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I can tell you from experience there are no threads on a CX100 or a LMIII. I think I would try to force the panther piss in with some compressed air for a few days and twist the nut end with a rattle gun.
that gap in the front cover is the key, it's been splashed with all kinds of road grime and grit, get it cleaned up good, PB blaster and heat.frame is not threaded.
I was thinking that too, a light impact wrench. Is there something more magical than PB Blaster for spraying into it? I have had good luck with that in the past.
I had the same problem,I hope you dont have to go thru what i did. Heat or snake oil did not work. In the end i cut thru the bolt at the frame rails,saving the cover. then i drilled the bolt out of the cover. frame rails were then built back up with weld. i wish you luck
There's a feeling that a 50/50 mix of Acetone/ATF is the best way to free rusty parts. It's in fact Power steering fluid, not ATF. I'd use something hotter than a hair drier. Like a propane torch. Don't leave it in one place too long - move it around constantly. The heating/cooling cycles will help draw in the penetrating oil.When tapping on the threaded end, have the nut attached loosely. It's not how hard you hit it but the shock waves created. The bolt vibrates at a different frequency than the block and that will help break it loose. As with anything like this, it's easy to think it'll never change, but eventually there will be some slight movement. Don't keep pushing one direction. Go back and forth, like rocking a car out of a snow drift. Once the bolt moves a little, tap it from the other side and drive it back in. Each time it moves it draws some more of the penetrating oil into the rusty areas.
Thanks to everyone for replying. Sounds like I am on the right track, and thanks for the heads up about the gap to spray into..that's great to know. This is a really cool bike, my 9th or so Guzzi but an amazing bike. Anyone who has one knows what I mean. Anyway I'll give it a shot again.
A copper hammer will do some serious *smiting* without damaging the bolt. Like everyone (almost) sez, heat, AeroQroil smite and turn.
Just FYI you do not need to remove that bolt to crab the frame.
Mine was seized solid too. I ended up cutting the bolt to removed the frame rails, took the front chest off the engine and got an engineering shop to drill it out.Look at the amount of bolt shank hidden in the enclosed holes to left and right, if the corrosion is bad, a grenade won't budge it and you keep hitting it, eventually you'll break the chest; better to bite the bullet and get it drilled out.
Yeah I know but I want to take the engine out to work on it, and putting the springs back in horizontal will be a challenge no doubt. I know I could stand the whole thing up, but....
All of the above + this stuff. It really works.
Ooh I like it. I am going to try the torch first. Crabbed the frame enough to remove transmission from engine. Clutch plates look great except that they all have a huge coating of oil. Hoping this is a simple main seal and clutch replacement.....the clutch would not disengage and grab when I decided to take it apart, assuming this is oily clutch and gummed up splines?
More likely gear oil from the transmission than engine oil fouling the plates. Replace both clutch hub o-rings, the input shaft/clutch hub seal and (most importantly) the clutch pushrod seals. The early "seal" was just a plastic sleeve, the "upgrade" is a pair of cone-shaped rubber seals. I've never had much luck with those either, I use a stack of 6 o-rings and haven't had a leak since. I will send you six o-rings for FREE.