Date: Wed, 19 Dec 2007 00:20:07 -0800
Reply-To: Jake de Villiers <crescentbeachguitar@GMAIL.COM>
Sender: Vanagon Mailing List <vanagon@gerry.vanagon.com>
From: Jake de Villiers <crescentbeachguitar@GMAIL.COM>
Subject: Re: nuts in steering linkage and rack
In-Reply-To: <007a01c8420c$3402ab10$6401a8c0@TOSHIBALAP>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1
Dealerships in the Vancouver area are pretty fluent in Vanagonese - lots of
them around.
An '86 Vanagon modern? Hell yeah; its got EFI and was built by robots. The
newest car we've ever had is my wife's '90 Golf. :)
Older cars and trucks didn't go in for these throwaway fasteners; they used
cotter pins instead. Of course, robots don't install cotter pins very well,
but they excel at torque-to-yield.
On Dec 18, 2007 10:55 PM, Scott Daniel - Shazam <scottdaniel@turbovans.com>
wrote:
> I don't know about your VW stealership but mine would have a hard time
> finding those bolts in the parts pictures and ordering them. NLA wouldn't
> surprise me even. I don't think they are stretch type, but I'm not
> certain.
>
> Liability and safety would be the obvious concerns.
> 'modern' ?? you're calling a 1980 to 1991 Vanagon 'modern' ??
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Vanagon Mailing List [mailto:vanagon@gerry.vanagon.com] On Behalf Of
> Jake de Villiers
> Sent: Tuesday, December 18, 2007 10:43 PM
> To: vanagon@GERRY.VANAGON.COM
> Subject: Re: nuts in steering linkage and rack
>
> They're probably "stretch to yield" bolts - lots of them in modern cars.
> Should be readily available at your local dealership.
>
> On Dec 18, 2007 8:03 PM, Allan Streib <streib@cs.indiana.edu> wrote:
>
> > Well I'm not doubting what you say about not ever having a failure,
> > but there was SOME reason the engineers went to the trouble of
> > stating "always replace" on these particular nuts. They didn't just
> > toss that in there for fun. So, either they're a special single-use
> > design of some sort, or they are ordinary nuts but for some reason
> > they still should not be re-used. Maybe new ones come pre-coated
> > with thread-locker or something?
> >
> > I just looked at the ones I removed and they look absolutely ordinary
> > to me. I'll probably re-use them, but put some loc-tite on them just
> > to feel better.
> >
> > Allan
> >
> > On Dec 18, 2007, at 10:37 PM, Scott Daniel - Shazam wrote:
> >
> > > I guess I'm going to die just any day now when my steering nuts and
> > > bolts
> > > fail from being reused.
> > > Steering bolts and nuts are made extremely well. Steering is even
> > > more
> > > critical that brakes actually. I have put hundreds of those back
> > > together
> > > with the same fasteners. And I darn sure wouldn't be replacing
> > > original
> > > german parts with anything from a hardware store !
> > > If you put them back together carefully and good n'
> > > tight.........the
> > > chance of them failing is nil. Unless you do something dumb like
> > > don't
> > > tighten properly, or extremely over tighten them etc. I might
> > > make a lot
> > > of things tighter than the published toques btw, sometimes they'll
> > > have like
> > > 18 ft. lbs on a bolt and that's not much at all. It depends.
> >
>
>
>
> --
> Jake
> 1984 Vanagon GL
> 1986 Westy Weekender "Dixie"
> Crescent Beach, BC
> www.crescentbeachguitar.com
> http://subyjake.googlepages.com/
>
>
--
Jake
1984 Vanagon GL
1986 Westy Weekender "Dixie"
Crescent Beach, BC
www.crescentbeachguitar.com
http://subyjake.googlepages.com/
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