Jump to content
Ultimate Subaru Message Board

Recommended Posts

08 Outback here in good old salty Connecticut.

Thought ball joint replacement would be a snap but looks like the snap part may end up being the pinch bolt that holds he joint in place!

Soaked it in PB Blaster for a few days but I can't budge it with a 6 point socket.

I am afraid that I will soon be in "drill her out hell" once I snap the bolt.

It seems as though the design with the open space that is pinched together allows road salt and cryptonite like rust to occur from the middle of the bolt outward as well as from each end inward.

I suppose some heat might help but without a lift, I may just be cooking the outer cv boot before I am done.

Is it reasonable to think that continued use of PB Blaster will eventually overcome the will of Mr. Rust?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Drlling is easier when you have the right bit first.

If you want to use heat, remove the axle from the hub to get it out of the way.

One of these days, I'll buy that special stuff that absorbs heat so I can use it near these types of things.

 

O.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

You are wise to question. Each one differs but if it's bad Soaking it likely won't work. Remove the entire knuckle and control arm and submerge the joint - I doubt that would even work. It's just too much rust to saturate all of it. People that don't see really bad ones don't get that.

 

using a smaller bolt and nut passing through that hole is common repair in rust areas.

 

Getting another used knuckle is a way to lessen the down time on this job - assuming the ball joint isn't rust welded inside the knuckle. It doesn't take long at all to swap a knuckle - 2 bolts and three nuts, swap brake stuff and you're done. No drilling or thread repair required.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

One word: impact.

 

Just went through this on my '02. A quick glance at opposedforces says the joint setup is the same.

 

I went and picked-up a used knuckle, as I didn't want to risk doing it on the car (learned the hard way last time). Plus, I decided to rebuild it with a new bearing.

 

Soaked that bolt for two or three weeks in PB, then i dunked the whole joint in acetone+ATF for a few days. My electric impact (6-pt socket) took some long bursts to budge it loose, and just about rounded the bolt head in the process. (Wondering if a higher torque impact would have just snapped it?)

 

That was the easy part. The BJ was also fused into the cup. An air chisel would have been the way to go, but i ended up using a flat/narrow chisel and beat on it forever with a hammer to drive the joint out. The one advantage to leaving it on the car is being able to pry against the LCA, but even then, I doubt mine would have budged.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

unfortunately once they get rusted in, a good used knuckle is the way to go.. been there and done that.

As already mentioned, even if you do manage to get the bolt out you still need to get the old joint out, and that can be just as bad, if not worse, than the bolt

 

we have had some pretty good success on some rusted bolts using a product called "Freeze Off" by CRC - but it isnt exactly cheap and results can vary

Link to comment
Share on other sites

One word: impact.

 (Wondering if a higher torque impact would have just snapped it?)

 

The one advantage to leaving it on the car is being able to pry against the LCA, but even then, I doubt mine would have budged.

 

you're right - when prying against the LCA, the strut and bushings move and have so much give, there's almost no impact going to the specific seized joint and the force transfer is mitigated.  prying against the LCA is nearly pointless on really seized stuff...."really" seized, which brings up the very confusing part of this topic:

 

it's highly ambiguous due to the wide scope of how bad it can be.  outside the rust belt these jobs are often cake (compared to the rust belt), lots of methods work.  many methods suggested online that work for rough rust - would have never worked for yours.  and your soaking/impact routine wouldn't work for a few really nasty ones.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

When I did mine on my '03, there is no way they would have come out without my acetylene-oxygen torch.

 

When I did get them out (after heat to cherry red, rotate 1/2 or 3/4 turn, douse to keep heat from soaking the wheel bearing and CV joint, repeat) significant portions of the bolt were missing.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

When I did mine on my '03, there is no way they would have come out without my acetylene-oxygen torch.

 

When I did get them out (after heat to cherry red, rotate 1/2 or 3/4 turn, douse to keep heat from soaking the wheel bearing and CV joint, repeat) significant portions of the bolt were missing.

My head just burst into flames thinking about all of the what ifs...

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I did it axle in place, piece of sheet metal above protecting the axle boot, biggest torch tip to heat as fast as possible.

 

I heated the threaded end.

 

With a big tip you can heat quickly turn the bolt and cool before it all heak soaks.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

 Share

×
×
  • Create New...