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Home > Technical > Removing a Stripped Torx Filler Plug |
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jules Member Since: 13 Dec 2007 Location: The Wilds of Warwickshire Posts: 4999 |
Are you going to weld a big nut to the new filler plug, before you put it in ? Jules |
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10th Nov 2023 10:15 pm |
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jules Member Since: 13 Dec 2007 Location: The Wilds of Warwickshire Posts: 4999 |
Just thinking ...
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11th Nov 2023 11:38 am |
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I Like Chips Member Since: 25 Jun 2017 Location: Ascott Under Wychwood Posts: 1540 |
Silicone and rubber the love affair that is forever |
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11th Nov 2023 6:53 pm |
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Bobupndown Member Since: 26 Dec 2014 Location: Upside down behind the TV! Posts: 2805 |
Yep, used my 1/2" Ryobi impact gun on it recently, came out effortlessly. Landrover - turning owners into mechanics since 1948 2014 Orkney grey Freelander SD4 GS. 2004 Zambezi silver Discovery 2 Td5 (Gone) 1963 Surf blue Morris Mini Minor Super de Luxe (my little toy) |
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11th Nov 2023 9:06 pm |
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Badger51 Member Since: 01 Mar 2014 Location: Coffs Harbour Posts: 962 |
IMHO, you don’t want to be putting anything on the filler plug that could possibly find its way into the auto box & contaminate it! (Now Sold). 2008 Freelander 2 (Nazca Sand) SE TD4 Auto. Statutory write off & on WOVR for hail damage but still road legal. 171037Km as of 09/05/22 Superchips Bluefin Flash Nanocom Evo II (also sold) |
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11th Nov 2023 9:25 pm |
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Lightwater Member Since: 21 Aug 2014 Location: Sydney Northern Beaches Posts: 4906 |
There will be a corrosion party with those 3 metals. I use PTFE tape on stainless bolts into steel for the car for the roof rack. Galvanized bolts are good (zinc plated is useless). Procrastination, mankind's greatest labour saving device! Acoustic insulation ARB TPMS 3xARB air compressors After cooler Air tank On-board OCD pressure air/water cleaning Additional 50L fuel Carpet in doors ABE 2x1kg Waeco 28L modified fridge Battery 4x26ah Solar 120w Victron MPPT 100/20 DC-DC 18amps 175amp jumper plug Awning 6x255/60R18 |
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11th Nov 2023 9:31 pm |
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davyboy Member Since: 30 Aug 2020 Location: Staffordshire Posts: 156 |
I have read all of the replies to your dilemma, this is what I would do, purchase a new plug from a main dealer and measure the thread shoulder from the top surface to thread width.
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11th Nov 2023 11:17 pm |
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Lightwater Member Since: 21 Aug 2014 Location: Sydney Northern Beaches Posts: 4906 |
Use tapping fluid when tapping, you get a much better quality tapped thread. Use a 'taper' tap. Not intermediate or bottom tap unless the hole bottoms out. Also a Sutton tap, not Chinese rubbish.
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12th Nov 2023 12:28 am |
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Grue Member Since: 29 Apr 2018 Location: New Zealand Posts: 366 |
Discovered that plumbers PTFE tape gets eaten steering fluid (nicely taped threads were leaking after a year), but then it's not like the filler plug is constantly in contact with the oil like the steering fluid lines would be... Was surprised as it's supposed to have some pretty good hydrocarbon 'resistance'. |
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12th Nov 2023 11:33 pm |
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CaptainBarnacles Member Since: 06 Aug 2019 Location: Forest of Dean Posts: 48 |
Good call on the copper grease. I'm no chemist either but silicone grease does seem like a safer option. The filler plug could do with a rubber cap over it to stop moisture sitting in there. Of course it could just be a hexagon head bolt with a flange (like a sump plug!). 2010 Freelander 2 HSE TD4 Auto |
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14th Nov 2023 6:38 pm |
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CaptainBarnacles Member Since: 06 Aug 2019 Location: Forest of Dean Posts: 48 |
That is surprising ! I thought that PTFE was impervious to almost everything. I'm starting to think that I'll keep my old filler plug with a 32mm nut welded on and just remember to free it up every so often (maybe every engine oil change) so it doesn't bind too tightly. Of course if it does the I have all that meat to torque it around with instead of just the piddly torx drive. 2010 Freelander 2 HSE TD4 Auto |
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14th Nov 2023 6:44 pm |
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davyboy Member Since: 30 Aug 2020 Location: Staffordshire Posts: 156 |
Sunday afternoon I was at a loose end so decided to build a mock gearbox filler plug scenario, plus I had an old gearbox casing from a previous project with the thread being the same as a landrover Freelander 2 auto box filler plug,(previous merc unimog days) rummaging around all the junk I keep found three old filler plugs from the auto gearbox oil change challenges of my landy, so I put the old plug plus copper washer into the gearbox casing to a torque of 7Nm then carefully drilled out the Torx area of the plug to accept a flat copper washer but without penetrating the plug cap, and then placed a black cloth below the plug, put plenty of grease onto the drill bit plus a hoover nozzle near to the drilling and put a neat hole through the plug, bearing in mind the wall thickness of the plug was tiny, again using a new tap I managed eventually to tap a small thread into the plug, tried a 13mm head short bolt and copper washer to 5Nm. Seating flat onto the plug top. Using a pressure washer no water penetrated the plug and seal.
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14th Nov 2023 7:15 pm |
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CaptainBarnacles Member Since: 06 Aug 2019 Location: Forest of Dean Posts: 48 |
Brilliant work there DavyBoy, you totally engineered the heck out of this problem
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14th Nov 2023 8:12 pm |
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davyboy Member Since: 30 Aug 2020 Location: Staffordshire Posts: 156 |
Hi, yes a severe gamble either way, the second option is more likely to be the solution, bit of a thought though hopefully it’s not cross threaded, I remember watching some formula Ford chaps doing some repairs to one of their competition cars and time was the essence, everything was air powered and they just went straight in spinning every bolt and cap into place. Hopefully the guy who installed your filler cap originally hand fitted it then the proverbial an air or battery tool to tighten, it seems this is the norm within workshops, I remember well my first service at the Landy workshops they spun out the threads on the air filter box with some tool, the threads were none existent.
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14th Nov 2023 10:15 pm |
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