LRO: Like Buttah was cutting off bolts

From: SJH (SHARDING@SCHULTE-LAW.COM)
Date: Mon Apr 23 2001 - 11:32:00 EDT

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    Cutting new slots in the heads of the screws/bolts occurred to me this
    weekend, but only as I was decapitating the last of the ones securing the
    middle floor and seat moutn brackets with a cutoff wheel. Went very
    fast/well. A few scuffs in the seat mount brackets, and one or two on
    the floor, but nothing I can't live with.

    Simon

     -----Original Message-----
    From: Todd Ondick [SMTP:greylildogs@hotmail.com]
    Sent: Friday, April 20, 2001 9:16 PM
    To: schultelaw@transport.com; catchall@schulte-law.com; SJH;
    lro@Works.Team.Net
    Subject: Re: LRO: cutting off bolts

       

    I used a dremel tool w/ cut-off wheel to re-cut the slots on the self
    tapping screws & was able to use a screwdriver (& impact driver if
    supported
    well enough)to back them out. works swell for window track screws too.
    It
    also works well for cutting the heads off machine screws while minimising

    risk to nearby birmabright. They're cheap (or were?) and good for 100's
    of
    other things too.
     -todd

    >From: SJH <SHARDING@SCHULTE-LAW.COM>
    >Reply-To: lro@works.team.net
    >To: "lro@works.team.net" <lro@Works.Team.Net>
    >Subject: LRO: cutting off bolts
    >Date: Fri, 20 Apr 2001 10:02:00 -0700
    >
    > Is a cutoff wheel significantly better than a normal metal grinding
    >wheel speedwise? I have to remove some seriously nasty seized rusty
    >screws (the broadheaded slotted screws) securing the middle floor in my
    >109 SW as well as some bolts holding in my seat brackets. PO had carpet
    >back there and every bolt rusted up nicely, some so bad there's little
    >evidence of a slot!! I want to do the job faster but I was wondering is
    >there a significant difference here (I assume there is) in terms of
    >speed, and is a cutoff wheel a good idea when working close to the au
    >floor panel which I want to avoid damaging? I want to proceed faster,
    >but don't want to damage anything. I was thinking a cutoff wheel could
    >simply slice down through the head of each screw to floor or washer
    level
    >and a chisel would then make quick work of the head. Grinder (4.5 inch
    >dewalt) just seems kinda slow.
    >
    >Simon
    >

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