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Grinding/drilling out exhaust bolts

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pepperami
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PostPosted: 22:10 - 04 May 2020    Post subject: Grinding/drilling out exhaust bolts Reply with quote

Not long ago I had a nice shiny aftermarket exhaust put on my bike.

I’m trying to rescue the old pipes as a backup/spare.
The bolts that hold the silencer onto the downpipe protrude from the silencer.
Even though I was super careful when I tried to separate the down pipes from the silencer, the nuts sheared.
I used penetrating oil left for a couple of days and used heat when trying to turn the nuts.
They still sheared.

So now I have two broken studs that need to come out.
I started off by trying to pilot drill a small hole in each.
Ordinary drill bits had little to no effect Shocked Sad
After getting through 3 bits , I have made some headway.

I’ve been keeping my drill bit cool with frequent dipping in water.

How can I soften the stud metal.
Is it a case of prolonged heat on the studs?

I was thinking of using an old bit and a dash of grinding paste, what do you think on mighty BCF?
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stinkwheel
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PostPosted: 22:22 - 04 May 2020    Post subject: Reply with quote

Stainless or mild steel?

Stainless, you're screwed, it's hard and will just get harder. Mild steel should be able to be annealed by heating to just below red heat for a while.

Lubricate and cool the bit. I've used antifreeze for this before, or dribbled a shaken up mix of water/oil onto the drilling site. Even WD40.

Sometimes there is just a hardened surface your bit is skating on and you can break through it a bit with a punch to allow the bit to bite again.

Try a masonry bit. Tungsten carbide is super hard and should chew through pretty much anything. Brittle though.

You can get tungsten carbide drill steel drilling bits. £££ though.

EDIT: A tungsten carbide centree drill isn't a bad investment. I keep meaning to get one. Harder to break and less prone to wandering. Drill the centre with that then chew in with the normal bit. Rinse and repeat.
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pepperami
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PostPosted: 22:35 - 04 May 2020    Post subject: Reply with quote

stinkwheel wrote:
Stainless or mild steel?

Stainless, you're screwed, it's hard and will just get harder.


I seek your wisdom? Why will it get harder?
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Riejufixing
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PostPosted: 22:49 - 04 May 2020    Post subject: Re: Grinding/drilling out exhaust bolts Reply with quote

pepperami wrote:
The bolts that hold the silencer onto the downpipe protrude from the silencer.

Pic pic pic pickety pic pic please.

Or at least something from the 'net to show what the job looks like.
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stinkwheel
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PostPosted: 22:51 - 04 May 2020    Post subject: Reply with quote

pepperami wrote:


I seek your wisdom? Why will it get harder?


It work hardens as you cold work it. The more you drill at it, the harder it gets.

Why?... It's complicated but the iron effectively forms martensite which is very aligned iron-carbon lattice. hard but not flexible. Also, interestingly (if you're interested inthat kind of thing) becomes more magnetic. So the harder your stainless gets, the more magnetic it will become.

Oddly, if you heat it to a critical temperature then rapidly quench, it will soften it (opposite to normal catbon steel). However, to get it to critical temperature, you'll need to have it up to >1000 degrees then rapidly cool which could make a real mess of the rest of your piece... Hmm. I suppose you could use an arc welder with carbon electrode for really focal super-heating. Thinking
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pepperami
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PostPosted: 23:20 - 04 May 2020    Post subject: Reply with quote

stinkwheel wrote:
pepperami wrote:


I seek your wisdom? Why will it get harder?


It work hardens as you cold work it. The more you drill at it, the harder it gets.

Oddly, if you heat it to a critical temperature then rapidly quench, it will soften it (opposite to normal catbon steel). :


Ahh?? So if I go back and heat the stud and quickly quench, that should make drilling easier?
I can rinse and repeat yes?
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kramdra
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PostPosted: 00:01 - 05 May 2020    Post subject: Reply with quote

www.shop-apt.co.uk/carbide-burrs-ball-nosed-cylinder-type-c/carbide-burr-6mm-diameter-16mm-head-length-double-cut-ball-nose-cylinder.html

Small carbide drills are not that expensive but they are brittle, but burrs can take some abuse, even if a cordless is far, far too slow.
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stinkwheel
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PostPosted: 00:09 - 05 May 2020    Post subject: Reply with quote

pepperami wrote:


Ahh?? So if I go back and heat the stud and quickly quench, that should make drilling easier?
I can rinse and repeat yes?


