HaulingAss
Well-known member
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- Oct 3, 2020
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- Western Washington, USA
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- Cybertruck DM, 2010 F-150, 2018 Performance Model 3, 2024 Performance Model 3
Heating just the bolt is a very effective way to loosen a tight bolt. The reason this is so effective is because when the bolt was tightened it put the bolt under great elastic tension. Tightening the bolt actually stretches the length of the bolt in an elastic manner, meaning it wants to return to it's original length but cannot because friction is preventing it from rotating counter clockwise. Heating it causes the bolt to elongate which reduces the tension on the bolt. Heating it does cause it to also expand slightly in diameter but that's insignificant because there is enough clearance between the male and female threads that the binding is in an axial direction to the bolt, not transverse.Heat could be a mistake in this situation unless you can heat the surrounding metal more than the bolt, as a heated bolt will expand. Heat is often helpful where the device being removed can be heated more that the bolt or screw. For example, heat helps removed frozen nuts because they can be heated more than the bolt.
The last thing you would want to do is heat the aluminum around the bolt, causing it to expand in thickness, thus increasing the tension on the bolt. That said, any heating can help break free a corroded fastener by causing movement that breaks the bonds formed by the oxidation between the threads, something likely not in play in the steering wheel bolt of a relatively new Cybertruck.
Also, there could be thread locking compound on the threads, if so, heating the bolt is the fastest, least risky method to soften/weaken it, making it much easier to loosen.
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