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Removing a Broken Exhaust Manifold Stud: The MCN Tutorial

Removing a Broken Exhaust Manifold Stud: The MCN Tutorial

A while ago I had to deal with a broken exhaust manifold stud. To say it was annoying is to seriously understate my feeling on the matter. Rather than dwell in my own misery, I decided to come up with a do-it-yourself solution so some poor sap in the future may have an easier time than I did. I spent about 6 weeks thinking about the solution that did not entail me removing the head, plunking down my $75 at the machine shop, and another $100 for all the gaskets to put the head back on. So without further adue, my tutorial on how to fix a exhaust manifold stud disaster.

This post is about removing a stud without damaging your aluminum cylinder head. Some may say it can’t be done with the head on the car, and in some cases, that may be correct. However, I plan to show how to remove a broken exhaust (or intake manifold) stud without a trip to the machine shop and the cost of a new head gasket and headache and all that.

First, a parts list:

  • Electric or pneumatic drill
  • 90 degree angle adapter for the drill, if necessary
  • 1x 5/32 cobalt drill bit, Cobalt is the metal it is made of, not the brand.
  • 1x internal pin-type concrete anchor, AKA concrete “Strike Anchor”
  • a bench grinder or other heavy duty metal grinder.
  • 1x 5/32 square tapered screw extractor
  • small hammer
  • crescent wrench

First of all, some notes about the parts list. You must have something to drill with, so obviously an electric or pneumatic drill is a necessity. Unfortunately, most electric drills will not fit, so you will need to buy a right angle adapter for the electric drill, pictured below. You may also be able to substitute a 90 degree angle die grinder if you can find cobalt metal bits that fit it, but in my experience, that is a chore.

Right Angle Drill Adapter
Right Angle Drill Adapter

Second, the drill bit is of the utmost importance. Don’t even bother with the wood/metal/all purpose drill bits, because they are just a waste of time. You want to buy a drill bit that is made of cobalt metal, i.e. the chemistry element cobalt. This is the most critical part you should buy. Without this bit, it won’t happen. I spent 5 hours, first with an “all purpose” wood/metal bit, then went to a “titanium coated” bit, then a carbide bit, all of which didn’t do the job in any way, shape, or form. After 3 trips to the store, only a call to my master airline mechanic father-in-law, did I discover that Cobalt metal drill bits are the name of the game for things like this. So seriously, don’t even bother without one. They are about $5 at sears.

Cobalt Metal Drill Bit
Cobalt Metal Drill Bit

Third, you need this particular style of “Strike Anchor” concrete anchor from whatever hardware store you can find:

Concrete Strike Anchor before grinding
Concrete Strike Anchor before grinding

Fourth, this method may not be possible without a bench grinder. you may be able to get creative and use something else, but a bench grinder makes life really easy.

Finally, you are gonna need a cheap $3 screw extractor. It is a square pin with serrations that bite when turned counter-clockwise.

Screw Extractor
Screw Extractor

Procedure:

Our first objective is to make a metal sleeve for the drill bit to force the bit to the center of the stud. This is to ensure that the drill bit goes through the stud and not your cylinder head. To do this, you need to take the concrete anchor described above, and remove the pin from the center of it, as well as the nut that may or may not be on it. Then, using a bench grinder, or alternatively, a hack saw, cut the anchor in half. We just need the top side of the anchor with the threads on it, the bottom side can be discarded. Next, you need to grind down the outer shell of the anchor until it fits snuggly into the hole of the exhaust manifold. If you have your exhaust manifold off, now would be a good time to attach it with as many studs as possible that are still intact. This step is necessary,because without the exhaust manifold attached, the sleeve we made for the drill bit cannot be used. Below is an example of the sleeve, as well as how we plan to use it:

Concrete Strike Anchor After Grinding pic 1
Concrete Strike Anchor After Grinding
Concrete Strike Anchor after grinding pic 2
Concrete Strike Anchor after grinding pic 2
Concrete Strike Anchor after grinding Pic 3
Concrete Strike Anchor after grinding Pic 3

Next, if you have enough clearance to insert the drill bit into the bit guide we made from the anchor without the bit guide and the bit having to be put on at the same time (test it out) then lightly tap the drill bit guide into the exhaust manifold hole where the stud used to go. If there is not enough clearance to insert the drill bit guide and then the drill bit separately, then simply put the sleeve over the bit and insert both at the same time, being sure that the drill bit guide is a snug fit into the exhaust manifold stud hole.

Drill bit inside bit guide tube
Drill bit inside bit guide tube

Now, as long as you are confident that the drill bit guide you made snuggly fits the exhaust manifold stud hole, then this is the moment of truth. With your 90 degree angle adapter for your drill attached, and the cobalt metal drill bit, with the drill bit guide over the drill bit, make sure once again that the sleeve is inserted snugly into the EM. If all of those things check
out, then start drilling a tiny test hole to verify the drill bit angle.

If the first pilot hole is successful, then set up the rig again and drill a hole through the stud. This should take no more than about 45 seconds of drilling to get through the stud. You should feel the drill bit sink in really fast (since you are using the cobalt drill bit..), which will then be your indication that you are through the stud. At this point, keep the drill rotating in the clockwise(drilling in) direction and slowly remove the bit, as this will ensure that the bit does not break in the stud, and also evacuate most of the shavings created going through the stud. Congratulations, you now have a relatively straight hole through the stud, thanks to the sleeve you constructed.

Now, remove the sleeve and use the screw extractor and the hammer to lightly tap the screw extractor into the hole we made in the stud. Once it is securely in the stud, use a crescent wrench to wind the screw extractor in the counter-clockwise direction. This is not the time for power tools, because we don’t want the screw extractor breaking inside the stud. If you did everything correct, then the broken stud should start to wind its way out. If you suspect the stud might be rusted in or something, before using the screw extractor, spray some wd-40 or rust eater or other penetrating oil into the hole and then come back the next day to do the screw extractor step.

If all goes well, you should have something that looks like this:

Success Picture 1
Success Picture 1
Success Picture 2
Success Picture 2
Success Picture 3
Success Picture 3

You will notice that in the image above, I managed to drill a nearly perfectly straight hole through the broken portion of the stud, thanks to the sleeve I constructed from the upper portion of the concrete anchor. I didn’t even knick the cylinder head threads at all, and the new stud went in like nothing happened. This method works only on studs that have broken off inside the head, with no portion exposed to the outside. Good luck!

How to remove a broken exhaust manifold stud

How to remove a broken exhaust manifold stud

I recently had the distinct pleasure of needing to remove a broken exhaust manifold stud from an aluminum cylinder head on my drag racing car, even when using a torque wrench graduated in inch/lbs. As you may well know, there are only 3 types of people in this world. Ones that have not yet broken a stud, those that have already, and those that never will.

Well, congratulations are in order, because I graduated from class 1 into class 2 in a flurry of expletives. I had just completed a porting job on my exhaust manifold, and in the process of bolting it back up, the last stud (always) decided to break on me. Now, this isn’t one of those “easy break” deals, either. The remainder of the stud was recessed with respect to the plane of the head. So, it is with much reluctance, I now had a research project on my hands.

After searching the web for a while, the conclusion I came to is that the “easy way” is to take it to a machine shop. Well, that just isn’t good enough for me. I figured the machine shop might only charge $40 or $60 bucks for it, but then there are all the gaskets to buy and the downtime to deal with and on and on. There has to be a better way.

Well, there is. And I documented it for all of my readers. Here it is.. enjoy!