
Scott
Hey Scott.Scooter wrote:Here is what I used. The middle hex part has a thru hole and use a hardened washer on top. hold hex part in place and use rachet to compress nut. Works good if you only have a few of them to replace. I bought metric rivnuts from McMaster-Carr.
Hey David.David Dunn wrote:Buy the right rivnuts... too many Pinzes have been repaired with "close" and the poor sap that owns it next is stuck with a repair bill that didn't have to be ( or the owner forgot what he did).
A rivnut isn't a big thing except you have a mix of bolts for the same thing, and they can get buggered by trying to force them "a little" into the wrong pitch thread, and end up replacing nutserts needlessly ( and enlarging the original hole)
Carbs are becoming henteeths because of parts being destroyed because of people putting SAE and sheetmetal screws where a metric belongs.
Remember, all Pinzes have a previous owner, and some of your problems could come from one of those repairs.... think of the next owner when you fix something.... I know, you'll never sell itbut you may move up some day to TD, and you'll never want to drive that old gasser again
And in there lies the slip... first a single SAE... then another.. then a USS until finally you use a Wentworth bolt !I am not so concerned in this case simply because I am going to use Philips or Robertson (Canadian!) bolts, so I won't need an SAE tool in my kit....although I keep a complete set with me anyway...
I will make sure to contact my sponsor if I start losing control...David Dunn wrote:And in there lies the slip... first a single SAE... then another.. then a USS until finally you use a Wentworth bolt !I am not so concerned in this case simply because I am going to use Philips or Robertson (Canadian!) bolts, so I won't need an SAE tool in my kit....although I keep a complete set with me anyway...
![]()
![]()
Fwiw, I found those 10mm rivnuts too big for the existing holes on my K. I used their SS 9mm M6 rivnuts instead and they were fine.berger wrote:Hey Scott.Scooter wrote:Here is what I used. The middle hex part has a thru hole and use a hardened washer on top. hold hex part in place and use rachet to compress nut. Works good if you only have a few of them to replace. I bought metric rivnuts from McMaster-Carr.
Which rivnut did you buy? I am looking at the following part:
M6x1.00 10.00 0.7-4.2 95105A183 9.08
Zinc-Plated Steel Open-End Knurled Rivet Nut M6X1.0 Internal Thread, .7-4.2mm Material Thk
I assume I want the rivnut that only goes from .7-4.2mm material thickness?