murphaayyy
Well-known member
At my first day of work today there was a car with stuck tie rod nuts that no one could seem to get free (im manager in training). I asked the store manger if there was an acetylene torch and he said it is bad and weakens the tie rods. He brought me to the master tech and he said yea, it changes the molecules or molecular composition or something and it weakens the metal. The manager then said, wow i can't believe merchants (where I used to work) still uses it, like its some old or bad practice. I didn't say a thing because I knew it was not the time to 'be smart'.
When I was a technician I used the torch a good bit on tie rods as sometimes it was impossible to turn the nuts, even with nice locking screw ring pipe wrenches that get tons of leverage. But also on exhausts where the bolts looked like nubs that could just be blasted clean with the torch saving both parts. My one coworker always told me to warm exhaust studs with the torch then let them cool, to extract and contract to break rust. I feel like the torch was good practice if used right.. Was I wrong, and taught bad practice? How do people work with out a torch?
When I was a technician I used the torch a good bit on tie rods as sometimes it was impossible to turn the nuts, even with nice locking screw ring pipe wrenches that get tons of leverage. But also on exhausts where the bolts looked like nubs that could just be blasted clean with the torch saving both parts. My one coworker always told me to warm exhaust studs with the torch then let them cool, to extract and contract to break rust. I feel like the torch was good practice if used right.. Was I wrong, and taught bad practice? How do people work with out a torch?
Heating up the nut won't put that much heat into the rest of the tie rod.