xcellerate
Tank
- Joined
- Dec 7, 2004
- Messages
- 3,961
- Reaction score
- 1
1.) buy an audi with a 5cyl motor
2.) try and change the timing belt
I got everything taken apart, and the last thing I had to do was pull the crank pulley off so I could put the timing belt on but guess what...the bolt won't come off.
It's a pulley, so for the people out there going, "just get a bigger breaker bar!" it's not that simple; because the pulley just spins. Yes there's a special audi tool that holds the pulley still while you get a breaker bar and break the bolt loose, but I figured I'd just use an impact gun like the other times I've had to remove crank bolts.
So I use my friends off brand impact gun at 90psi and it doesn't work, so I get another friends craftsman impact gun and up the psi to 120 and it still doesn't work. So I get another friend's ingersoll rand and pump it up to 170psi and it still won't come off, so finally one of my friends works at a vw shop and I have him swipe me his snapon impact gun and I try that at 220psi and the bolt STILL won't come off. Infact I nearly stripped the impact socket off the impact gun trying to get the bolt off. All the guns are rated for a psi of 90, and the snapon at 90psi is supposed to make 407ft/lbs of torque.
I can not believe how ridiculously tight this bolt is on here. I guess I'm going to have to bit the bullet, buy the special audi tool, and make a 15ft breaker bar and jump on it from my roof.
I'm just getting really frustrated...and if I somehow managed to strip this case harded, drop forged, heat treated, cryo treated, tungsten carbide bolt that was installed by the will of God, then I might as well just go walk in front of traffic.
It's crazy how one average size bolt can ruin your weekend...and then some.
2.) try and change the timing belt
I got everything taken apart, and the last thing I had to do was pull the crank pulley off so I could put the timing belt on but guess what...the bolt won't come off.
It's a pulley, so for the people out there going, "just get a bigger breaker bar!" it's not that simple; because the pulley just spins. Yes there's a special audi tool that holds the pulley still while you get a breaker bar and break the bolt loose, but I figured I'd just use an impact gun like the other times I've had to remove crank bolts.
So I use my friends off brand impact gun at 90psi and it doesn't work, so I get another friends craftsman impact gun and up the psi to 120 and it still doesn't work. So I get another friend's ingersoll rand and pump it up to 170psi and it still won't come off, so finally one of my friends works at a vw shop and I have him swipe me his snapon impact gun and I try that at 220psi and the bolt STILL won't come off. Infact I nearly stripped the impact socket off the impact gun trying to get the bolt off. All the guns are rated for a psi of 90, and the snapon at 90psi is supposed to make 407ft/lbs of torque.
I can not believe how ridiculously tight this bolt is on here. I guess I'm going to have to bit the bullet, buy the special audi tool, and make a 15ft breaker bar and jump on it from my roof.
I'm just getting really frustrated...and if I somehow managed to strip this case harded, drop forged, heat treated, cryo treated, tungsten carbide bolt that was installed by the will of God, then I might as well just go walk in front of traffic.
It's crazy how one average size bolt can ruin your weekend...and then some.