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Yes, you can thread the nut on to one side until it's flush with the end of the spindle, then place a length of black pipe over the stud on the other side. Take a powerful bar clamp and place it from the head of the nut to the base of the black pipe on the other side and apply pressure. You need a bar clamp like the one pictured below. It can apply a lot of force. If you spray the pin with penetrating oil, apply the clamp and orient the frame so gravity draws the oil into the pin, it should eventually pop free from the continuous pressure. As a cabinetmaker, I have these already, so it's a technique that costs me nothing.... You can also apply heat to the shaft too.[ATTACH=full]76301[/ATTACH]
Yes, you can thread the nut on to one side until it's flush with the end of the spindle, then place a length of black pipe over the stud on the other side. Take a powerful bar clamp and place it from the head of the nut to the base of the black pipe on the other side and apply pressure. You need a bar clamp like the one pictured below. It can apply a lot of force. If you spray the pin with penetrating oil, apply the clamp and orient the frame so gravity draws the oil into the pin, it should eventually pop free from the continuous pressure. As a cabinetmaker, I have these already, so it's a technique that costs me nothing.... You can also apply heat to the shaft too.
[ATTACH=full]76301[/ATTACH]