Only if you heat to critical temperature so the metal atoms start to flow internally then re-crystalise. Not simple. I'm not a metallurgist, just started reading around the subject for having a go at blacksmithing and that's mostly to do with carbon steel.

It'll probably be glowing bright orange red at that temperature (between 1000 and 1100C). Chances are you'll be burning/melting the surrounding fitting by the time you've got the stud to that heat. You'd need oxypropane/MAPP.

i also suspect that heating it to sub-critical temps risks making matters worse.

It's not like tempering mild steel which you can do with a blowlamp.

It's not something people usually do. They usually resort to tungsten carbide or abrasives.
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pepperami
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PostPosted: 00:16 - 05 May 2020    Post subject: Reply with quote

Thank you for your wisdom Thumbs Up
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mentalboy
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PostPosted: 02:19 - 05 May 2020    Post subject: Reply with quote

Are you trying to rescue both the silencers and the downpipes or just the downpipes?

It took a re-read for me to realise that you're talking about the bolt that pinches the silencer onto the pipe. The original bolts will be stainless and if you've already cooked them with repeated drilling attempts then, as Stink has already explained, you are going to have a joyous time drilling further.

If it were me and I were trying to save the silencer, I'd grind off the old pinch bolt set up and buy some loose jubilee clip style bands to do the job instead. But I would consider the visibility aspect, so in time old fashion, what bike are we talking about?
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stirlinggaz
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PostPosted: 03:50 - 05 May 2020    Post subject: Reply with quote

hi,
i havnt read all the replies, so apologies if its been mentioned before.
decent quality cobalt drill bits.
when all else fails i dig out my set of cobalt drill bits (think there dewalt)
i start off slowly with plenty of cutting oil or even 3 in 1 oil.
keep it cool & just work your way up the sizes till its hollow enough to pick out or been shocked so much it actually turns.
Once its out i clean threads up & run a tap down it.
never had to resort to carbide bits...yet.

cheers,
GAZ
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pepperami
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PostPosted: 08:33 - 05 May 2020    Post subject: Reply with quote

mentalboy wrote:
Are you trying to rescue both the silencers and the downpipes or just the downpipes?

It took a re-read for me to realise that you're talking about the bolt that pinches the silencer onto the pipe. The original bolts will be stainless and if you've already cooked them with repeated drilling attempts then, as Stink has already explained, you are going to have a joyous time drilling further.

If it were me and I were trying to save the silencer, I'd grind off the old pinch bolt set up and buy some loose jubilee clip style bands to do the job instead. But I would consider the visibility aspect, so in time old fashion, what bike are we talking about?


The end of the downpipe has a wide flange welded on it with four bolt holes in it.
The silencer has four internal bolt holes in it that match the four holes on the downpipe.
When you put them together and line them up , you can put bolts though and tighten up to hold the silencer onto the downpipes.

Those bolts snapped when separating the silencer from the downpipes.
Now I’m left two stubborn stubs .
And because they are just inside the silencer, using a disc grinder won’t help.
I still need to get the gash material out of the bolt holes before I consider cutting a new thread Shocked , but that’s another topic for later Thumbs Up .
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martin734
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PostPosted: 12:44 - 05 May 2020    Post subject: Reply with quote

I have noticed one of the problems many people have when drilling metal is that they use too high a drill speed. For a 1-5mm drill you should drill at a max of 3000 rpm and for 6-10mm a max drill speed of 1000 rpm. Remember, the faster you drill the hotter your drill bit will get and as it gets hotter it will get softer and blunter.
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Riejufixing
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PostPosted: 13:38 - 05 May 2020    Post subject: Reply with quote

pepperami wrote:
Those bolts snapped when separating the silencer from the downpipes.
Now I’m left two stubborn stubs .
And because they are just inside the silencer, using a disc grinder won’t help.

