Home > Td5 > Exhaust manifold and stud query |
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blackwolf Member Since: 03 Nov 2009 Location: South West England Posts: 17316 |
Dewebbing the manifold means it is less likely to break studs in the future since the manifold becomes a little more flexible.
As far as the studs are concerned, if you can get the broken bit out of the head you can go with standard size, and usually they come out ok. If you're really lucky there'll be enough sticking out to get hold of, if not drill it out very carefully with a left-hand cutting drill. If the hole is damaged you have little choice but to Helicoil or Timesert the hole for standard or go oversized. |
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11th May 2024 4:45pm |
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NineCherries Member Since: 10 Aug 2019 Location: Falkirk Posts: 47 |
Thanks đđ»
I presume de-webb before it gets machined, yeah? |
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11th May 2024 5:53pm |
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landy andy Member Since: 15 Feb 2009 Location: Ware, Herts Posts: 5648 |
Deweb and if youâve got a broken stud, wind it into the head, then clean/recut thread, then try to extract. A warped head is unlikely to warp again. Especially if dewebbed Done a good few of them. Only use good quality studs to fit such a Wurth items and if you need drill head and go with a size bigger stud.
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11th May 2024 6:39pm |
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MadTom Member Since: 10 Sep 2013 Location: Olomouc Posts: 615 |
Last time I let the manifold to heat threatement to release any internall tension, because it warped second time after 12 years of hard use (heavy car, outer temperatures like 45 °C and high altitude like over 2000m asl.) during our summer trips. It was warped without broken studs, but it was leaking. Heat threating was like - make it red hot in oven and let it cool really slow, like days long. And than resurface. "Drobek" = The Small One - Discovery 2, "BlufĂnek" = The Blue Thing - Defender 130, and for me at least Ford Mondeo
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12th May 2024 4:41am |
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Jabberwocky Member Since: 27 Oct 2021 Location: Luxembourg Posts: 221 |
Be aware if you drill the stud not to go too far as you can breach the water jacket and cause a leak, my manifold was skimmed as part of a repair fixing a âleakingâ ( coolant not gases) stud, the webbing was left as is.
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13th May 2024 1:42pm |
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NineCherries Member Since: 10 Aug 2019 Location: Falkirk Posts: 47 |
thanks for your opinions.
local engineering place is going to machine it flat again for me with a quick turnaround. I'll get the left hand drill bits, gaskets studs etc organised then pick a day and get it removed and sorted. thanks folks. T |
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14th May 2024 7:20am |
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