Rory Bellows
Well-known member
Try some Kroil.
Free from your dentist if you keep a good relationship with him/her.... most use them once for a patient then discard them. They are usually 90%+ usable life. Otherwise, pick a few up from grainger - they don't cost that much and will come in handy. Just remember when using them that they are the opposite of drilling in metal - with these use very light pressure and high speed - let the bit do the work.Sticky, How much would that be and where would I get them?
Snapped off an left handed bit extractor inside the drilled bolt hole
everything was going good, quarter turn here then a half quarter turn and snap, the titanium extractor snapped off, forgot to look on the package as to see what origin they were made and saw in fine print made in china , I got a Irwin drill bit and hit the sides to take off the fatty metal took it off like a sinch but the left handed bit didnt hold up, I used a t-handle wrench to hold the bit.
Next few days when I get some time Im off to the junkyard to get the mainfold lol
Hard lesson, I'll post some pics, its raining hard outside
here they are

I refer you to my original post:Drill it and try an ez-out. 2 tips with that:
1. Get the ezouts with the hex end on it that have the short ezout tip on it, MUCH less likely to break then the standard style that use a tap handle.
2. Drill damn straight down the center. If the ez-out doesn't work, find out what drill bit is needed to tap that size bolt, and drill through with that size bit. 9 times out of 10, it'll chip up what's left of the bolt and you'll be left with a clean hole. If not, get a pick and clean it up. If that doesn't work, you'll have to chase the threads.
I do this all the time on jets, it's no big deal.
Okay so I have a irwin drill bit 3/16 and its dam hard to try and drill it out whats next? I called down there and they are refunding my money but dam this is catostraphic, Looking into some intake manifolds now lol

Did you miss the post right above yours? Did you try any of the suggestions that have been given?
I guess that if I were one of the folks posting helpful tips here, I'd be a little miffed. You've been given a wealth of time-tested methods, but you did your own thing anyway and used the wrong tools. Then, 58 posts later you ask what's next?
If anyone told you, would you bother listening?
Sorry to sound like a ********, but after reading about your fiasco, it seems like you are your own worst enemy here....
If anyone told you, would you bother listening?
Sorry to sound like a ********, but after reading about your fiasco, it seems like you are your own worst enemy here....for life.
Did you miss the post right above yours? Did you try any of the suggestions that have been given?
I guess that if I were one of the folks posting helpful tips here, I'd be a little miffed. You've been given a wealth of time-tested methods, but you did your own thing anyway and used the wrong tools. Then, 58 posts later you ask what's next?
If anyone told you, would you bother listening?
Sorry to sound like a ********, but after reading about your fiasco, it seems like you are your own worst enemy here....
As a Matter a fact I do got a Mig Welder, I will take it off and see if I can access the bolt from underneath otherwise IM off to the junkyard. With the refund for the bits IM half way into the price for a used intake.
Got a MIG or an Arc welder? Just put a big flat washer over the broken stud and weld the washer to the stud (err -- broken tap -- whatever is left). Then tack weld a nut to the washer. The heat will help expand the stud to break the corrosion bond and you'll get enough leverage with a socket or wrench on the nut to get it out.
Those stud extractors you bought are worthless -- as Nissan said, they break easily.
You don't have many options left before you have to take this thing to a qualified machinist, and chances are, he'll use the exact technique I just described to get the stud out.
If you are going to take the intake manifold off, then you should be able to access the bolt from underneath.
I guess 5/64 is as big as I can go, the welder is a Campbell Hausfeld, some cheapie I got for free
Those spiral EZ outs are definitely junk. One way or another, starting with a left handed drill bit is a good start: a lot of the easier ones will come out before you ever think about picking up an EZ out. If I've gotta use an EZ out, it's going to be the square taper ones: the shock of tapping them in seems to break a lot more than just torque from a spiral one digging it's way in (just before it snaps, of course).
Well, I haven't used a spiral version in maybe five or ten years; gave up on them as useless a long time ago. Meanwhile, I haven't had nearly the problems with the square ones that you apparently have had: as long as they're a quality brand, I've been pretty dang successful with them. (probably haven't broken one in 3-4 years, either) Are they going to pull out a bolt that's solidly rusted to the base metal? probably not. Dissimilar metal corrosion? probably not that either. That being said, if it's in clean, I can get it out clean in a significant majority of instances.The square ones are just as bad as the spiral ones. They are two different designs for two different purposes. The spiral ones are for softer metal, while the square ones are for harder metal. The square ones will ream out softer metal where the spiral ones will work (more often). They are both no good, and if a left handed drill bit doesn't get it out, it's going to be a pain. I had to use an ez out last week and it got the first screw out and broke out in the second. The difference between me and a lot of people is that I assume that they will break, so I don't get near as frustrated when they do.