snapped plug
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snapped plug
Was removing spark plug from a 1956 convertible thats not seen the road since 1968,it has a factory replacement gold seal engine,anyhow the plug snapped and i tried to remove the rest with a torx bit but it too snapped,does anybody know what type of drill bit will drill out the torx bit,thanks Stevie
Pretty much NOTHING will 'drill out' the torx bit! It will be very hard. When you say the plug snapped - you mean the metal part of the plug has sheared off - leaving part of it still in the head ? Not heard of that before - but it does sound like head off job to get access. Good soaking with Plus-Gas - and maybe some heat will help. But if there is nothing left to grip - it may have to be tackled from the combustion chamber side - or just fit another head!



It might not work in this case, (and as already mentioned, you'll almost certainly have to take the head off as you'll never get all the fragments out of the cylinder) but they used to sell 'Freih Drills' (spelling was something like that) round all the shows - there'd be a guy with a pillar drill happily making holes if files, big engineering drills, bearing casings etc all day. They were some sort of titanium/cobalt tipped construction. (I've got a set in a cupboard and have never used them....
) At a pinch (I discovered before I bought the set of genuine ones at a car boot) you can drill out most stupidly hard things with a standard masonary drill: you need to put a keen edge on the tip with a grinder (or with a diamond file/diamond stone) use a slow to moderate speed and fair amount of pressure - and keep it from overheating while you're running it (squirt of oil now and then) I've drilled through high speed steel metal-cutting saw blades quite happily with this trick!

Last edited by alzax3 on Fri Nov 13, 2009 8:29 pm, edited 1 time in total.

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- Minor Legend
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I once sheared off a bolt in a suspension casting, took it to a toolmakers that I used to deal with and had the offending part 'spark eroded' a process carried out under oil where a tungsten electrode is fed automatically into the offending part which gradually erodes!
Parts can be saved with no need for re-tapping. Worth a try?
Parts can be saved with no need for re-tapping. Worth a try?

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- Minor Legend
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- Joined: Tue Jan 30, 2007 10:09 pm
- Location: Essex
- MMOC Member: No
snapped plug
well guys got the broken plug out using a combination of hammering in snap on torx bits to punch the broken bit in and then cleaned the remainder of the plug out with a snap on die grinder and then gently screwed a new plug in and out till the threads were clean,still going to have to take the head off to get the filings out of the chamber and whats left of the broken torx bits
plug
well guys got the broken plug out using a combination of hammering in snap on torx bits to punch the broken bit in and then cleaned the remainder of the plug out with a snap on die grinder and then gently screwed a new plug in and out till the threads were clean,still going to have to take the head off to get the filings out of the chamber and whats left of the broken torx bits