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> Ball joint/strut wedge pin, Pulling through hole
rjames
post Jun 12 2024, 07:58 PM
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QUOTE(technicalninja @ Jun 12 2024, 06:13 PM) *

QUOTE(rjames @ Jun 12 2024, 10:34 AM) *


The Koni instructions say to add antifreeze to the strut housing and given that the later strut housings aren't sealed (there's a hole at the bottom) trying to pour antifreeze while it's mounted to the control arm sounded like a recipe for disaster. Lastly, the strut gland nut would be easier to tighten on the bench.


Koni is most likely having you fill the strut housing to increase heat transfer from the insert to the housing.
I've done this multiple times with Z cars, but I used the original hydraulic oil that was already in the strut. I'd carefully drain that crap into a container for re-use.
I called it "Japanese fish oil strut juice" because that is the way it smelled.

I WOULD NOT put anything into an outer strut housing that was not fully sealed!

I cannot say I've seen an outer housing that wasn't sealed at the bottom.
I will be looking at mine closely when I put inserts in per your comments.

I am a HUGE believer in having the heat transfer fluid between the insert and the housing.

But, if it can drain out, it will.

Make a mess of your freshly painted suspension pieces...

One final note regarding antifreeze. It has very little surface tension and can flow through cracks that nothing else will.

Have an old, cracked coffee mug that works fine for coffee, it probably won't hold antifreeze.
Antifreeze is an excellent test fluid for crack detection because of this feature.

It will leak out of the strut housing easier than almost everything else.


@technicalninja The struts I removed were aftermarket (KYB) and there was oil in the strut housing and they did not leak. Clearly the wedge pin and ball joint end was sealing it all up. Maybe I should use a lightweight oil or ATF instead of antifreeze?
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rjames
post Jun 12 2024, 08:00 PM
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QUOTE(914sgofast2 @ Jun 12 2024, 06:27 PM) *

Are you sure that the hole in the strut housing which accepts the pin isn't oval-ed out or oversized for some reason?


I’m not sure, but it doesn’t look like it, and the old pin was in there tight.

It would be good to know how to tell when the pin is in far enough before tightening the nut. I’ve read ‘until it’s flush’ and ‘until it’s almost flush’. Apparently aftermarket pins are hit or miss, but the pins from Porsche I’m using look exactly like the ones I took out.
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East coaster
post Jun 12 2024, 08:15 PM
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Maybe someone had replaced the strut with the older thru hole style at some point?
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mepstein
post Jun 12 2024, 08:19 PM
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QUOTE(East coaster @ Jun 12 2024, 10:15 PM) *

Maybe someone had replaced the strut with the older thru hole style at some point?

There would be an opening/slit in the strut end if it was a clamp style. Impossible to insert a pin into the early style.
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technicalninja
post Jun 12 2024, 08:25 PM
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The struts are sealed then.
I'd use oil/ATF as the heat transfer fluid.

A trick I use to "tell" if a wedge pin is bottomed.

Hold torque against the nut (not more than final torque) and smack the pin with a drift/hammer. If it moves AT ALL you will feel the nut move.

This is how I install these pins. I use the nut to "feel" if it's bottomed.

The rear pins on a Z-car hold the pivot bar and if it's not exactly centered it will dent the bar to the point it can never be removed again.

During the wedge pin installation, I "float" the two together making sure the bar is exactly matching the pin angle and I center the rotation of the pin the same way.

I use copious amount of anti-seize during this procedure.

A decade later my install will come out easy. Normally you end up DESTROYING the rear pivot bar and the pins when you do this to a Z.

The 914 stuff will be GRAVY compared the 240Z rear pin bullshit...
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rjames
post Jun 12 2024, 08:47 PM
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QUOTE(technicalninja @ Jun 12 2024, 07:25 PM) *

The struts are sealed then.
I'd use oil/ATF as the heat transfer fluid.

A trick I use to "tell" if a wedge pin is bottomed.

Hold torque against the nut (not more than final torque) and smack the pin with a drift/hammer. If it moves AT ALL you will feel the nut move.

This is how I install these pins. I use the nut to "feel" if it's bottomed.

The rear pins on a Z-car hold the pivot bar and if it's not exactly centered it will dent the bar to the point it can never be removed again.

During the wedge pin installation, I "float" the two together making sure the bar is exactly matching the pin angle and I center the rotation of the pin the same way.

I use copious amount of anti-seize during this procedure.

A decade later my install will come out easy. Normally you end up DESTROYING the rear pivot bar and the pins when you do this to a Z.

The 914 stuff will be GRAVY compared the 240Z rear pin bullshit...


Not sure that will work in this application given that the wedge pin went in past the point where it was flush (see first post). In other words, I’m betting that if I keep wacking it hard enough it will keep moving. I’m going to go with ‘whack it until it’s almost flush’ (1-1.5mm?) as recommended on every post on the subject that I have been able to find, and then torque the nut. I purchased the Porsche steel lock nuts (not nylocks) and new hardened washers to stay to OEM spec.

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rjames
post Jun 12 2024, 08:47 PM
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Forgot to add that I appreciate everyone’s input here. Thank you.
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rjames
post Jun 16 2024, 01:07 PM
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So I ordered a supposedly Porsche wedge pin lock nut as I read that the nylock nuts shouldn't be used as a substitute I thought the new one from Porsche be the same as the apparently original style ovalized lock nuts I removed, but that's not the case.

