stripped oil drain plug hole

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  • Anonymous

    #1

    stripped oil drain plug hole

    Hi,

    I recently purchased a '78 GS750 and have gleaned a lot of useful info from this site. Thanks!

    This past weekend I went to do her first oil change and the drain bolt hole stripped. (Whether from my own ham-handedness or from almost 30 years of previous oil changes, I don't know.) The bolt will still thread in, but I can't put any real torque on it or it slips.

    I'm wondering if anyone has experience with this and can recommend a simple but reliable fix. Solutions seem to range from getting a larger, self-tapping bolt, to inserting a helicoil, to getting an expanding rubber plug. I'm wondering if maybe I can even chase the existing threads.

    Also helpful would be if anybody knows the exact bolt size and thread pitch of this drain bolt. I could not seem to match the threads at the local hardware store, and the threads on this one seem less than perfect.

    Thanks!
  • Gerry

    #2
    Read this

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    • Scud

      #3
      If nothing else seems to work for you then try Ebay, I found an oil pan complete with drain plug for $20.00 to my door.

      Scud

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      • Jethro
        Forum LongTimer
        Charter Member
        GSResource Superstar
        Past Site Supporter
        • May 2002
        • 17888
        • The only Henniker on earth

        #4
        I used a rubber plug for about 10k miles on my bike. Not even expandable, just a simple rubber stopper. I guess many auto parts stores sell 'em as a temp fix, but it never leaked a bit on me. I had it helicoiled a few years ago just becasue.
        Currently bikeless
        '81 GS 1100EX - "Peace, by superior fire power."
        '06 FZ1000 - "What we are dealing with here, is a COMPLETE lack of respect for the law."

        I ride, therefore I am.... constantly buying new tires.

        "Tell me what kind of an accident you are going to have, and I will tell you which helmet to wear." - Harry Hurt

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        • Anonymous

          #5
          I had mine strip also. I took the whole oil plate down to the local machine shop & had it drilled and tapped for a 16mm plug. In hindsight, I'd take it to an automotive machine shop and have a Helicoil put in.

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          • mdole

            #6
            Originally posted by Scud
            If nothing else seems to work for you then try Ebay, I found an oil pan complete with drain plug for $20.00 to my door.

            Scud
            I got a complete pan and plug for $20.oo also at the local motorcycle salvage yard.

            Comment

            • Anonymous

              #7
              Just for the record,the Billy Rick's tip for the oversize self-tapping plug works great !

              I have done this on 2 of my bikes with no problem, a low buck fix no more complicated than changing your oil, thanks again Billy.

              (don't ask how I am sooo' luckly to have 2 stripped plugs)

              Comment

              • Gary Lich

                #8
                Mine also stripped last year and I put in a selftapping oversized plug...
                (with a modification ). I drilled and tapped the center of the new plug with a straight thread (don't recall what thread size, the largest I could fit) Then I put in a bolt with a copper washer and remove that when it's time to change oil. With the smaller hole it takes a little longer to drain the oil but I don't have to risk stripping the pan hole again.

                Comment

                • MichaelHoward

                  #9
                  I put a small bead of Red RV silicone on one once, just a dab around the head of the bolt and did not leak the whole 1.5 yrs till I had it heli-coiled.

                  Comment

                  • Anonymous

                    #10
                    Here's how I fixed mine.


                    Stainless steel plate and a few screws, done. My ADHD really kicked in the day I thought of this one. :-)

                    Kim

                    Comment

                    • Anonymous

                      #11
                      Had the same thing happen to me when I first got my 82 1100E from original owner. On the first oil change, the threads came right out with the plug.

                      Took oil pan off and into M/C shop, they put heli-coil in, been great ever since.

                      I wonder if AntiSeize compound would've helped it over the years.

                      Comment

                      • triffecpa

                        #12
                        I had the same problem. Bought a spark plug repair kit at Autozone. Came with the proper size tap and a replacement thread insert. Not as good as a heli-coil, but the whole kit was about $14. My autoparts store didn't have the oversized self tapping plugs.

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