:lol: if you don't know what you're doing, then stop doing it until you find the right way to do it
I better stop working on my car then. lol
Most of the work that I have done, I had no experience, zero, zilch, naughta...
Did you soak the bolts with pb blast or WD 40 over night?
It's recommended you do that for any bolt you're going to take off.
Makes the job alot easier.
I was going to suggest that
Soaked them with PB blaster. Some of the bolts came right off, but the one on the strut did not. Just snapped the head right off. The single bolt on the camber kit was moving with a breaker bar, saw the threads moving, but just snapped midway down the bolt. I might just have to have a shop with the right tools get those out and replaced. Then once all the new bolts are in start over again. Sucks, but I guess that's what happens to a 15 year old car that's in NY.
That's what Im always afraid of when working with rusted bolts/nuts
Try the route of an E-Z out and see if you can get the bolt stud out. If your not familiar with the tool, go to a hardware store for the tool. Its a drill bit that the threads going in the opposite direction. Its not for drilling, its for broken bolt stud that you cant get out. First, you drill a hole in the center of the bolt stud. Use the E-Z out and thread it into the pre drilled hole(making sure its not bigger than the E-Z out) counterclockwise, its eating into the bolt and will get tighter. Just keep turning and pray that the bolt breaks loose.
If you can get the suspension parts that has the broken bolts off the car. It should make it a bit easier to get the bolt stud out. Soak part of the suspension with the broken bolt in strong solvents(something that eats through rust). Im sure this is what the shop would do, if they don't convince you to buy replacement parts
This is just an idea for a cheaper route, unless your already set on taking it to a shop