I'd love to have inflicted that degree of destruction with a Dremel, but would probably have to have fired it out of a cannon directly at the headlight!
With the 2 problem rusted nuts on the encapsulated plastic studs, with limited access and the bolt onto the chassis at bottom having a rounded head, I was pretty stuffed. You could try drilling them, but they spin. You could use heat on the studs and hope to melt the encapsulated plastic, or you could say:
"Stuff it, I've spent an hour messing with these and I'm not getting anywhere. I've got a complete new unit to put in anyway and I'll just break the plastic"
Which is what I did. Used a pry bar, paying attention not to inflict any damage to the body metalwork, which survived intact. Shame about the light, but I try to cost my time and the time I was spending was more than I'd have got for the light if I'd repaired the mounts as per the LHS one and sold it.
Had to make a new loom for the replacement light as found those lovely plastic chop blocks hidden under the rubber bulb covers.
If you've got the same problem, you can buy the black plastic mounting brackets intact for around £25. You just have to get the headlight out intact though!
Gilbertd- my mate used one of those "big yellow spanners" to cut a wheel (in bits) off his Mondeo when he rounded off a wheel nut! I wasn't around to advise alternatives, but if I had been, I'd probably just have videoed him doing it and put it on YouTube!
Ferryman wrote:
I can take a joke to a certain extent but I'm in the same boat. Is this what I can expect when using a dremel?
South Hams, Devon
Currently caring for (in order of attention demanded):
- 2002 4.6 Range Rover Vogue SE LPG- Zavoli Alesei, Zeta Super, Matrix injectors (Still slightly internally incontinent)
- 1995 4.6 Range Rover HSE LPG (other half's Daily Driver)