yes to this. earthquake is cheap & does an outstanding job removing blade bolts. (11 cfm on compressor)I have used my HF earthquake impact to remove the bolts on my King Kutter several times with no issues.![]()
i finish the torque w/cheater bar.
yes to this. earthquake is cheap & does an outstanding job removing blade bolts. (11 cfm on compressor)I have used my HF earthquake impact to remove the bolts on my King Kutter several times with no issues.![]()
I would not try a cheater bar with 1/2 inch drive and handle: asking for a break and maybe injury. Think you need the 3/4 inch drive and handle and sockets. Unless you have a precision set impact wrench, I'd be more confident in getting that 450 ft # with 80 # of estimated push on a 6 ft piece of pipe over the 3/4 inch handle than a guesstimated set on most impact wrenches. Not rocket science. Usually, just push as hard as you can to tighten on a 6 ft piece of cheater pipe, and you're good. Run it without tail wheel for a bit and "retorque".Most nuts on rotary cutters are in the 450 ft/lb range.
Check the torque capabilities of your impact gun, make sure you have enough air pressure and go to it.
About a 5' cheater bar should also do the trick.
Learned something new! I've heard them called a "blue knife" but never a gas axe. Have to remember that!I've never taken the bolt out with a socket, I use a gas axe and cut the head off and I use a 1" square drive impact (what you use on big truck wheels) to tighten the new bolt.
I use a 1/2 socket wrench and a 6 point socket with a cheater bar. The reason I use a 6 point socket instead of a 12 point; you have plenty of room to work and the nut at the bottom of the cutter often takes abuse. That being said a 12 point is more likely to round the nut than a 6 point.Most nuts on rotary cutters are in the 450 ft/lb range.
Check the torque capabilities of your impact gun, make sure you have enough air pressure and go to it.
About a 5' cheater bar should also do the trick.
I could be wrong but I believe all impact sockets are 6 point.That being said a 12 point is more likely to round the nut than a 6 point.