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Those swaybar studs are round-head 'bolts' tack-welded inside the crossmember. The only way I found to fix this was to knock out the spot-welded head, then drill into the crossmember from the ZF side and use a real bolt & washer thru your drilled hole. Be sure to size your drilled hole for socket clearance so you can hold the bolt for tightening.

Trying to weld-repair a broken stud doesn't hold very long- possibly because weld heat anneals the result, which was too small & weak to start with. With a real bolt you can go to the next grade and size up and be much stronger. The fix is invisible to all but people who've had this happen.

Since the stud is evidently a bolt, of which the head has been welded to the body, could you dress the exposed bit of broken stud flat enough to center punch it, carefully drill through it and tap it 8mmx1.25, basically turning what was the hidden head of the bolt into a captive nut to receive a bolt from the outside?

That is exactly what I did over 20 years ago.

@larryw posted:

Since the stud is evidently a bolt, of which the head has been welded to the body, could you dress the exposed bit of broken stud flat enough to center punch it, carefully drill through it and tap it 8mmx1.25, basically turning what was the hidden head of the bolt into a captive nut to receive a bolt from the outside?

When I retrieved my broken stud-heads and found they were small, round and tack-welded in only three places, I decided I wasn't lucky enough for the other stud/bolts to be welded good enough to take drilling & tapping without breaking loose. Apparently others were lucky.

And as I said, backside-drilling of the crossmember gives one the opportunity to use a larger bolt of a stronger grade than stock. YMMV-

Drilling through the broken stud, through the head and tapping it is all that you need to do.

The tack welded head will act as a captive nut and the tack welds keep it from turning. Those welds were strong enough to not spin when you snapped off the original stud. Don't hit it with an impact wrench to tighten the new bolt though.

Use plenty of oil on the tap and then on the new bolt and tighten it by hand.

I had a couple of the original studs snap off on me also and drilling and tapping what was left worked for me.

...Great Job! Did You use a Grade 8 Bolt? A Grade 3? (Common) will Snap-Off on the Thread Root.

When I lift the Frame, I put a Block of Wood on the Jack. I know you have a Plate Installed, but do You want that Gouged-Up?

Don't want to Offend Anybody...Just Not the way a Machinist would Do It.

MJ

Last edited by marlinjack

...a Property Class 8.8 bolt or screw is a medium-strength fastener that’s roughly the same strength as an SAE J429 Grade 5 fastener.

When I build...I don't believe in 'Medium Strength'!! My Religion is 'Massive-Overkill'!! DO it Right! Or do it a Second Time!

MJ

P.S. Nice Paint Job! But, Are Those 'WELDS'?? Weld Prep!

Last edited by marlinjack

I think the factory studs are probably 8.8 just like most fasteners on Panteras.  The car came to me with damage to the stud.  It was bent at almost 90 degrees, maybe from lowering the car after jacking and the stud caught on something.  When I tried to straighten it the stud snapped off.  Thus, the snapped stud was due to a mishap and not from driving the car.

I'm not sure why those welds are there but the car does have a thick steel plate that is impervious to the jack and no need for wood on this one.  I have used a block of wood on my previous Panteras.

My other Pantera is very messed up from jacking.  The sheet metal is now round.  I use a jack pad for it to avoid making it worse.

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