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Thread: 300 Tdi Injector Clamp Nut Tension

  1. #1
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    300 Tdi Injector Clamp Nut Tension

    According to the manual the correct tension for the injector clamp nut is 24 Nm. Mine failed at less than this whilst tightening. The others didn't feel good whilst doing up, so I guess I'll ditch the lot.



    Might ignore the manual and settle for 20 Nm on the replacements.

    Any one had a similiar problem.

    Deano

  2. #2
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    Hey Deano , been there done it. When I snapped one of mine I almost had a heart attack, for a moment I thought I had snapped a molded part of my new c.head off!!

    After a fair few bolt snapping incidents whilst changing my CH, I always try to use new bolts where possible and look at torque settings as a guideline.

    For the clamps I stepped up through the torque settings 5,10,15 and when getting up to torque if the next click didn't come quick enough, I just left it!

    One of mine made it 24Nm and others I only dared get close... I suppose they fatigue from all the heat exposure over the years. All new ones and you probably would get 24Nm on them all no probs.

    Matt

  3. #3
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    oh btw, I still have three of those studs in my old CH if you want me to post them... should be same part number 300tdi/200tdi?

  4. #4
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    I stretched all of mine before I bothered looking up the torque setting!!
    New ones were good for 24Nm

  5. #5
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    Thanks guys. New ones are pretty cheap and Roverlord is only 1 days post away.

    Frightened the crap out of me too. I had visions of having to remove the head to extract the remnants. , and after all that bull**** 60 degrees plus 60 degrees plus 20 degrees and similiar crap with the rockers for heavens sake, talk about making a simple job difficult......................

    Never been more thankful for my usual pedantic thread cleaning and using gallons of anti sieze, stud remnants came out easy with a gentle tap from the cold chisel.

    Deano

  6. #6
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    Or, if its Sunday and you just broke the stud and need to use your TDI for work on Monday. Go to the auto parts store that's open, buy a packet of high tensile M8 bolts with the same amount of thread as the stud. Cut the head off and clean up the edges, then use it as a stud. Fits fine with no issues. I think the narrow shoulder of the original stud might be a failsafe for over tightening in the alloy head, ie the stud will break before it pulls out of the alloy. Whatever the reason, the home made stud is still there after 100k kms. Simon

  7. #7
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    Binned my 3/8" drive torque wrench today, just doesn't feel right. If I torque up fairly quickly it 'breaks' cleanly and feels good. If I torque up slowly it 'hangs on' and doesn't 'break' till way over tension. I reckon this is what may have happened with the injector stud(s).

    Deano

  8. #8
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    Quote Originally Posted by DeanoH View Post
    Binned my 3/8" drive torque wrench today, just doesn't feel right. If I torque up fairly quickly it 'breaks' cleanly and feels good. If I torque up slowly it 'hangs on' and doesn't 'break' till way over tension. I reckon this is what may have happened with the injector stud(s).

    Deano

    Dry threads might have been binding up. Have you tried the torque wrench in different circumstances, or with some loctite on the threads? Its easy to reach apparent tension if the nut sticks in place too early.

  9. #9
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    Quote Originally Posted by DeanoH View Post
    Binned my 3/8" drive torque wrench today, just doesn't feel right. If I torque up fairly quickly it 'breaks' cleanly and feels good. If I torque up slowly it 'hangs on' and doesn't 'break' till way over tension. I reckon this is what may have happened with the injector stud(s).

    Deano
    Dig it out post it up and I'll service it for you.

    Dont use high tensile bolts, the OEM studs are shanked so they do break before you overtighten them and kill the head. If they snap off before they hit 24NM then they have been over tensioned previously.

    on a standard sidchrome 13mm ROE spanner I pull upto 40NM without too much effort so they are quite easy to over do, just like the bolt for the cran case ventilator, the rocker cover bolts and the dreaded centrifuge oil filter on the TD5.

    Typically its not the butcher that does them up too tight the first time that has the problem but the guy trying to do the righty afterwards that does.
    Dave

    "In a Landrover the other vehicle is your crumple zone."

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  10. #10
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    Thanks Dave. though I wonder if it's worth the effort.

    It's a Kincrome which no 1 son bought home from work as it 'failed' its annual calibration test. Actually it 'passed' its annual calibration test because no accuracy requirements were given to the testers by the owners so it automatically 'passes' regardless of the results.

    Actually its calibration is only out in the 0 to 10 Nm range, above that it's OK (+ or - 5%) which I reckon is fair enough.

    In the end he bought a new one, with calibration chart, which was cheaper than testing the 'old' one anyway.

    PM me your address dave and I'll send it to you.

    No problems with dry threads Spel1, I'm a real Nazi for for anti-sieze thread lube, especially steel into alloy.


    Deano

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