Two nuts on the top thread
Screw both nuts into each other (top nut clockwise, bottom nut counterclockwise), tightening towards each other so they are jammed tightly and can’t move.
Once they are jammed and can’t spin, you can put a wrench in the bottom nut, loosen counterclockwise and since it’s jammed against the other but, will spin the whole stud out from the workpiece.
Then just loosen both nuts at the same time to unman, and move to the next stud
Looks a lot more limited in use than a standard set of vice grips. The opening in the jaws limits what it can grip to things of a larger diameter, and there's no knurling on the jaws so it won't be able to grip round objects such as studs or screws as strongly.
>no cap
For what it does it's magnificent. Specialty tools are often worthwhile. I miss the old Petersen line that got wiped out by Irwin buy out. At this point ya may as well buy Chinesium for the disposability.
You could tighten the chuck of a drill on it as if it is a drill bit. Them just reverse it out. Might damage the threads of the stud. Or you might be too much of a weenie to tighten it enough.
You strongly counter one nut with another and try to unscrew it
Gonna need to rent an excavator I'm afraid.
a crane maybe even
Looks like you should be able to grabbed the knurled part with a vice grip and turn counter clockwise. Doesn't seem like it would be that hard.
Two nuts on the top thread
Screw both nuts into each other (top nut clockwise, bottom nut counterclockwise), tightening towards each other so they are jammed tightly and can’t move.
Once they are jammed and can’t spin, you can put a wrench in the bottom nut, loosen counterclockwise and since it’s jammed against the other but, will spin the whole stud out from the workpiece.
Then just loosen both nuts at the same time to unman, and move to the next stud
heat the end farthest away from the wood with a blow torch then yank it out with pliers before the wood has a chance to freeze around it
Dremel
I've gotten many broken screws out with this. Some even stripped and so flush that I had to dig around it with a knife before I could get a grip.
this.
1) Hammer
2) [pic related] clamp jaw
And you can do near enough any PrepHole job.
This.
Or use a stud remover with whatever length bar it takes.
I prefer picrel
Looks a lot more limited in use than a standard set of vice grips. The opening in the jaws limits what it can grip to things of a larger diameter, and there's no knurling on the jaws so it won't be able to grip round objects such as studs or screws as strongly.
It can go pretty small. I've used it for stripped brake bleeder valves. And the way it curves gives it an impressive amount of grip.
>no cap
For what it does it's magnificent. Specialty tools are often worthwhile. I miss the old Petersen line that got wiped out by Irwin buy out. At this point ya may as well buy Chinesium for the disposability.
tie a string around it and tie the other end to your car bumper, then have a friend hold the wood while you drive the car away from him
vice grips are your friend
double nut it and unscrew
just burn the wood infestation off.
>Thing.
Excuse me, but those are clearly Metallic Wigglers.
Is this a serious question? Clamp vice grips on the non-threaded part, turn it counter-clockwise.
You could tighten the chuck of a drill on it as if it is a drill bit. Them just reverse it out. Might damage the threads of the stud. Or you might be too much of a weenie to tighten it enough.
Get it red hot, it will come right out.
Use your dick hole and pull
Easy