flywheel bolts

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stariontron
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flywheel bolts

Post by stariontron »

are these reuseable? i'm pretty much all ready to go back together... exciting times!
dirtygalant
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Post by dirtygalant »

yep they should be! I would dab them in loctite and torque them up to the proper specs though.
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Lunacy
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Post by Lunacy »

^^^ What he said :) Unless theyre munched up at all they should be sweet torqued up with loctite
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stariontron
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Post by stariontron »

cheers guys. a perfectly good day is wasting away outside while i wait on a loan click type torque wrench to arrive. not man enough to use my elderly (and severly uncalibrated) needle type
OLD FART
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Post by OLD FART »

I know this is an oldish topic but fwiw if you have some serious grunt ARP's are the way to go as my stroker stretched the stock bolts ( yes they were torqued to specs and locktited ) and stuffed the flywheel which rattled so badly I thought that the gearbox was broken :(
Last edited by OLD FART on Thu Mar 24, 2011 4:18 pm, edited 1 time in total.
I've had mine since 03 07 92
85 JB 2323cc DOHC 4G63
THE OLDER I GET THE FASTER I WAS
GROWING OLD IS MANDATORY GROWING UP IS OPTIONAL
Lummy
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Post by Lummy »

Just don't be too liberal with the loctite - if you get loctite on the mating surfaces (flywheel and the crank flange), then you're just relying on the bolts themselves to do all the work - that wont last long. The majority of the strength comes from the two metals binding on each other - the bolts are just there to keep that contact consistent and strong. Surface must remain clean and dry with no possibility of any lubricating liquid in there.

I agree that ARP's are preferred, but having said that, I run stock bolts on my stroker motor and have never had any issues (and I've re-used them many times too).
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