Porsche 911UK Forum

Welcome to the @Porsche911UK website. Register a free account today to become a member! Sign up is quick and easy, then you can view, participate in topics and posts across the site that covers all things Porsche.

Already registered and looking to recovery your account, select 'login in' and then the 'forget your password' option.

Broken rear caliper bolt

IanG1

Well-known member
Joined
8 Jan 2016
Messages
185
After sorting my rear brakes out on the drivers side now rebuilt with new disc, pads and handbrake shoes started the near side today. Bottom caliper bolt was a bit tight but breaker bar and working it a bit and it came out. Moved onto the top bolt and again ubber tight but breaker bar cracked it and managed a few very tight turns till it went solid. Got my even longer breaker bar out but snap the head came clean off. I managed to get the caliper off by unplugging the ABS plug and removing the connector to give me enough to get it over the broken bolt. Next tool came out my stud extractor, heated the base of the stud I had left and cranked on the extractor and again it moved half a turn an thought that was it then snap it breaks clean off level with the hub. At this point it was time to walk away and have a brew. I now need to some how remove whats left in the hub by drilling out and helicoil hopefully without the hastle of removing the hub. Anyone had the same problem before and can offer some pointers or advise.
Cheers
 
Heating the stud would've made it tighter until it cooled down again. If you can get a drill down the centre around 8mm it will relieve some of the pressure. You've then chance of hammering something in that hole that will get a grip (like a torx bit) and possibly let you unwind it out. Or better still a stud extractor like so:

https://www.toolstation.com/screw-bolt-extractor-set/p51010

51010.jpg
 
If you have a stud extractor snapped off then even i would be looking at removing the hub and sending it to an engineer to sort out .. need some pretty dam good drills to get that out imho .. someone like Alex here is worth his weight in gold sorting this kinda problem .

Its beyond me .. that's for sure .
 
Sorry to hear this Ian, even more gutting with this weather, :x

at least it will be properly sorted by the summer. :driving:

I'll ask around for who can fix it locally.
 
Try and get some penetrating fluid/Plusgas down the threads, keep giving it a bit more every half an hour or so for a few hours, then as Alex says drill a hole down the centre, start off with say 3mm, then keep opening up to about 8mm ( I think it is an M12 thread/stud) then hammer a Torx bit into the hole, more plusgas and gently tease it backwards and forwards and keep adding plusgas, it will come out eventually. You could also try heating the hub with a blowtorch, then cooling it with water, muliple times, keep going with the Plusgas as you do it :thumb:

When contemplating jobs like this on my cars I always plan ahead and give all fixings a few doses of plusgas over a few days prior to starting work on the car, obviously you can`t really do that with the caliper bolts due to the length, but it really does make life easier :grin:
 
:agree:

Unless you can spark erode/ EDM it out :dont know:
 
You cant have much thread sticking out the back of the hub mount now. Can you try driling out the centre with some cobalt drills from toolstation, 3 mm, 5mm, 6.5mm and then tap the 6.5mm hole with an 8mm tap, screw a short 8mm allen bolt into the caliper bolt and tighten it into the broken stud so it goes through the hub and falls out the back
 
Thanks for all the replies, all helpful cheers.
Bit of an update, my biggest fear was drilling central and square as top of broken stud wasn't flat so difficult to centre punch. Decided to make a drill guide by cutting down one of the old bolts the same length as the depth of the caliper mount holes then drilling down the centre of it on a pillar drill so nice and square. I then mounted the caliper back on one fixing and nipped it up and packed a bit of tape around my new guide to take out any play then into the top hole. Used my air drill as its compact and low speed and drilled down the guide with a 3mm drill into the remainder of the snapped bolt. I am now as far as a 5mm drill right through the bolt so not sure whether to try an extractor or to tap it 8mm and try and wind it through as BillCoupe98 suggest, I have heated and cooled and will pick up some plusgas tomorrow as only have wd40 which aint the best for this stuff. So far so good but not rushing it. Worst case I end up with a helicoil or a second hub if it goes pear shaped but never been beaten by a car in over 30 years of spannering and not going to give up without a fight LOL
 
:thumbs:

Your on the right track.

WD-40, although not the best at this, is excellent stuff and worth letting it soak in it until you get some plus gas.
 
deMort said:
My hat off to you Sir .. i know my limits and this sort of thing is beyond mine .. and i fix these cars for a living .. sigh .

LOL cheers pal, I think its from being a tight git who never gives in but also learnt when to walk away and have a brew and think about things, Amazing things can be done in a home garage with a bit of thinking outside the box. It still might go Pete Tong but drilling a hole down the centre was my biggest obstacle, the rest just takes patience. Good job it isn't my daily though
 
IanG1 said:
Good job it isn't my daily though

I'm sure you could've got by with one caliper bolt in for a couple of days :grin:
 
I wouldnt go near it with a screw extractor - they are brittle and the challenge moves up several levels when they snap off in the hub!

I would research the drill size to get within a few thou of the bottom of the bolt threads so you can peel out the remaining thread - this is how the Stomski jig works for exhaust bolts. It might be a random imperial size!

Good work so far!! Well done.

Ian
 
Just checking an old bolt - 10mm is pretty close to the thread valley diameter - maybe go 9.5 and see how you get on
 

New Threads

Forum statistics

Threads
124,350
Messages
1,439,420
Members
48,707
Latest member
race911turbo
Back
Top