Anyways, it's spring now, weather's getting warm, thought I'd do a spring tune up on my bike and get it ready for the season. I always change my oil, once a year, or every 1000 miles, whichever comes first.
Now I've ALWAYS done all the maintenance on my buddy and never had any issues. Last time I did an oil change, I installed the magnetic Prima drain bolt kit on my buddy 125, seemed like a smart choice! Well...taking it off wasn't so easy. I've always used a 17mm 12-point socket, and it chewed the new prima plug up in one turn. Every corner of the bolt was fully rounded right off. NEVER HAD THIS ISSUE ON THE OEM OIL DRAIN PLUG.
I went to Sears, bought a hexagon 6 point 17mm socket, and that didn't work either, it wouldn't properly grip the bolt.
Now I'm screwed. I've got a scooter which needs an oil change badly, and no way of draining the oil.
Called Metro Scooter and Dave said they could probably fix it for me, but that's an hour and a half away, and I can't ride my scooter in it's current condition...
I called a local motorcycle repair shop, and the guy said he's done it a hundred times and fixed stripped bolt heads on bikes, BUT he wasn't free to look at mine for quite some time...
While googling generically for "Removing stripped bolt heads", I came across this magical tool you can buy at any local Sears hardware store.
http://www.sears.com/shc/s/p_10153_1260 ... 000P?mv=rr
I decided to buy a set for the 17mm socket piece, and test if it really would work. Came home and placed it onto the stripped bolt head, and used a rubber hammer to lightly pound it into position. Connected my ratcheting wrench, and in one shot, the bolt came right off cleanly.

You can see from above, the left good prima plug, and the right, bad plug. The right Plug was from ONE turn of a 12 point 17mm socket. It's also a bit chewed up looking from the Craftsman Bolt-Out I used on it, it "eats" into the damaged bolt to get a better grip.
Here's another close up of the bolt-out socket I bought.

Hope my problem can help people in the future. I thought I was screwed, but $20 worth of tools, and DIY handyman skills saved my buddy!
So lesson learned, never trust 12 point sockets ever again, use only 6 points cause cheap metal will strip easier with 12.