> > Try this: boil a kettle of water. Use the freeze spray or dry ice on the line. Isolate the back of the nut with tape so when you pour the
> > boiling water on it it hits the nut but not the line. Freeze the line, boil the nut, take a small dead blow hammer and whack the nut around (if
> > you can reach it) and see if it win't come loose. The idea is to get the nut hot - boiling is usually plenty - while freezing and thereby
> > shrinking the line. Couple of whacks to loosen it, or Whatsisname's trick of just a >bit< of tightening then loosen. The only line I've so far
> > been unable to loosen was the upper trans cooler on my 23' when I recored the radiator. Go figure.
> >
> > --johnny
>
>
> Johnny
>
>
> if remember correctly from a physics class when you heat a donut shaped object (the nut) the inside diameter actually gets smaller, it is a
> classic demo of a non-intuitive situation. The donut shape expands in both directions inward and outward as it is heated. If there was a way to
> chill just one of the pieces without chilling the other like putting the dry ice on the line a foot away from the nut. Just a thought.
>
> I got lucky, several applications of PB Blaster and jerking the wrench back and forth got the lines loose from the hoses. Amen to anti-seize.
Tom, you are entirely correct on the effects of heating and cooling. The super heating and shock cooling I'm doing causes the items to shrink at
different rates and hopefully allows some of the penetrating oil to penetrate. On the three I have not been able to get loose yet, I plan to try
super cooling them with dry ice and hopefully shrinking them.
I have never tried this approach before. The dry ice place is only about 12 miles away So I plan to drive over there, refill my borrowed acetylene
bottle and get some dry ice next week.
--
Ken Burton - N9KB
76 Palm Beach
Hebron, Indiana
> > boiling water on it it hits the nut but not the line. Freeze the line, boil the nut, take a small dead blow hammer and whack the nut around (if
> > you can reach it) and see if it win't come loose. The idea is to get the nut hot - boiling is usually plenty - while freezing and thereby
> > shrinking the line. Couple of whacks to loosen it, or Whatsisname's trick of just a >bit< of tightening then loosen. The only line I've so far
> > been unable to loosen was the upper trans cooler on my 23' when I recored the radiator. Go figure.
> >
> > --johnny
>
>
> Johnny
>
>
> if remember correctly from a physics class when you heat a donut shaped object (the nut) the inside diameter actually gets smaller, it is a
> classic demo of a non-intuitive situation. The donut shape expands in both directions inward and outward as it is heated. If there was a way to
> chill just one of the pieces without chilling the other like putting the dry ice on the line a foot away from the nut. Just a thought.
>
> I got lucky, several applications of PB Blaster and jerking the wrench back and forth got the lines loose from the hoses. Amen to anti-seize.
Tom, you are entirely correct on the effects of heating and cooling. The super heating and shock cooling I'm doing causes the items to shrink at
different rates and hopefully allows some of the penetrating oil to penetrate. On the three I have not been able to get loose yet, I plan to try
super cooling them with dry ice and hopefully shrinking them.
I have never tried this approach before. The dry ice place is only about 12 miles away So I plan to drive over there, refill my borrowed acetylene
bottle and get some dry ice next week.
--
Ken Burton - N9KB
76 Palm Beach
Hebron, Indiana