Stainless nut seized on cut off bolt. Cast aluminum winch housing.
Thoughts?
Small die grinder wheel - possibly Dremel to cut through the top of nut. If nut can spin, do the same as on top (and you are done) if nut cannot spin. A) use wheel to flatten nut so it can rotate or b) use heat and HD screwdriver with wrench to open the slot you created in the nut enough to extract the shaft.Stainless nut seized on cut off bolt. Cast aluminum winch housing.
Thoughts?

If you work with stainless hardware at all, whether it's one nut n bolt or a cabinet full of them use Tef Gel.First of all, don't never use stainless bolts with stainless nuts unless you plan to cut them apart in the future. Stick a regular nut on the side that's not visible.
The threads don't slide well over each other, especially when spun on faster than by hand. I've ran stainless nuts on stainless bolts on, then off, and then on again. The during the second "on" the nut would seize on the bolt, welded forever. This was before the nut even got to the plate it was fastening.
If you have access to a plasma cutter you can blast that nut out (carefully so you don't damage the winch).
Is it a nice winch (Warn premium)
This is what I would personally do as well.. weld a nut onto the stud and then get it out like a normal bolt (use vice grips or jam a screwdriver into the existing nut to prevent it from spinning)I would place a washer over the exposed stud.
Place a nut on the threads, should be able to thread one on right?
Then weld the nut onto the stud and unbolt it like a normal bolt.
Working in a brewery, everything is stainless-on-stainless. Just use a good anti-seize and it's fine.First of all, don't never use stainless bolts with stainless nuts unless you plan to cut them apart in the future. Stick a regular nut on the side that's not visible.
The threads don't slide well over each other, especially when spun on faster than by hand. I've ran stainless nuts on stainless bolts on, then off, and then on again. The during the second "on" the nut would seize on the bolt, welded forever. This was before the nut even got to the plate it was fastening.
If you have access to a plasma cutter you can blast that nut out (carefully so you don't damage the winch).
Is it a nice winch (Warn premium)

that's what I was referring to, I call them body sawsDo you have a air saw to cut the bolt between the nut and cast
G
and now we wait and see what the OP actually didSorry Daniel I must have missed your post yes same thing different names
great minds think alike![]()

I learned that the hard way when I installed all stainless hardware on my 95 Cobra exhaust system. A year later when I was swapping clutch and trans, I had to cut off every single one of the bolts - and they were all ARP ($$$$) ouch!Stainless galling is no joke, and so the only way forward was to attack the nut.
Nicely done!
When I bolted down the benches in my boat, I was depending on galling, along with the nyloc to give a rivet-like attachment, just like the original.Stainless galling is no joke, and so the only way forward was to attack the nut.
Nicely done!
I just installed a million 10-32 screws and nyloc nuts in ice shack runners.
After a couple galled and snapped I tossed a snowball into the bucket. The water was enough to keep the galling away.
They're like huck bolts to me.I bet that doesn't work so well when you go to take them apart...