On Mon, 2007-07-02 at 00:13 +0000, farna@xxxxxxx wrote: > Tom, I think you give up to easy! Nahh, I'll give up only if the part is ruined from more and more extreme attempts at extraction :-) Tomorrow I go to the machine tool store and see what the have for HARD bits. Carbide, etc. I'll get advice, if not a tool. Then I'll order something from MSC. That doesn't look like a standard thread, it almost looks ACME-ish. I was able to clamp it well with a hold-down kit on the mill, those cast flats do just fine. I don't know how the hell you were able to hacksaw yours, mine is hard as a rock. Sawblade (Starett brand steel) slips over it like greased watermelon. Doesn't even make a shiny spot! Same with HS steel drill bit, I went slow, use lots of oil, then harder to see if I could cut surface hardening etc. I did use a bit from my cheap chinese crap bit set. From the store I'll bring home a big gun (carbide etc). Actually, the last resort would be the "tap disintegrator" approach. For $150 they'll get the POS outa the damn hole! It's still cheaper than outright replacement. (I think the trick is to mill a grease groove into the casting, and not mess with the bolt thing. But not weaken the thing.) > I repaired mine years ago. I didn't have much choice, so I got it done. Instead of a drill bit you might try a carbide cutting tool. Or a carbide tipped bit. You know, I'm probing the deep reaches of memory (I repaired my worst 63 upper trunnion about... 20 years ago??), but I seem to recall taking the trunnion to a machine shop to have that bolt drilled out becasuse of the same problem you're having. They used a drill press and carbide bit, I think. It's hard to say from 20 years ago! But I didn't have much luck with a standard drill bit. I do remember using a 9/16 bit, which is just over the size needed to thread a 5/8" hole. That gives the bolt a looer fit, leaving plenty room for grease to move around it and still enough thread to keep it in place (though the arms limit sideways movement anyway). I do know for sure I cut the arms off (cut the pin) with a hack saw. I might have used a blade for each cut (can't remember), but get a real goo > d blad > e. Using a couple $5-6 blades just to make two cuts may sound expensive, but the alternative is a $175 or so replacement. > > I'm not sure if the camber is the same on the later models, but mounting isn't a problem. The inner bushings are different for arms that use a bolt to mount vs. the early American's mounting rod. You should be able to use the early bushings in late arms. I haven't tried it, but they appear to have the same outer diameter and profile. Should be easy to get those measurements. The mounting rod type have a larger inner diameter because the rod must be larger due to no support on one end wheras the bolt through type are supported on both sides. > > Instead of going newer, try going older. The 50-55 Nash Rambler trunnion should be much cheaper and bolt on as easy (or easier) than a later model. In fact I know that the complete 50-55 front suspension will bolt right on. The steering knuckle of the earlier and later (than 58-63) suspension may have a different size/design pin on top (where it goes through the trunnion). That would be the real sticking point. > > > ---------------- > Date: Sat, 30 Jun 2007 14:41:28 -0700 > From: Tom Jennings <tomj@xxxxxxx> > > Well I'm pretty much screwed. Another half dozen heat/soak cycles and it > doesn't budge. Plus I drilled a hole in the casting in the middle to get > Aerokroil in there. Did no good, and I sheared off my welded nut. > > And that's on the one with enough stub that I can get a nut on it. The > other one's sheared off -- both sides -- flush with the arms. > > As a last resort I tried drilling them on my 1" capacity mill. The > trunnion bolts are not much less hard than the drill bit; I didn't even > get .25" in before I cooked the bit cherry red. I may look for some > special super-hard bit but that seems desperate as a hole down the > middle of a hard, frozen bolt may not help in this case; it's so long > and no way to grip it. > > Both trunnions have both arms stuck on there, which makes dealing with > them difficult. > > With a good dozen hours in them I think it's safe to say they are > unusable. With replacement costs over $700 for rebuilt used parts I have > to find another solution. (I need arms too, so it'll be even more.) > > Any ideas anyone? This kinda puts the car off the road. > > Does a 64-69 upper trunnion system fit, or nearly so? It appears (from > the parts catalog drawings) to have the right camber and it's probably > the same upper bearing. But I think the arms fit into the chassis like > all other 64-up cars, instead of onto that bolt-on pivot bar. > > > -- > Frank Swygert > Publisher, "American Motors Cars" > Magazine (AMC) > For all AMC enthusiasts > http://farna.home.att.net/AMC.html > (free download available!) _______________________________________________ Amc-list mailing list Amc-list@xxxxxxxxxxxx http://www.amc-list.com/mailman/listinfo/amc-list