The new one just looks to have some sort of anti-seize material already applied to the threads. I'm thinking about using the old lock nuts because they still seem to have retained their 'locking ability' because they are clearly still ovalized I can't thread them on the wedge pin by hand.
Thoughts?

Attached Image

Also does it matter which side of the strut I install the wedge pin on? The holes are the same diameter on either side. The parts diagram pictures I've found suggest that the nut is installed on the side of the strut that faces the front of the car.
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Superhawk996
post Jun 16 2024, 01:49 PM
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You’re totally overthinking this which isn’t bad on a safety component but relax (IMG:style_emoticons/default/beerchug.gif)

The direction doesn’t matter - the interference fit occurs between the wedge and the V shaped groove in the ball joint.

The material you see in the new nut is Locktite not anti-seize. If
It were me I’d reuse the old nut with a preference toward a mechanically deformed prevailing torque fastener over Locktite.

In either instance, the locking feature is belt and suspenders to the stretch of the bolt which is actually what keeps things tight. (16-19 lb-ft per standard torque for M8 x 1.25 grade 8.8 black oxide)
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technicalninja
post Jun 16 2024, 01:57 PM
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(IMG:style_emoticons/default/agree.gif)
+1 for the mechanical class 4 nut.

I'd use blue loctite as well.

But I'm a pin head...
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rjames
post Jun 16 2024, 02:10 PM
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Thanks for the feedback. I’ll use the old nuts and 16 ft lbs.
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rjames
post Jun 17 2024, 05:24 PM
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So this is where I ended up at when tightening the nut to 16 foot lbs. Before putting the new wedge pin in I measured the diameter of the hole from different points and it was clear that it was not perfectly round.
I can't recall what the differences were- they were slight, but similarly out of round on both ends. I put the pin in on the side that had the smaller diameter measurements.
I'm pretty confident it would have pulled a bit further if I had gone any tighter than 16 foot lbs.

Any concerns or should I move on with my life?
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Superhawk996
post Jun 17 2024, 05:58 PM
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Splitting hairs:

I would drive the wedge in with a brass drift until it stops moving. Then torque to 16-19 lb-ft. Let the pin fall where it may.

Alternatively. Move on. Recheck torque after driving 10-20 miles.
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technicalninja
post Jun 17 2024, 08:49 PM
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QUOTE(Superhawk996 @ Jun 17 2024, 06:58 PM) *

Splitting hairs:

I would drive the wedge in with a brass drift until it stops moving. Then torque to 16-19 lb-ft. Let the pin fall where it may.

Alternatively. Move on. Recheck torque after driving 10-20 miles.


(IMG:style_emoticons/default/agree.gif)

See my post #25

If you just used the nut, you can retorque and should.

If you also used Loctite you cannot.
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rjames
post Jun 17 2024, 09:14 PM
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QUOTE(technicalninja @ Jun 17 2024, 07:49 PM) *

QUOTE(Superhawk996 @ Jun 17 2024, 06:58 PM) *

Splitting hairs:

I would drive the wedge in with a brass drift until it stops moving. Then torque to 16-19 lb-ft. Let the pin fall where it may.

Alternatively. Move on. Recheck torque after driving 10-20 miles.


(IMG:style_emoticons/default/agree.gif)

See my post #25

If you just used the nut, you can retorque and should.

If you also used Loctite you cannot.


I ended up using the new nut from Pelican with the locktight already applied because one of my original locking nuts didn’t have much resistance when I was threading it on.

I’m not going tap the pin in further as I’m afraid that it will damage the ball joint stud because my guess is that the stud helped to keep the pin from being pulled further in when I was tightening the nut.

I used marking paint on the nuts so that I’ll be able to tell if anything moves. Someone before me must have inadvertently widened the hole the pin goes in.


…or I should I just try and find another late strut housing?
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Superhawk996
post Jun 18 2024, 12:42 PM
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QUOTE(rjames @ Jun 17 2024, 11:14 PM) *



I’m not going tap the pin in further as I’m afraid that it will damage the ball joint stud because my guess is that the stud helped to keep the pin from being pulled further in when I was tightening the nut.

I used marking paint on the nuts so that I’ll be able to tell if anything moves. Someone before me must have inadvertently widened the hole the pin goes in.


…or I should I just try and find another late strut housing?

I think you’re missing how the design functions.

It is intended to be an interference fit between the wedge bolt compound taper and the ball stud V. You cannot damage the ball stud by having the wedge drive up into it. That is the way it’s intended to fit. When the wedge bolt finally goes to full interference with the ball stud, it effectively locks everything into place.

There is a higher chance of me hitting the lotto than of you needing a new strut. Well maybe that’s an exaggeration but you get the point.

And having said that, don’t freak out and redo anything. Monitor your paint marks as you stated. I’d bet as you’ve assembled and torqued, you’ll be fine. If you hear any noise or perceive any looseness then drift the wedge in further, clean the nut, add blue Loctite, retorque.
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rhodyguy
post Jun 18 2024, 05:45 PM
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The taper shape of the hole self stops the wedge shape of the stud. It will only go in so far and stop on it’s own. Or should. Get a small enough to fit the hole brass drift for driving the stud in. The brass is soft enough not to tear stuff up and still get the job done. Don’t be afraid to wack it pretty hard.
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