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Engine hardware, fasteners, and fittings are the parts that hold everything together — literally. This category covers over 930 components including cylinder head bolt sets, oil drain plugs, core plugs, crankshaft and camshaft repair sleeves, valve cover grommets, connecting rod bolts, and dozens of specialized plugs and fittings used throughout the engine. These parts fail from corrosion, overtorquing, heat cycling, or simple age. A stripped oil drain plug or weeping core plug might seem minor, but both can escalate quickly into significant engine damage. When buying, torque-to-yield head bolts should always be replaced, not reused — check your factory service manual before assuming a bolt is reusable. For repair sleeves (crankshaft, camshaft, harmonic balancer), verify the journal diameter and sleeve OD precisely; even a 0.001" mismatch affects sealing. OEM is worth the premium on critical fasteners like rod bolts and main bearing cap bolts; aftermarket is generally fine for drain plugs, caps, and covers.
Signs you need replacement
- Oil seeping around the valve cover or oil pan: Deteriorated valve cover grommets or a loose/cross-threaded drain plug are common culprits — grommets harden and crack with age, typically needing replacement every 60,000–100,000 miles or whenever the cover is removed.
- Coolant weeping from the block or timing cover: Failed core plugs (freeze plugs) corrode from the inside out, especially in vehicles that have run low-quality or unmaintained coolant. A rust-colored wet spot on the block face is a clear indicator.
- Crankshaft or camshaft seal leaking after a fresh seal replacement: If the shaft journal is grooved where the old seal ran, a repair sleeve is required — a new seal on a worn journal will leak again within miles.
- Oil drain plug spins without resistance or won't torque properly: A stripped drain plug or damaged pan threads needs immediate attention; a cross-threaded or oversized plug is a short-term fix that usually leads to an oil change mess and potential dry-start damage.
- Engine vibration or accessory belt wear after front seal work: A scored harmonic balancer snout needs a repair sleeve to restore the sealing surface — without it, the new front seal will fail prematurely and vibration can affect belt-driven accessories.
- Head gasket or engine rebuild in progress: Torque-to-yield cylinder head bolts are one-time-use parts and must be replaced any time the head is removed, no exceptions — reusing stretched TTY bolts risks improper clamping load and repeat head gasket failure.
Frequently asked questions
- Do I need to replace cylinder head bolts every time I remove the head? Most modern engines use torque-to-yield (TTY) head bolts, which stretch during installation and cannot be reliably reused. Check your factory service manual — if the spec calls for an angle-torque method (e.g., 30 ft-lb + 90°), replace the bolts. Older engines with non-TTY bolts can often be reused if they measure within spec.
- Are aftermarket oil drain plugs and core plugs reliable, or should I stick with OEM? For drain plugs, aftermarket options from Dorman or Febi are widely used without issues — just match the thread size, pitch, and seat style (tapered vs. flat washer) exactly. For core plugs, brass or stainless aftermarket plugs are actually more corrosion-resistant than OEM steel. On critical fasteners like rod bolts or main cap bolts, OEM or ARP is strongly recommended.
- How much do engine hardware repairs typically cost, and what should I replace at the same time? Parts alone range from under $5 for a single drain plug to $80–$150 for a complete cylinder head bolt set on a V6 or V8. When replacing core plugs, inspect all plugs in the block — labor to access one often covers several nearby. During head work, replace head bolts, dowel pins, and valve cover grommets in the same service to avoid repeat disassembly.














































