sharpeye Mike wrote:
If you have a mig welder you can place a nut ( same size or one size bigger ) on top of the broken stud and weld it on, the heat will force the stud to expand but since it has no room to expand it will shink when it cools and VOILA the stud will be loose again. I worked in a machine shop in my early years and this was an easy fix most of the time after someone broke an easyout in the stud. Hope this help.
Mike
Last night I stood the block up on the mill and drilled all the bolts down to just above the top of the block to get the head off. I was going to drill and easy out them with some heat today but didn't have any time to work on it till tonight.
After you mentioned that, I remember a mechanic buddy of mine telling me he had done this. I tried it and VOILA. ALL of them out in like 15 min. Worked great!
I originally posted this because I wanted to vent and I was wondering how sensitive these blocks are to heat. I actually have a machine shop and I've drilled, used easyouts, left hand drills, drilled the hole to the tap drill size and picked the threads out with a dental pick. I also have a cutter grinder I use to make spade nose carbide drills out of old endmills or supercarbide to take out broken taps and broken easy outs. If all else fails then it gets EDM'd out. Obviously I don't know it all though, and I'm sure glad you gave me your input. That saved me a pile of time and I'll be sure to use that one in the future.