fried1765
Super Star Member
- Joined
- Jan 6, 2015
- Messages
- 10,159
- Tractor
- Kubota L48 TLB, Ford 1920 FEL, 8N Ford, Gravely 12 HP "Professional", 48" SCAG Liberty
I vote for vise-grip style pliers as the #1 rounder-offer.
AGREED!
I vote for vise-grip style pliers as the #1 rounder-offer.
I vote for vise-grip style pliers as the #1 rounder-offer.
I stand corrected on the pipe plugs being of common use in various tractor oil and trans pans, and certain British cars like MG's. In the case of MGs it would likely be a Whitworth plug, not a common NPT thread used in the States for instance.
As for a seperate rounder-offer thread, one could just read this one over and over and by the time one reaches the end- there will be an end- no? one can just begin again.
As far as crescent wrenches there is a right and wrong way to use one. The right way it to have the force applied to the stationery jaw, the wrong way is the opposite, placing the moveable jaw on the flat where force will be applied, which consequently causes slippage, and when the jaw cannot hold anymore the subject nut/flats get rounded off and the trouble begins.
I use Crescent wrenches all the time too, and just as you describe to keep a snug fit. But most of the time when I see others use them it's in a 'close enough is good enough' way with a sloppy fit and backwards for some reason.I use a Crescent, meaning adjustable wrench the right way and if possible when applying tension keep my thumb on the screw to make sure there is no movement in the width of the jaws. I can't recall ever slipping on anything that I cared about. For some reason, I just presumed everyone did it this way?
Buy, or borrow, a small Stilson wrench.
You will do much better with a Stilson than vise grips...more leverage.
A bunch of what has been suggested on here is just creative ways to machine off some more of the metal on the stuck plug.
IMHO, it will take the welded nut to git-er-loose. Or removing the crossbar and drilling.
But what's the chances that the plug is cheap Chinese cast iron and won't weld well?
For something like is pictured - I have a small(8" or 10" ) pipe wrench. The more torque applied - the tighter the jaws grip. I've had to use it a few times - never slipped or rounded anything off. Works right - works every time.
I vote for vise-grip style pliers as the #1 rounder-offer.
Guess I'll poke the bear. Took longer to drag the welder over and set it up, then it did to get this one out. Total time for removal was 5 minutes. With impact and socket. Easy breezy. Even got some special effects in the last picture :cool2:
Guess I'll poke the bear. Took longer to drag the welder over and set it up, then it did to get this one out. Total time for removal was 5 minutes. With impact and socket. Easy breezy. Even got some special effects in the last picture :cool2:
Maybe put some Anti-Seize on the replacement plug threads?