Hello
There are senior engineers (like me) out there who work on 30 year old cars, and are used to pulling rusted bolts out of difficult places.
The reason why steel bolts are used, is simple, for the cost, steel is a great material for fasteners. The reason why aluminium is used for engine blocks and especially cylinder heads, is because of weight, heat transfer, etc.. etc..
For a start the bolt hasn’t annealed, it has corroded with the aluminium through galvanic action. The aluminium thread has “sacrificed itself” and plated the bolt. This all happens at a very small scale. But it is enough over a period of time to seize the bolt permanently. And if it has seized do what the man says above, soak them in WD-40 for at LEAST 24 hours, and I mean SOAK.
Then try and undo the bolts gently, and get a feel for how much torque is required at the wrench to make the bolt heads JUST move. Then gently rock the wrench back and forth using the same torque in both directions. What this does is loosen the seizure at the top of the thread where the most strain is taking place. Once this happens, you will feel the torque reduce by a slight margin, spray some more WD-40 on, leave it to soak in and do the other bolts. Return to the first bolt and keep doing this for as long as you think it’s working. It works in about a half of cases. Most people think if the bolt doesn’t move on first torque application, they just use more brute force, and then snap the bolt.
If that doesn’t work, remove the top of the bolts with the some VERY careful grinding and/or chiselling and/or machining.
Take the cylinder head off
You now have access to the bolt shank, but not of course the bolt head.
If, and I mean if, you are lucky the bolt should turn with a light torque, if not the bolt is seized. Then heat up the bolt with a torch, Grab the bolt shank tightly with a wrench and rock the bolt shank back and forth gently, don’t let it slip though! Then let it cool down; cool enough so you could touch it.
Tip, place a small dab of nail varnish/cheap paint on the bolt where it enters the block, this usually changes colour before any harm comes to the block, best to check paint suitability before ruining an engine block!
Repeat this process, it may require the heating and rocking process 3 or 4 times. It doesn’t take that long in real life, honestly, I too have rebuilt motor cycle engines.
If this doesn’t work, drill the bolt out, and have the thread recoiled. It doesn’t cost a machine shop that much, I have just had my Golf/Rabbit cylinder head done, it cost 6 pounds/9 dollars a hole.
What is interesting is how one cylinder head came off without any problem, and the other side didn’t. No doubt two different assembly workers, one doing all the left hand heads and the other doing all the right hand heads, and forgetting to use some lubricant. The most common reason for this type of problem, I have experienced, is someone buying slightly cheaper bolts for the line, and the plating/oiling has been dropped to get the price down.
The question now is what are you going to do on reassembly?
Change the design?
Use aluminium bolts? (I don't think so)
Put new steel ones in and hope for the best?
You do the last one, but the most important thing is to smear anti seize compound on the threads before assembly. It's grease with extremely small granules of copper in it. No steel bolt will seize in an aluminium block with this on it, well none of mine have! Don’t use a light oil or WD-40 again for this, it’s too thin. It works, but you might as well do the job properly.
But the problem still exists of senior engineers never leaving their desk and actually handling/making the pieces they are responsible for. I worked in one company where the design engineers weren’t allowed to operate any factory machinery, or make any parts of any sort for any reason. In fact it was instant dismissal. Oh the joys of liability insurance!
The worrying thing about one of the stories above is a PhD engineer being trusted with the product and an attitude of “we have always done it that way”, If I had a pound/dollar for every time I’ve heard that.
Hoyle