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Stuburn Differential Drain Plug My lower plug is stipped out. (3/8" ratchet turns inside the plug).
Looking for suggestions to remove it. I tried gripping it with a pipe wrench but not enough of the plug is exposed to grab securely. 1. Welding a bolt on seems like the easiest fix but I don't have a 220 welder and believe my weld will not hold. 2. Drilling out - but concern for shavings in the rears. |
Re: Stuburn Differential Drain Plug Take a chisel and make it a good fit from corner, to corner, and tap it in to wedge it in, and if you use a square one, then take a wrench, or pipe wrench and turn it.
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Re: Stuburn Differential Drain Plug I have a piece of square tool steel about 6" long which I ground down to a taper (BOY does that take some time!) This I hammer in place and then turn.
Sort of a home-made "easy-out" (Easy Outs are designed to keep repair machinists in business I think.) Joe K |
Re: Stuburn Differential Drain Plug Weld a nut on it .
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Re: Stuburn Differential Drain Plug Use the correct tool. 3/8" is too loose. I found a dogbone type drain plug wrech at a swap meet, and it has several sizes of squares to stick into the drain plug holes. I would grind down a square piece of 1/2" steel until it fit nice and tight, then put a 12" adjustable wrench on that to remove it. If you're lucky you might find the head on a square headed bolt with the right size to fit in the plug, then you can grip the threaded part with a vice grip. Over the years I've found many plugs that have been tightened much more than they need to be.
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Re: Stuburn Differential Drain Plug i have a socket set for square plugs, all different sizes. 3/8 drive is a loose fit and will wear out the plug
Some of the newer transfer cases have aluminum plugs and without the right tool they strip.. |
Re: Stuburn Differential Drain Plug I took an old VW wheel stud and ground the threaded end to fit the plug tightly, tapped it in and unscrewed it.
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Re: Stuburn Differential Drain Plug 1 Attachment(s)
Here's the wrench I bought at the swap meet. On one side it says "DRAIN PLUG WRENCH" and on the other side it reads "643 INDESTRO SUPER U.S.A."
This was the second wrench I saw at the swap meet. The first one was marked $15 and I didn't want to pay that much, so I told my friend that I rode with and he bought it for a buck.:mad: This one I had to pay $10 for, but it's worth it.:) It has 8 different squares and one large flat blade for the 1928 slotted plugs. |
Re: Stuburn Differential Drain Plug 1 Attachment(s)
You know I had the same problem. Most of the plug was broken off and I could not get enough of the wrench to grab the plug. I drilled it out with a left hand bit and then used and easy out. I chased the threads just to make sure I didn't have to repeat this step. The new plug fit the ratchet better than my plug wrench.
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Re: Stuburn Differential Drain Plug "Always amazes me how easy some things are when given the right tools to work with."
Checked with the mechanic shop at my office, they had a larger easyout set than the one I have. It took me longer to get under the car than it did to get the darn plug out! I let it drip for about 20 minutes, refilled with Varsol until tomorrow when I will drain and refill with fresh 40W |
Re: Stuburn Differential Drain Plug 40W? That's too light for a rear end.
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Re: Stuburn Differential Drain Plug Is the 40W just for a quick flush? It would be way too light for running in the rear end. I like Mobil 636.
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Re: Stuburn Differential Drain Plug 40 w-----wow that just set off a bunch of alarms
i am not to familiar with varsol will that attack or harm any rubber seals in the diff ?? |
Re: Stuburn Differential Drain Plug Quote:
I will drain and refill with fresh 600W (M-533) |
Re: Stuburn Differential Drain Plug To drain rear ends with NO plug, I use my A/C evacuation pump to pump down an old freon tank. Shove on a plastic hose, stick it down in the filler hole, turn on the valve & "SUCK" it out. Bill W.
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Re: Stuburn Differential Drain Plug That is a good idea, Bill.
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