.
> Going back to your comments about having tungsten carbide drills for
> PCB's, could you get a pilot hole in the screws and open it up with the
> right sized cobalt bit, freshly ground, of course?
I've probably got the right size tungsten carbide. Bought a load off a
workshop that closed down - including the ancient but very good PCB drill
press.
> My thinking is, that if you have one of those 12 V and tiny hand drills,
> it would be ideal to control where the twist drill can wander. Just
> angle the drill slightly, at 90 degrees to the direction of error, until
> the tip is pointing down the centre of the screw and bring it upright
> again.
I'd say there's a very real chance of breaking a small tungsten carbide
used hand held.
> That didn't look right. If the twist drill is wandering to the left, you
> angle it to the left, until the drill cuts back to the middle of the
> screw.
I could cut a cross with a Dremel to provide the centre?
--
*Virtual reality is its own reward *
> I could cut a cross with a Dremel to provide the centre?
If you can do that why not just cut a slot and use a parallel sided
(not wedge shaped) straight screwdriver after the soak with
PlusGas/Diesel? Gentle use of a powered impact driver might be better
than a hand held tool. How much pressure can you apply to stop any
driver turning out without distorting the bit you want to keep?
--
Cheers
Dave.
> If you can do that why not just cut a slot and use a parallel sided
> (not wedge shaped) straight screwdriver after the soak with
> PlusGas/Diesel? Gentle use of a powered impact driver might be better
> than a hand held tool. How much pressure can you apply to stop any
> driver turning out without distorting the bit you want to keep?
That's how I broke them off flush in the first place. ;-)
--
*If you try to fail and succeed, which have you done? *
Only if it is used in a pistol grip power drill. I also make PCB's but I
use HSS steel drill bits in a 12 Volt mini drill. (I have no problem
with regrinding them at this diam.). It has a body of about 35mm diam,
that contains the DC motor, with a very small chuck at the end. It is
very difficult to put any side force on it, unlike a pistol grip drill.
Just let the bit do the cutting without using too much force to make the
bit cut. The only problem you might encounter, is if you you do break
the bit and part of it stays in the screw, you might be stuffed at
getting the broken part out.
>> That didn't look right. If the twist drill is wandering to the left, you
>> angle it to the left, until the drill cuts back to the middle of the
>> screw.
>
> I could cut a cross with a Dremel to provide the centre?
That could shatter the bit, due to the cutting edge ramping up and down
over the cut cross. I wouldn't tackle it that way.
As an aside, many years ago, I had a series of Austin Minis and they
were notorious for the brake adjusters to seize up. One was so bad I
used an easy out to try and get it to move. Needless to say, the easy
out snapped. The tungsten carbide drill I had, drilled it as if it was
butter. After that, it was out with the blow torch and use heat to
release it. That never failed. :-)
Some years ago, I bought some tungsten rotary files, one was a ball
cutter, only about 3mm in diam. Something like that would be far better
to give you a centre.
Thinking about that, why not find what used to be a Fred Aldous shop and
see if they are still available? Our local one was closed down some
years ago and it was the only place I had ever seen them. They used to
be based in Manchester.
Good luck
Dave
>> If you can do that why not just cut a slot and use a parallel
sided
>> (not wedge shaped) straight screwdriver after the soak with
>> PlusGas/Diesel? Gentle use of a powered impact driver might be
better
>> than a hand held tool. How much pressure can you apply to stop any
>> driver turning out without distorting the bit you want to keep?
>
> That's how I broke them off flush in the first place. ;-)
Ah.
How thick is the surrounding sheet? Could you punch the remnant
through?
--
Cheers
Dave.
> Only if it is used in a pistol grip power drill. I also make PCB's but I
> use HSS steel drill bits in a 12 Volt mini drill. (I have no problem
> with regrinding them at this diam.). It has a body of about 35mm diam,
> that contains the DC motor, with a very small chuck at the end.
Well yes. I have a similar one. And if drilling the odd PCB hole with that
I too use HSS drills. Because the tungsten carbide ones break too easily.
So I only use them in the drill press.
--
*A snooze button is a poor substitute for no alarm clock at all *
> Ah.
I'm wary about using force in case I damage the panel. Think I'll have a
go with a small pointed grindstone to give a centre for a tungsten carbide
drill.
--
*A backward poet writes inverse.*
I had a similar experience with the door handle screws on a Golf. In the end
there was a combination of plus gas, time, cutting slots with a dremel and a
drill. I think the slots and plus gas eventually did it. I find using a
torque limited cheap electric screwdriver useful for these sorts of things -
set them to a low torque setting and high speed and you get a very light
impact driver effect that tends to get things moving. Drilling was something
of a waste of time - the screw must have been made of something tough as it
blunted drills like crazy. The heat may have helped a little though -
couldn't use a blowtorch due to the still attached plastic handle.
The problem of drilling something hard is down to the very tip of the
drill, the chisel point. If this is not hard enough to create a hole
then all effort is wasted. Once you get a hole in the metal, known as a
pilot hole, you might find that standard HSS drills will be OK to open
it up. Obviously the twist drill must be freshly sharpened and run at a
slow speed.
Dave