Update on the Tig brazing deal:
I'm getting closer to doing the real thing, which will be brazing on bronze and then turning threads on a shaft it to meet/match a 1-1/8"-12 section.
I grabbed a piece of 1" brass and put some corn cob holders on each end ( see the picture). Its sitting on the motor stand with the tig torch zip tied to a cheap indicator holder.
That lets me rotate the corn cob with one hand while I feed wire with the other hand, and the tig torch stays at the optimal distance.
I went alright- I started with 3/32 silicon bronze like last time, lots of soot and brushing it off like last time.
I found in my box of filler wires a short length of Harris 15 filler and tried that for filling in the voids.
I haven't used it before, but It really wets out great- way better than silicon or phosphor bronze, no soot either.
Now and then I find them discarded in the neighborhood, which is crazy considering what a new tube costs.
Threading went fine, next is the real thing!
I'm getting closer to doing the real thing, which will be brazing on bronze and then turning threads on a shaft it to meet/match a 1-1/8"-12 section.
I grabbed a piece of 1" brass and put some corn cob holders on each end ( see the picture). Its sitting on the motor stand with the tig torch zip tied to a cheap indicator holder.
That lets me rotate the corn cob with one hand while I feed wire with the other hand, and the tig torch stays at the optimal distance.
I went alright- I started with 3/32 silicon bronze like last time, lots of soot and brushing it off like last time.
I found in my box of filler wires a short length of Harris 15 filler and tried that for filling in the voids.
I haven't used it before, but It really wets out great- way better than silicon or phosphor bronze, no soot either.
Now and then I find them discarded in the neighborhood, which is crazy considering what a new tube costs.
Threading went fine, next is the real thing!
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