Still no pic or link to same on t'internet?
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kramdra
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PostPosted: 16:01 - 05 May 2020    Post subject: Reply with quote

martin734 wrote:
I have noticed one of the problems many people have when drilling metal is that they use too high a drill speed. For a 1-5mm drill you should drill at a max of 3000 rpm and for 6-10mm a max drill speed of 1000 rpm. Remember, the faster you drill the hotter your drill bit will get and as it gets hotter it will get softer and blunter.


Very wrong. A 1mm drill should be up in the 6000-30,000 rpm range, if you have the correct tool. 3mm should be 2000 -10000rpm. 6mm 1000-5000rpm.
Cordless is a compromise, but generally below 4mm youd have fast gear max speed. Above 4mm it will not have enough torque so low gear max speed.

The mistake is not adequate feed pressure. Without the feed pressure, the bit will rub instead of cut, the chips will be thin . You can tell if it is correct by the chip, powdery dust is no good, you want strings or curls. Decent sized chips remove the heat.
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martin734
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PostPosted: 18:49 - 05 May 2020    Post subject: Reply with quote

kramdra wrote:
martin734 wrote:
I have noticed one of the problems many people have when drilling metal is that they use too high a drill speed. For a 1-5mm drill you should drill at a max of 3000 rpm and for 6-10mm a max drill speed of 1000 rpm. Remember, the faster you drill the hotter your drill bit will get and as it gets hotter it will get softer and blunter.


Very wrong. A 1mm drill should be up in the 6000-30,000 rpm range, if you have the correct tool. 3mm should be 2000 -10000rpm. 6mm 1000-5000rpm.
Cordless is a compromise, but generally below 4mm youd have fast gear max speed. Above 4mm it will not have enough torque so low gear max speed.

The mistake is not adequate feed pressure. Without the feed pressure, the bit will rub instead of cut, the chips will be thin . You can tell if it is correct by the chip, powdery dust is no good, you want strings or curls. Decent sized chips remove the heat.

30,000 rpm for a HSS bit on steel? Anything above 4000 rpm and you will seriously struggle to keep the bit cool, at 10,000 rpm you will start to melt the bit after a few seconds, plus the material you are trying do drill will start to harden. These are a couple of good guides.
https://www.sserc.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2011/12/drill-speed-chart.pdf
https://www.ultimatehandyman.co.uk/how-to/metalworking/drilling-techniques-and-speed-charts
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Pete.
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PostPosted: 20:18 - 05 May 2020    Post subject: Reply with quote

I drilled out all 8 broken studs on a Bandit cylinder head. If you're drilling stainless you want to keep the speed down and drill with quite a lot of pressure. The lower speed will stop the drill tip from cooking and the heavy weight will avoid work-hardening the stud. If it stops cutting, stop immediately and sharpen the drill.
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kramdra
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PostPosted: 20:18 - 05 May 2020    Post subject: Reply with quote

No, lower value for stainless, higher value for aluminium. Suggest you look at some of the manufacturers technical spec rather than some pdf written by a school teacher for classroom use, and anyway the ideal numbers you'll find in references are irrelevant if other conditions are not met. The main one, as I said, is the feed rate. The best way to judge this is the resulting chip, if the chip and feed are wrong, you will ruin the bit at any speed.

www.vikingdrill.com/viking-Drill-FeedandSpeed.php

As I said above, stainless hardens as it is worked. It does not harden if it is cut, hard stainless is avoidable.

And I disagree, those are rubbish guides. THIS is a proper guide, tho I admit the numbers are somewhat less than the generally accepted SFM in other references.
www.presto-tools.co.uk/file.php?filename=PrestoCounsellor2016.pdf
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pepperami
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PostPosted: 21:50 - 05 May 2020    Post subject: Reply with quote

Well back to the job in hand.
Taking Mr Stinky’s advice/wisdom, I did some heating/quenching on the bolt stubs, getting them up to a bright orange before quenching.
The studs were a bit softer I think, but they still put up a fight against a drill bit.
Progress was being made but very slowly.
After a rummage through my junk tools and bits & pieces I found the worlds smallest tungsten carbide burr.

