Author Topic: flywheel bolts  (Read 2592 times)

July 24, 2008, 08:43:11 am

moTthediesel

  • Junior

  • Offline
  • **

  • 194
flywheel bolts
« on: July 24, 2008, 08:43:11 am »
Looking for a source of new flywheel bolts (I believe they are not to be reused, correct?), anybody got an idea?

moT
'82 LandCruiser Diesel Conversion
4Cylinder 3B/KKKturbo/AudiIntercooler(gone, BNF)
'92 Dodge/Cummins D350 Getrag Dually
356 w/Quantum 1.6TD (73 mpg!)
'85 BMW 524td (Der Komisar) 
'00 Jetta TDI 5spd

Reply #1July 24, 2008, 09:48:09 am

jimfoo

  • Veteran

  • Offline
  • ***

  • 2110
    • http://www.66rover.com
flywheel bolts
« Reply #1 on: July 24, 2008, 09:48:09 am »
I got some from one of the online places, but it's been so long I can't remember which one. And unfortunately they are still sitting around here somewhere, unused, as I needed longer bolts for the Toyota flywheel. I just bought some regular bolts at the hardware store for it. They worked fine(I only got 8.8 )  until my run away engine mishap. I would think you could use 12.9 cap screws with some sealant/locktite on them. That's what I upgraded to.
Jim
1966 Land-Rover 88" with 1.9 1Z which has been transformed to an M-TDI
TFO35 mechanically controlled VNT, IC , and 2.5" exhaust.
Driven daily

Reply #2July 24, 2008, 03:34:57 pm

Turbinepowered

  • Veteran

  • Offline
  • ***

  • 1206
flywheel bolts
« Reply #2 on: July 24, 2008, 03:34:57 pm »
I bought mine from autohausaz.com for peanuts.

Reply #3July 24, 2008, 07:33:38 pm

vanagonturbo

  • Veteran

  • Offline
  • ***

  • 639
    • Fine Tuning
flywheel bolts
« Reply #3 on: July 24, 2008, 07:33:38 pm »
I have used so many over and over and NEVER had a problem. I dont really think its necessary to get new ones.

I have seen them fail once. When they werent tightened. I have also seen thousands of flywheels attached to VW engines.

Reply #4July 24, 2008, 10:11:06 pm

zukgod1

  • Veteran

  • Offline
  • ***

  • 2817
flywheel bolts
« Reply #4 on: July 24, 2008, 10:11:06 pm »
Quote from: "vanagonturbo"
I have used so many over and over and NEVER had a problem. I dont really think its necessary to get new ones.



Ditto!!
dan

99 Golf TDI (now CNG powered) , 82 TD Caddy

Reply #5July 25, 2008, 06:40:18 am

moTthediesel

  • Junior

  • Offline
  • **

  • 194
flywheel bolts
« Reply #5 on: July 25, 2008, 06:40:18 am »
Quote from: "Turbinepowered"
I bought mine from autohausaz.com for peanuts.



I looked there but couldn't find them, guess I'll have to look again!

moT
'82 LandCruiser Diesel Conversion
4Cylinder 3B/KKKturbo/AudiIntercooler(gone, BNF)
'92 Dodge/Cummins D350 Getrag Dually
356 w/Quantum 1.6TD (73 mpg!)
'85 BMW 524td (Der Komisar) 
'00 Jetta TDI 5spd

Reply #6July 25, 2008, 06:57:31 am

moTthediesel

  • Junior

  • Offline
  • **

  • 194
flywheel bolts
« Reply #6 on: July 25, 2008, 06:57:31 am »
Quote from: "vanagonturbo"
I have used so many over and over and NEVER had a problem. I dont really think its necessary to get new ones.

I have seen them fail once. When they werent tightened. I have also seen thousands of flywheels attached to VW engines.


That may be, but I'm bolting up a Kennedy hybrid air cooled/water cooled flywheel, and it has a good bit more rear offset. I'm just a little leery of it I guess.

moT
'82 LandCruiser Diesel Conversion
4Cylinder 3B/KKKturbo/AudiIntercooler(gone, BNF)
'92 Dodge/Cummins D350 Getrag Dually
356 w/Quantum 1.6TD (73 mpg!)
'85 BMW 524td (Der Komisar) 
'00 Jetta TDI 5spd

Reply #7July 25, 2008, 10:10:40 am

Turbinepowered

  • Veteran

  • Offline
  • ***

  • 1206
flywheel bolts
« Reply #7 on: July 25, 2008, 10:10:40 am »
Quote from: "moTthediesel"
Quote from: "Turbinepowered"
I bought mine from autohausaz.com for peanuts.



I looked there but couldn't find them, guess I'll have to look again!

moT


Fox flywheel bolts. $1.90 apiece, but I figure that since I'm replacing 20+ year old bolts, new ones can't hurt!

The diesel that I installed in the Fox had 30 year old bolts on it, even more incentive to me to replace them. Threads are the same, bolt heads have the same grade stamp on them, so I assume they're the same bolts.


[edit] Yes, some of you may not consider $1.90 each for a bolt to be peanuts, but when my only local source for "substitute" bolts of a similar size and matching grade are only a quarter each cheaper, I'm willing to pay that extra $1.50 to have the correct bolts with threadlocker already applied.