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Thanks for your help guys. Ive advanced a little bit. Yes they have sheared but if I take the sump spacer off I will have around 10mm protruding from the block to get a hold of. Does this spacer simply come away if I undo the 4 screws? I should have drilled the heads off, would have made it much easier as Kiwi_Roy mentioned. Easy outs are a last resort, I've had one snap on my in the past on a Honda head.... not fun to repair but got there. I'll order a spacer gasket and some screws no I think.Thanks
What Wayne sez. I'd use a propane torch and heat up the stub - that'll transfer heat to the threads. Grab it with vise grips. The idea is that steel expands at a different rate than aluminum, breaking the bond. Another thing to keep in mind is not to force it out once it turns a little. Loosen a little, tighten. Loosen - back and forth. It'll move a little farther each time until it finally spins free. Think - driving out of a snow drift. I've seen it way too often where tires spinning but no progress. But if you go forward then reverse, a little more momentum each time, eventually it'll rock out of there.
The reason they are so bad is that the screws in question are the front corners and the one next. The screw holes are not blind but open to the elements from the top!! what a design! a nice little puddle of electrolyte. I advise anyone to seal this from the top with a blob of sealant or similar if its not too late.
We have a product down here called Lanocoat. Basically solid sheep grease from the wool. Don't know whether they add anything to it but we used it a lot in the engineering firm I worked in to coat dissimilar metals, especially stainless and alloy in a marine environment.Not high tech, but still good stuff. I use it a lot.
it's called Fluid Film in the USA....I spray the undersides of my vehicles to help protect against road deicing chemicals.