The screws are really stuck in there mate. What annoys me is the other three came out fine. its just two that are stuck solid so it has me scratching my head.adamk wrote:you try using a easyout ?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wWIk0DghB9c
i had antennas i had to do it to when i moved house
stripped marine screws
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Re: stripped marine screws
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Re: stripped marine screws
Sputnik, unless you can get stainless helicoils, I’m not sure, but I wouldn’t use regular helicoils, for rust and further binding reasons.
Soak some penetrine or wd40 or whatever you have overnight and attack it again fresh tomorrow.
Worst case scenario just drill out the stuck ones, can you rotate the pedestal as others have said so you don’t use the old holes ?
Soak some penetrine or wd40 or whatever you have overnight and attack it again fresh tomorrow.
Worst case scenario just drill out the stuck ones, can you rotate the pedestal as others have said so you don’t use the old holes ?
- adamk
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Re: stripped marine screws
prolly have to drill them out, dono if you could use tranny fluid to try an lube to easy out them. but future refrence 6 to 12 months remove screws an soak in tranny fluid or even vasaline to save dealing with that in the future. the problem is two different types of metal over time react.sputnik wrote:The screws are really stuck in there mate. What annoys me is the other three came out fine. its just two that are stuck solid so it has me scratching my head.adamk wrote:you try using a easyout ?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wWIk0DghB9c
i had antennas i had to do it to when i moved house
anyway gl sorry i cant help much
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Re: stripped marine screws
sorry i didnt get back to ya mate...wasnt near a pc.
The way we get these out is normally with an impact driver and just work on it. We soak them in "rost off" which breaks up the salt and such around the bolt (but over a day or so) and then they can come out.
Or we drill the head off the screw and take the seat off...then grab it with some vice grips and slowly unwind it...
The way we get these out is normally with an impact driver and just work on it. We soak them in "rost off" which breaks up the salt and such around the bolt (but over a day or so) and then they can come out.
Or we drill the head off the screw and take the seat off...then grab it with some vice grips and slowly unwind it...
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Re: stripped marine screws
Hey man thanks for the reply. I did end up getting them out by soaking with some wd-40 and hitting it with an impact driver. Now went to do it to the other seat post (Drivers chair) and ended up breaking one of the screw heads. :oops: so pulled off the ply and grabbed the rest of the head with a vice grip but got a little impatient and went to hard, broke the rest of the screw. So now i have a stuck screw broken flush with the metal of the hull. So i begun drilling with a cobalt tip which seemed to be working but then got the wise idea to hit it with an easy out to see if it would budge.repspec wrote:sorry i didnt get back to ya mate...wasnt near a pc.
The way we get these out is normally with an impact driver and just work on it. We soak them in "rost off" which breaks up the salt and such around the bolt (but over a day or so) and then they can come out.
Or we drill the head off the screw and take the seat off...then grab it with some vice grips and slowly unwind it...
Ended up breaking the easy out in the screw so now im practically done for. All i can think of now is to either leave the seat post as is and use it missing one screw or getting a fabricator to remove the metal and re-weld a piece on with a screw hole tapped again.
Do you guys think it would be bad to use the seat with one bolt/screw missing? I have the rest in and it seems very sturdy but add the impact of waves and a 100kg guy slamming on it and that one screw might be the difference between a broken chair and a solid one. I will try upload pics of the mess i've made, atleast some humour can come from my misfortune.
- Brett
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Re: stripped marine screws
punch it out with a punch, then use a slightly bigger screw to go in it's place?
Turn the base 10mm either way and re drill all new holes and use new screws?
Say stuff it, and just use it as is, I doubt it's going to matter, with 5 other screws.
Turn the base 10mm either way and re drill all new holes and use new screws?
Say stuff it, and just use it as is, I doubt it's going to matter, with 5 other screws.
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Re: stripped marine screws
They are phillip head bolts so they actually have threads, not just self tapping. Therefore punching it out would be difficult. I might just leave it as is and if anything goes south ill just have to shift it 10mm and re drill.Brett wrote:punch it out with a punch, then use a slightly bigger screw to go in it's place?
Turn the base 10mm either way and re drill all new holes and use new screws?
Say stuff it, and just use it as is, I doubt it's going to matter, with 5 other screws.
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Re: stripped marine screws
Let me just say sputnik - Your not alone (that Murphy bloke again).
Cheers Gra
Cheers Gra