Three studs down and one to go Thumbs Up
Still a lot of work to do but slowly getting there.
Once the last stud is drilled out, I will need to slightly enlarge the holes and cut a new thread to match some new bolts.
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mentalboy
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PostPosted: 22:51 - 05 May 2020    Post subject: Reply with quote

pepperami wrote:
Well back to the job in hand.
Taking Mr Stinky’s advice/wisdom, I did some heating/quenching on the bolt stubs, getting them up to a bright orange before quenching.
The studs were a bit softer I think, but they still put up a fight against a drill bit.
Progress was being made but very slowly.
After a rummage through my junk tools and bits & pieces I found the worlds smallest tungsten carbide burr.

Three studs down and one to go Thumbs Up
Still a lot of work to do but slowly getting there.
Once the last stud is drilled out, I will need to slightly enlarge the holes and cut a new thread to match some new bolts.


Nice one.
I always tried to make sure that any replacement bolts or nuts on exhaust systems were bronze (easy said and done when you're in the marine industry). Not cheap but it saves all the fucking around with wankered steel fastenings.
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pepperami
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PostPosted: 10:27 - 06 May 2020    Post subject: Reply with quote

Well thanks to the wonderful little tungsten carbide burr, I now have got through all four bolts.

The next step is widening the holes Shocked !.
One thing at a time, but after I have the holes the right size, I will need to cut threads to match some new bolts.

If cutting new threads is as hard as drilling out the old bolts, I’m in for a motherfugger of a bitch of a job.
The things we do to save a few quid Rolling Eyes .
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kramdra
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PostPosted: 12:51 - 06 May 2020    Post subject: Reply with quote

If you drill it ok, decent chips and no rubbing, any sharp drill and tap should have no problem. If not, a cobalt drill plus one of these

www.ebay.co.uk/itm/M6-x-1-0-HSS-E-6H-SPIRAL-FLUTE-RED-RING-M-C-TAP-DIN371-TM15300600-EUROPA-TOOL/271815438092

I could use one of these myself, ordered. Decent tools have saved me a lot of time.
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stinkwheel
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PostPosted: 14:13 - 06 May 2020    Post subject: Reply with quote

Taps are usually super-hard. Harder than drill bits which need to retain a certain amount of flex. It's why they snap so easily. Lots of lube, go slow don't force it and remember to back-off frequently.

Drillng once you have a pilot hole is usually straightforwards because you don't have that "skin" of really hardened material for the bit tip to skate about on. Move up drill size in stages, then you're curling off less material at once, generating less heat and mechanical stress.
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kramdra
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PostPosted: 15:15 - 06 May 2020    Post subject: Reply with quote

A relatively small hole and drilling in stages will ruin your bits and your hole, chip the corners off, rub and harden. If the chips stop flowing, stop and resharpen, or change bit, dont keep going.
Holes below 10, use a 2.5 or 3mm pilot then final size. You want 4-6mm diameter increase per stage.
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pepperami
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PostPosted: 19:47 - 06 May 2020    Post subject: Reply with quote

Tungsten carbide burrs rule Thumbs Up even small ones!
A combination of drill bits and burrs means all four holes are now ready for a new thread.
The holes are a mildly lose 6mm/HSS6 and there is plenty of metal to cut a new thread into.
The four bolts will be holding the silencer onto the down pipes, but the silencer is also held in place by hanging onto the passenger foot peg via another bolt like most modern bikes.
They are sort of load bearing as the original silencer is fffking heavy.

The world is my oyster when it comes to choosing bolts and threads because I will buy bolts & taps at the same time to ensure I buy the right taps for the bolts I put on the counter.

Mr Stinky : I seek your wisdom again, any pointers? Thumbs Up
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