Another trick is to use the one of old time blacksmiths---Dig a hole in the
ground
big enough to hold the new or repaired part --heat some sand-- dump some in the
hole-
put the repaired part on top of hot sand--cover with hot sand then bury the
whole
mess-- come back after everything has cooled down. wmts
---- Original Message ----
From: Albaugh, Neil
Date: Wed 4/10/02 10:07
To: 'Bob Bridge', land-speed@autox.team.net
Subject: RE: Tool Making / Welding
I believe it-- that's a stress- relief method.
Regards, Neil from the Sonora Desert
-----Original Message-----
From: Bob Bridge [mailto:saltracer@shaw.ca]
Sent: Tuesday, April 09, 2002 11:21 PM
To: land-speed@autox.team.net
Subject: Re: Tool Making / Welding
This might sound like a tale but is true. Some years ago I had a sport bike
that had a brake puck hanging up just a very small amount. It would
slightly warp the light weight vented disk. Its a long story how I came
across this idea but after fixing the the caliper, I put the disk in the
freezer, then in the oven at 500, back in the freezer, back in the oven and
that disk is good to this day. This doesn't really relate to your problem
but thought it might interest some.
Bob from Canada
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