Rounded off drain plug

   / Rounded off drain plug #572  
I'm wondering if JB-Welding the 15mm box wrench to the plug would help. The epoxy would fill in the gaps around the plug and wrench surfaces.

Make sure the surfaces are degreased and dry, and hold the box wrench in place with a magnet or duct tape while the JB-Weld cures over night.

To get use of the wrench back, zap the hardened JB weld with a propane torch, it'll turn to dust.

If you need more leverage, put a cheater bar on the wrench.

Pretty novel thinking and I could see doing this in certain applications.
The JB Weld might be hard in 24 hours but it still has some "give" that sometimes takes a longer cure time. Maybe a week or more but that's just my experience. Fresh JB Weld does cure faster.

I agree. If I didn't have a welder, I would get a large nut as discussed earlier in this thread. Get some JB Weld putty sticks, blend well, slide the nut over the exposed plug, and jamb the JB Weld in the space between the nut and the plug. Fill it up till flush but don't get any on the belly of the tractor. Wedge something under the nut to hold in place for a few days to cure. Maybe add some heat or a light bulb close to it to aid in curing. Then you can use a large wrench on the nut to break it free, or it will crack the JB and the nut will fall free from the plug. Seems like it's worth a try with nothing to lose but a pinch of JB Weld.
 
   / Rounded off drain plug #573  
^^ Packing it with bubble gum might work better than JB. That stuff can't hardly hold its own tube still.

LoL...You have to mix the two parts together...one is the catalyst...it's not either black or white (colors) :D

BTW...it also has to be used in applicable situations and conditions...!
 
   / Rounded off drain plug #574  
LoL...You have to mix the two parts together...one is the catalyst...it's not either black or white (colors) :D

BTW...it also has to be used in applicable situations and conditions...!
So, you're saying I shouldn't be chewing it like bubble gum to soften it? I thought it was a 2 pack, Wrigley's Spearmint and Black Jack.
 
   / Rounded off drain plug #575  
I'm depressed. I remember the first post. I just checked the date- March. I remember how many projects I thought I would have done by the end of the year.
The key is to have many projects going on at once.

Use it as a good reason to trade in the tractor for a newer one.
He already bought another drain plug with tractor attached.
 
   / Rounded off drain plug #576  
The key is to have many projects going on at once.


He already bought another drain plug with tractor attached.
Tell my wife. Hahaha. I got at least 5 without thinking to count.
 
   / Rounded off drain plug #577  
The key is to have many projects going on at once.


He already bought another drain plug with tractor attached.

I think I saw that flyer.

Fall Special. Purchase a replacement drain plug at MSRP of $49,950 and receive a new Kubota tractor. Hurry. Supplies are limited.
 
   / Rounded off drain plug #579  
That might damage the threads. I'd have to create a new thread on retapping threads then.
You wouldn't necessarily need to get it hot enough to burn it out. A portable hand propane torch on the plug, not the pan is what you would want to heat in that case, just a little bit to expand it will often be all that it takes..
At this point though that probably isn't what you want to spend time on, about the time that you do get back to work on it. The next time you crawl underneath it should be the time that you get the job done.

I致e seen a good torchest cut nuts off bolts without damaging the threads on the bolt.

A drain pan is a lot lighter weight than a bolt and would absorb the heat faster than the drain plug. Heck, even I can burn a nut off a bolt.
 
   / Rounded off drain plug #580  
In the time passed since the first question was posted, the OP could have gone to HF and bought a wire welder and learned how to use it (since he does not have a welder or know how to weld). He could take a piece of flat bar, 3/8" thick x 2" wide and 8-10" long. Drill a hole at one end of the bar stock large enough for the damaged plug to fit in. Hold the bar up, and parallel to the problem area, facing toward the rear, and weld. Tap counter clock wise with a hammer.
Then we would have nothing to write about for the past 8 months.
>
>
OK, correction; then we would have needed to find something different to speculate about for the last 8 months.
 

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