Unlikely. The bolt is steel and the hole is aluminum.
honestly these soft metal metric bolts gm is using feel softer than aluminum threads. they pop at snug haha
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Unlikely. The bolt is steel and the hole is aluminum.
Well, ok, here goes. If you want to try and just rig it and know that if it does not work you will need a new oil pan, try this.
Match the length of bolt or just a hair shorter, and use the same size bolt but use a different thread pitch. For instance, if is an 8mm bolt and is a 1.50 pitch, use an 8mm bolt with a 1.25 pitch, or vice versa. You will have to force that cross thread in there and hope the bolt sucks down the plate and slows or stops the oil leak. That is why I recommended a shorter bolt if can. You are threading into aluminum but may have enough thread strength left to hold the bolt. May even go with a equal size fractional bolt and run that in there. If was me, I would just do a new pan but I am a thousandaire and not every one is able to afford the new pan all of a sudden or even a used pan. Also, if not mechanically inclined and don't have the "TOUCH" to feel what is happening when you try this, a shop can attempt but if was my shop, I would say, fix it right or not at all.
There....are you vultures happy now. I spilled my "hillbilly" fix for this. But, sometimes poor people have poor ways.
Ain't nothing wrong with that idea at all. It reminds me of one of my favorite quotes: "If you can't fix it, force it. If it breaks, it needed replacing anyway."Well, ok, here goes. If you want to try and just rig it and know that if it does not work you will need a new oil pan, try this.
Match the length of bolt or just a hair shorter, and use the same size bolt but use a different thread pitch. For instance, if is an 8mm bolt and is a 1.50 pitch, use an 8mm bolt with a 1.25 pitch, or vice versa. You will have to force that cross thread in there and hope the bolt sucks down the plate and slows or stops the oil leak. That is why I recommended a shorter bolt if can. You are threading into aluminum but may have enough thread strength left to hold the bolt. May even go with a equal size fractional bolt and run that in there. If was me, I would just do a new pan but I am a thousandaire and not every one is able to afford the new pan all of a sudden or even a used pan. Also, if not mechanically inclined and don't have the "TOUCH" to feel what is happening when you try this, a shop can attempt but if was my shop, I would say, fix it right or not at all.
There....are you vultures happy now. I spilled my "hillbilly" fix for this. But, sometimes poor people have poor ways.
100%. And preferably use the OEM design, which Dorman also uses. I tried a Fel-Pro in that spot and never could get it to seal up, but the Dorman did the trick.Whatever you do, get a new gasket.
I tried tightening old one, still leaked.
New gasket fixed it.
Now does the oil cooler attach to the block or oil pan? It looks like it goes into the block.Well, ok, here goes. If you want to try and just rig it and know that if it does not work you will need a new oil pan, try this.
Match the length of bolt or just a hair shorter, and use the same size bolt but use a different thread pitch. For instance, if is an 8mm bolt and is a 1.50 pitch, use an 8mm bolt with a 1.25 pitch, or vice versa. You will have to force that cross thread in there and hope the bolt sucks down the plate and slows or stops the oil leak. That is why I recommended a shorter bolt if can. You are threading into aluminum but may have enough thread strength left to hold the bolt. May even go with a equal size fractional bolt and run that in there. If was me, I would just do a new pan but I am a thousandaire and not every one is able to afford the new pan all of a sudden or even a used pan. Also, if not mechanically inclined and don't have the "TOUCH" to feel what is happening when you try this, a shop can attempt but if was my shop, I would say, fix it right or not at all.
There....are you vultures happy now. I spilled my "hillbilly" fix for this. But, sometimes poor people have poor ways.
Pan.Now does the oil cooler attach to the block or oil pan? It looks like it goes into the block.
+1. It goes into the pan that just happens to look like the block in that spot.Pan.