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Stubborn Transfer case /Differential plugs

Joe Gamma

New member
125
1
0
Location
Middleboro Mass
I got a 3/4 inch breaker bar to remove the plug on my Transfer case since the fluid is yellow. It laughed at me (but it was cold) I remember when checking the rear diff and eventually replacing it that I held the breaker in place while my friend, a real mechanic, kicked it with his foot and finnally loosened the rear one. Any tips or tricks to approach this? I bet it hasn't been opened in ten years..

Joe
 

Gamagoat1

Active member
746
44
28
Location
Kiowa, Colorado
That means some D...A.. tightened it too tight. You can put a short piece of pipe on the handle of your breaker bar and turn it. Just don't let it slip out of the hole, Those plugs aren't cheap.

When you put it back wrap a couple of rounds of teflon tape on the threads. It shouldn't be that tight even after 30 years.
 

glcaines

Well-known member
3,912
2,586
113
Location
Hiawassee, Georgia
I had an extremely stubborn drain plug on a differential once that was so tight I was concerned that something would break when using a long breaker bar. Someone told me to drive the vehicle until the differential case was warm and then hold a piece of dry ice against the plug for a minute. After doing this, the plug came out using the breaker bar but I'm not convinced the dry ice helped that much.
 
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