oldharry
Well-Known Member
[ QUOTE ]
Ibut once you've broken the joint there's nothing to stop it coming off.
[/ QUOTE ]
Oh the innocence of youth! - or whatever... Stuarts particularly had quite close tolerance between the studs and the head, and it takes very little to cause the studs to seize to the head casting. Then you have mega problems to which as Trouville has found there is no easy solution.
Trying to force the head up over the studs is not usally an option because of the likelihood of damage to the castings, so putting a stud removing tool on each one, and heating the head up as much as possible in the hopes it will expand off the stud enough to allow the stud to rotate may be a way forward - or may leave you in a worse mess when the studs break off.
If the head has lifted a couple of mills, then you might be able to get a saw blade in to cut the studs. Its then a matter of drilling the studs out of the removed head, which is starightforward, and extracting the ends from the block, which can again be - er - fun. It might be that not all the studs are seized, so always start with the ones that look worst.
A right bar steward of a job though....
Ibut once you've broken the joint there's nothing to stop it coming off.
[/ QUOTE ]
Oh the innocence of youth! - or whatever... Stuarts particularly had quite close tolerance between the studs and the head, and it takes very little to cause the studs to seize to the head casting. Then you have mega problems to which as Trouville has found there is no easy solution.
Trying to force the head up over the studs is not usally an option because of the likelihood of damage to the castings, so putting a stud removing tool on each one, and heating the head up as much as possible in the hopes it will expand off the stud enough to allow the stud to rotate may be a way forward - or may leave you in a worse mess when the studs break off.
If the head has lifted a couple of mills, then you might be able to get a saw blade in to cut the studs. Its then a matter of drilling the studs out of the removed head, which is starightforward, and extracting the ends from the block, which can again be - er - fun. It might be that not all the studs are seized, so always start with the ones that look worst.
A right bar steward of a job though....