airsoft_warrior
NOOB!!!!
Could Harbor Freight cut down that shaft??? I saw the 6.5hp engine for 129 not bad
No you would either need a lathe and full engine breakdown our get a coupon and get the 6.5 for 100.
I will sell it if you want. But i need to get the clutch off first. I want that first.R97, that's a very interesting way to chase threads- I'll have to try that sometime. I know I don't have any dies large enough for something like that. I'm just trying to figure out how bloody difficult it would be to saw a grade 8 bolt in half by hand!
Airsoft, your brother sounds a lot like a friend of mine, bull in a china shop. He once hammered a ball joint into oblivion like that, on a Sunday. No auto parts stores open, had to drive to work monday morning. It took me quite sometime to restore the balljoint stud with a dremel, but I did it. I ground out the mushrooming at the end of the stud, then repaired the threads with one of those teeny cut-off wheels. Drove to work the next morning. In fact, drove it for the next two years. The moral? You ain't dead yet! Keep at it. When it's all done, youll be glad you did!
PS Send me the Briggs- I've been trying to find one around here. Tough to come by.
aww, c'mon, don't give up that easily, first get that tire off! then buy another nut that fits your axle threads (not a jam nut or lock not, just a normal one, also if you can get grade 8), cut it in half with a hack saw NOT an abrasive type cutting tool that will ruin the threads. put both the halves of the nut over the axle threads, behind the damaged portion, hold them together then slide the closed end of a wrench over the axle and put that over the bolts, now push the wrench away or towards the kart just enough to allow you to let go of the nut halves, now pull the wrench so that one of the halves is pressing on the axle threads a bit (not to hard), throw a bit of oil on the axle and start turning the nut over the damaged thread moving forward a bit then backing up, and repeat. depending on how badly the threads were damaged you may have to cut off a portion. i have done this and it works well for me. got the idea from some tool that does the same thing basically the same way, just wayyyy more expensive. i suppose if you wan't you can cut a die in half, but a bolt should work fine. now i know thats a lot to read, but its extremely simple. good luck.
p.s. you also don't have to worry about cross-threading!
do you mean you can'y get the fly-wheel of the engine? if so you prob need a puller tool.
i guess it doesnt really matter now. My brother after we bought the 6.5 hp engine we got it home and were swapping out the tires and rims for another set we had because the ones on the cart were old and dry rotted and had a hole in them. Any way, one came off with a few shots of wd-40 but the other was stuck. So my brother decided to hit the axel with a hammer to see if it would dislodge the wheel but all it did was mess up the threads so it doesnt matter whether we get the wheel off or not we cant thread the nut back on. Good bye go cart rebuild.