On May 19, 7:58*pm, Red Green wrote:
Smitty Two wrote in newsrestwhich-
:
In article t8mYj.1241$ay2.1029@trndny01,
*Liz Megerle wrote:
I built a picnic table several years ago. It took a hit from the snow
plow this winter. It's worth repairing, but I can't undo the carriage
bolts. The square part of the bolt head strips the wood when I put a
socket on the nut. *Next weekend I'll try pounding a screwdriver under
the head parallel to the surface of the wood to engage a flat side of
the square. What do you experts do?
Liz
I'll vote with those who actually know what a carriage bolt is, and
second the suggestion to grind a screwdriver slot in the heads with a
dremel.
I was thinking hole saw :-)
The nut=splitter is not a bad idea, either, if you have access to use
it. Picnic tables are sometimes constructed with counterbores for the
nut, so you'd not have access for a splitter.- Hide quoted text -
- Show quoted text -
Not good as then you are left with a batch of round wood discs still
firmly fastened to the adjoining member. Of course you could then use
a chisel to split the discs...
Harry K