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Alexander McCarthy


Platinum member
Platinum member
Hi all,

With the 1984 K100RS all done, I've taken the plunge and bought a 1986 K100RT (ex-police bike), which I'm slowly bringing back to life.

That said, I spent yesterday stripping the bike entirely (back to two wheels, driveline and frame at this point), and as part of this overhaul I'm naturally going to refresh all the fluids and replace wear items like fuel and oil filtres.

When trying to remove the cover for the oil filtre, I got two of the three screws out, but the last one has been stripped by the previous owner.

Any thoughts on the best way to remove this stubborn bugger?

Cheers, Alex.

P.S. I've already tried vice grips, lock grips, chisel and hammer etc.

http://www.alexmccarthy.com

Inge K.


Life time member
Life time member
Have you tried to add some heat? Aluminium expands more than steel.

Inge K.


Rick G


Life time member
Life time member
Use a 1/4 in drill and drill the head of then you will be able to get at the bolt to remove it.

Taking the sump of first will make the job east as you can do it on the bench. About 12 screws and it comes of without any hassle, no springs or balls. Yep just like the cover you are trying to get of.


_________________
If you give a man a fish you feed him for a day but teach him to fish and you feed him for life.
If you give a man a match to light a fire you keep him warm for a night but set him on fire and he will be warm for the rest of his life.
Bikes 1993 K1100 LT, 1993 K75 RT, 1979 Z1300 Kawasaki & 1976 SR 500 Yamaha for now

Avenger GT


Silver member
Silver member
Try hammering a larger Torx (star) socket into it. The splines of the socket cut into the bolt head and give a better grip than the hex key. I have shifted several bolts this way when I have found the Allen key starting to strip the top of the bolt.


5Back to top Go down    Sounds promising! on Sat Aug 27, 2011 9:40 pm

Alexander McCarthy


Platinum member
Platinum member
Avenger GT wrote:Try hammering a larger Torx (star) socket into it. The splines of the socket cut into the bolt head and give a better grip than the hex key. I have shifted several bolts this way when I have found the Allen key starting to strip the top of the bolt.


Big hammer. I like your thinking!

http://www.alexmccarthy.com

Rick G


Life time member
Life time member
Be careful about using too much force you may just need to get a bigger hammer


_________________
If you give a man a fish you feed him for a day but teach him to fish and you feed him for life.
If you give a man a match to light a fire you keep him warm for a night but set him on fire and he will be warm for the rest of his life.
Bikes 1993 K1100 LT, 1993 K75 RT, 1979 Z1300 Kawasaki & 1976 SR 500 Yamaha for now

7Back to top Go down    Taking it easy. on Sat Aug 27, 2011 10:15 pm

Alexander McCarthy


Platinum member
Platinum member
K Freak wrote:Be careful about using too much force you may just need to get a bigger hammer


I'll start off with a 2KG dead blow and work my way up to Thor's hammer.

http://www.alexmccarthy.com

Guest


Guest
A small selection of spiral Ezy-outs live in my toolbox. Drill a small hole in the centre of the stubborn bolt and screw the Ezy-out in with a socket, as it turns in its reverse threads bite in and (usually) back the bolt out. If they don't I get out the whiskey, chewing gum, blow torch and then the bazooka, but not necessarily in that order.


charlie99


Life time member
Life time member
sounds like you've got to the drill stage alex ..im guessing just the head is the problem



but i like the sound of undoing the oil pan first ...the best .....



good luck mate


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cheezy grin whilst riding, kinda bloke ....oh the joy !!!!

'86 K 100 RT..#0090401 ..."Gerty" ( Gertrude Von Clickandshift )

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