NO.7 black oxide 135 split point drill bit
1/4 20 spiral flute bottoming tap
Left handed 11/32 maintenance length drill bit
Thanks for the Quick replies I appreciate it , so the skinny rod is not in the tube of the glow plug? so its a open hole now? that sucks, @custom8726 may I ask what I do with that hardware?
The above list is the drill bits and taps you would need to drill them out.
It's a PITA FYI but saves pulling the heads and works well if you are careful.
The small bit you will use to drill into the body of the glow plug, Then you will use the 1/4" tap.
Next use the 11/32 (Large bit) to drill out the area of the glow plug that is stuck into the head. (You can measure this area/depth on a old glow plug and wrap tape around the 11/32 bit so you know when to stop drilling) Be carful to drill dead center and at the right angle to avoid damaging the threads in the head. There is only approximately 1/16th or less margin of error before damage will occur to the threads.
If all goes well the left handed 11/32 will spin the remaining stuck glow plug threads out as well as the remaining glow plug tip.
(The body of the glow plug catches all of the shavings at this point as well so there are no chance of getting metal shavings in the engine)
If the remaining glow plug does not come out with the left handed drill bit
you can use a bolt to thread into the glow plug body that you previously tapped in the second step. By threading the bolt in you can usually put enough forward pressure on the remaining glow plug to break it loose and it will then in turn come out when you reverse the bolt.
If the threads are (Mildly) damaged you will need a 10m X 1.25 tap to fix them.
Just remember there is nothing there to catch metal shavings from going into the head at this point so I would suggest using some grease on the tap to catch any small shavings caused by cleaning up the threads..
Good luck :thumb: