BRENTTODD Posted April 11, 2011 Posted April 11, 2011 The drain threads in the trans for drain plug striped. Any one have any ideas besides heli coil. Has anyone done any crafty stuff I havent thought of? Thanks Brent
Kiwi_Roy Posted April 11, 2011 Posted April 11, 2011 The drain threads in the trans for drain plug striped. Any one have any ideas besides heli coil. Has anyone done any crafty stuff I havent thought of? Thanks Brent JB weld something in there with a cap on or perhaps just a suitable size nut. Wine bottle cork boiled in water to make soft. Seriously if you can get someone to put in a heli coil, thats a fix better than original. Roy
BRENTTODD Posted April 11, 2011 Author Posted April 11, 2011 The drain threads in the trans for drain plug striped. Any one have any ideas besides heli coil. Has anyone done any crafty stuff I havent thought of? Thanks Brent JB weld something in there with a cap on or perhaps just a suitable size nut. Wine bottle cork boiled in water to make soft. Seriously if you can get someone to put in a heli coil, thats a fix better than original. Roy Yea I know I gona have to go that way. I just wanted to see how creative we are
gstallons Posted April 11, 2011 Posted April 11, 2011 Can you provide some dimensions ? You might be able to get a Heli-Coil to repair it ..............
Kiwi_Roy Posted April 12, 2011 Posted April 12, 2011 It might be more cost effective to take it to a shop that has the right size heli coil, the tap would be quite expensive for just a one off. I bought a 6mm kit to do my rocker covers about $35. I have seen a cheaper kit for doing spark plugs, perhaps that's an option, most garages would have one of those I would think.
BRENTTODD Posted April 14, 2011 Author Posted April 14, 2011 Heili coil it is. Got my redline on order got plenty of heili coils here at the shop all i need is to get off my dead ass and work on my own shit
jeffachenbach Posted March 29, 2015 Posted March 29, 2015 Old topic, I know, but I now have the same problem (stripped, or nearly so, trans drain plug). I've had too many helicoils come out with the bolt on bikes past, so don't really trust them. I like time-sets, but it's about $85 for the kit and requires removiing a bit more of the aluminum than I'm really comfortable with. The original bolt is 10mm (25/64 inch). One more millimeter puts it at 7/16", so I'm thinking of just tapping it to 7/16-20 and putting in a bolt and crush washer. Anyone tried this?
Craig Posted March 29, 2015 Posted March 29, 2015 Old topic, I know, but I now have the same problem (stripped, or nearly so, trans drain plug). I've had too many heli-coils come out with the bolt on bikes past, so don't really trust them. I like time-sets, but it's about $85 for the kit and requires removing a bit more of the aluminum than I'm really comfortable with. The original bolt is 10mm (25/64 inch). One more millimeter puts it at 7/16", so I'm thinking of just tapping it to 7/16-20 and putting in a bolt and crush washer. Anyone tried this? I haven't tried it and I can only see two difficulties. 1. How would you keep the chips out of the transmission case? 2. I would go larger than 7/16-20 however. The 7/16-20 is so close that you would end up cutting through the 10mm threads which would make it very easy to cross thread. and very leaky.
Camn Posted March 29, 2015 Posted March 29, 2015 One more millimeter puts it at 7/16", so I'm thinking of just tapping it to 7/16-20 and putting in a bolt and crush washer. Anyone tried this? I’ve done this with a help of a guy who I trusted. It is difficult to keep the bore 100% upright: if the bigger bolt is not level with the gearbox it is difficult to get the plug tight. I used copper gasket. How would you keep the chips out of the transmission caseOil out + open up the side cover as when changing the shift lever “magic spring” => it’s easy to clean everything up. The moisture on the picture does not come from the bolt ("new plug") - the reason was the front side of the back flange of the gearbox. This is why I ruined the threads from the plug in the first place. I thought the plug was leaking.
jeffachenbach Posted March 29, 2015 Posted March 29, 2015 Plenty of grease on the tap, don't go more than a turn at a time (back out, clean,more grease) keeps the chips in the grooves on the tap.
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