• Steel Soldiers now has a few new forums, read more about it at: New Munitions Forums!

  • Microsoft MSN, Live, Hotmail, Outlook email users may not be receiving emails. We are working to resolve this issue. Please add support@steelsoldiers.com to your trusted contacts.

CUCV headlight aiming bolt fix

Barrman

Well-known member
5,207
1,668
113
Location
Giddings, Texas
I have read several post in the past about those stupid plasic "nuts" the headlight aiming bolts screw into. The plastic threads strip if you look at them wrong and replacements from the "help" section of your local parts store are even worse.

My drivers side up/down screw "nut" stripped out a few months ago. I was driving along at night, hit a bump and the headlight was aimed at the bumper. I swapped it out with one from another Chevy truck I have. That one lasted a week. Another swap out with the same result. I was able to push the headlight back up and for the most part, it stayed that way on smooth roads.

I had to drive 60 miles home Wednesday night from the monthly LSMVPA meeting in Ausin. I reaimed the headlight before I left. The rotten Austin roads had it pointing down soon. I reaimed it again at a food stop and then when it went back down just made sure I stayed pretty slow the rest of my trip out in the middle of nowhere home. I was thinking that there had to be a better fix most of that drive.

There is. The screws are 7mm x 1.00. I didn't have a nut that size at home, or at work. None of the local auto stores in town did either. The NAPA 20 miles away did though. Just put it on behind the plastic part, use a 11mm wrench or 7/16" since they are the same size to hold it while you adjust the light like normal.

I drove across my field at a pretty good clip last night and down my dirt road looking for bumps and the light is still where I aimed it.

Hope this helps somebody.
 

Barrman

Well-known member
5,207
1,668
113
Location
Giddings, Texas
If you have one of these little plastic things break, just buy 4 of the 7 mm x 1.00 nuts. I didn't when I made the above post last month. Last night driving home, the passenger light decided to point at the front bumper. I will add nuts to all 4 adjusting screws now.
 

OL AG '89

Member
743
9
18
Location
Kingwood, Texas
I did the similar fix awhile back, not sure what size I used just "forced" a not on to the backside of the plastic thingy that resembles a nut.

Why is it, the older I get the more I have trouble with my N....s????:-(
 

jacksmad1

Member
68
55
18
Location
Franklin, KY
Great idea to fix this. Just what I needed as my drivers side headlight stripped yesterday. Probably a good idea to put a drop of Loctite on the threads when through aiming to keep it from vibrating loose.2cents
 

Barrman

Well-known member
5,207
1,668
113
Location
Giddings, Texas
The 1/4 nuts will start on the adjuster bolt. Then they can be forced to tighten. This will work in a pinch. However, the bolt is the 7mm x1.00. Use what you can get, but know it is a pain to force tighten that nut while reaching behind the grill and trying to keep a phillips driver from stripping out the head.
 

aph1979

New member
17
0
0
Location
Garfield Heights, OH
1/4-20 (standard pitch) may have to be forced. 1/4-28 (fine pitch) went on using just my fingers. You may need the wrench when you're tightening against the spring though.
 

Barrman

Well-known member
5,207
1,668
113
Location
Giddings, Texas
Hmm, I tried both in a Check A Thread. 7mm x1.00 was the only one that fit by hand. I would guess that the 1/4 size was what GM used up until the "lets change over to metric one bolt at a time" idea came along. then 7mm x 1.00 was what they went to. I guess by the replies here that both can be found on a CUCV.
 

rnd-motorsports

New member
905
3
0
Location
Evart,Michigan
:ditto: the change was sometime in the early 80's I think! If you want better replacement parts skip the parts store with there cheap replacements and go to a larger body shop to get the better quality part! I get all my plastic body clips and such at the body shop and stay away from cheap crap the parts store sells!
 

aph1979

New member
17
0
0
Location
Garfield Heights, OH
I'd recommend against using Loctite/stop nuts. I tried using stop nuts and almost stripped the Phillips head on the adjustment bolt. The tension against the spring works well enough to hold the nuts in place.

The only problem will be the passenger side. You might have to pull the front battery to reach them. I have rather skinny arms so I could wedge myself in there, but only just barely.
 

ralbelt

Active member
1,056
9
38
Location
West Warwick, R.I.
The metal that the aiming screws heads lock into was fatigued on mine allowing the screw heads to slip out. So I moved the left bucket to the right side and the right to the left. That gave me new/unused mounts for the side to side adjusters. The vertical adjusters needed strengthing so i cut out a few very small triangles from some scrap metal and welded to each side of the vertical head tabs. With new springs, screws, plastic nuts backed up with1/4-28 nuts nothing moves. Of course the buckets were also blasted and painted.
 

Blood_of_Tyrants

Active member
1,614
10
38
Location
Lebanon, TN
Jeez, you guys are doing it the hard way. Go to any auto parts store and look at the display with the replacement body screws and such. You can get a couple for a few bucks.
 
Top
AdBlock Detected

We get it, advertisements are annoying!

Sure, ad-blocking software does a great job at blocking ads, but it also blocks useful features of our website like our supporting vendors. Their ads help keep Steel Soldiers going. Please consider disabling your ad blockers for the site. Thanks!

I've Disabled AdBlock
No Thanks