rjs78
SILVER Star
Hope this is an appropriate forum, if not my apologies and requeI for correct one. I recently got an FJ60, from a dealer so I have no PO info. It has a DrawTite underframe receiver that I want to remove. 3 bolts per side, nuts on bottom. I have wirebrushed the exposed threads and oiled up for a week and I can move nuts with a breaker bar from underneath, but cannot get enough room on top to hold the bolt head, which is turning.
I have an air impact wrench (cheap Chinese with HOme Depot Husky compressor kit.) I haven't tried it because I expect the top bolt head to turn while I'm wailing on the nut, and I can't reach to get a wrench in. Am I assuming correctly that the whole bolt will turn?
Same compressor kit came with a 3" wheel air high speed cutter (like a die cutter tool), again probably harbor freight quality. I figure these bolts are a high graade that might laugh at harborfreight cutting discs. Is that true, or would it be possible to use these cutter to cut off the bolt, which would mean going through the whole nut?
Lastly, I have an electric 4-1/2 angle grinder with some cutting wheels. Grinders are chaap, probably not high rpm. Might this be the appropriate approach?
Do any of my ideas sound plausible/doable? Any cutting technique suggestions? Safety - do these cutting wheels shatter?
Many thansk, RJ
I have an air impact wrench (cheap Chinese with HOme Depot Husky compressor kit.) I haven't tried it because I expect the top bolt head to turn while I'm wailing on the nut, and I can't reach to get a wrench in. Am I assuming correctly that the whole bolt will turn?
Same compressor kit came with a 3" wheel air high speed cutter (like a die cutter tool), again probably harbor freight quality. I figure these bolts are a high graade that might laugh at harborfreight cutting discs. Is that true, or would it be possible to use these cutter to cut off the bolt, which would mean going through the whole nut?
Lastly, I have an electric 4-1/2 angle grinder with some cutting wheels. Grinders are chaap, probably not high rpm. Might this be the appropriate approach?
Do any of my ideas sound plausible/doable? Any cutting technique suggestions? Safety - do these cutting wheels shatter?
Many thansk, RJ