Wera nice.. seems they have a very good reputation, I'd seen their kit before, but never realised it ranked so well. Thanks for the pointers.
That is a brilliant design... ! Still not sure it would fit anywhere on the Panigale style bikes, but easily pop into the 996
That looks handy ...... and compact as well . In addition to the tool kit that came with the bike , I've always carried a Leatherman ..... ..... mainly for the pliers and the screwdriver selection . Plus a few metres of electrical cable , and some bits of coat-hanger wire
I have the same one which I take on tour. We once used it to dismantle a Multistrada to fix the Y shaped hose in a hotel car park in the alps.
I rarely post now as I sold the Ducati a few years back, but couldn't stop myself I'd try some of the excellent suggestions to get the screws out by bodging the Hex key, if they all failed then I'd purchase some left hand drill bits. As they drill in the opposite direction (anti-clockwise) they both weaken the screw and unscrew at the same time. Used them a couple of times and had good luck. As it's a countersunk screw it should also be reasonably straightforward to get an approximate center on the screw as well Of course you'll need a bi-directional drill, surely somebody you know has one? Personally I dislike Easy-Outs, having had some snap in screws in the past, it ups the pain of removal to a whole new level. If you do decide to use them, just go carefully. That's me posted for the year, I fell right smug John
seeing as we have gone for general advise on how to remove dodgy fasteners. these are awesome. particularly the first pic with rotted heads. i put off buying them cos they looked pish. but the lads bought a set and jeezo. superb. back to the original fault, forgive the upcoming gloat. i never break a bolt. (which no doubt means i will break everything ii go near when i'm back to work) as soon as you notice capheads or any splined bolt is starting to slip, stop. get yourself an appropriately sized punch and hammer and just start tapping away at the top of the fastener. it will tighten up the spline of the bolt and slacken its grip on the threads.
"get yourself an appropriately sized punch and hammer and just start tapping away at the top of the fastener. it will tighten up the spline of the bolt and slacken its grip on the threads." funny you should suggest this.. O.P. has tried this and was unsuccessful unfortunately.
he should of tried harder and been more patient, Chris. should read the thread through, Fin. anyways, just reaffirming
If it were me, having tried the previous suggestions and failed, I'd be drilling the head off now. Once the offending part is off, there should be sufficient shank protruding to perhaps make a slot in it and use a flat head screwdriver to remove?
this could work of course, it's the "not knowing your enemy" isn't it? - light corrosion, excessive length of thread, binding thread when first fastened, Loctite, etc blah..
all failed so far! have some easy out type things, and thought I would wait for the local garage to open this week to see if they can do anything before I irreparably damage the bolt heads. lots of reviews seem to suggest the same risk with the easy out things, seems like a 50-50 fix vs making it much worse. will probably, as you suggest, need to buy left hand bits to drill before trying the easy outs if I do try them. my last hope is to ask my brother who is a dentist to get his micro drills in and sort it out.
this is the first thing I tried - the punch and hammer -chris suggested it in the first post of the thread and swore by it being a best first strategy, albeit not foolproof. sadly, no budge!