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Randy H. November 4th 05 03:15 AM

Cast alluminum
 
Hi all,

I had a little accident involving a fork lift and one of my glass lathes.
End result was one of the cranking wheels to move the carriage was broken.
The spokes broke free of the hub. I believe it is cast aluminum.

What would be the best way to fix it other than something like JB Weld?

Thanks,

Randy Hansen




DeepDiver November 4th 05 04:23 AM

Cast alluminum
 
"Randy H." wrote in message
news:UhAaf.578$zu6.180@fed1read04...

I had a little accident involving a fork lift and one of my glass lathes.


What is a glass lathe?


End result was one of the cranking wheels to move the carriage was broken.
The spokes broke free of the hub. I believe it is cast aluminum.

What would be the best way to fix it other than something like JB Weld?


You could probably have it TIG welded (or even MIG welded) if, in fact, it
is aluminum and not some kind of pot metal. If your shop is capable, you
could machine a new one. Or you could buy a generic replacement.

- Michael



ATP* November 4th 05 05:07 AM

Cast alluminum
 

"DeepDiver" wrote in message
...
"Randy H." wrote in message
news:UhAaf.578$zu6.180@fed1read04...

I had a little accident involving a fork lift and one of my glass lathes.


What is a glass lathe?


A lathe for turning glass as it is blown. One of the local metalworkers
works as a mechanical engineer and gave me a tour of his facility. That was
one of the cooler toys they had.

http://www.littonengr.com/Lathes.html



DeepDiver November 4th 05 06:14 AM

Cast alluminum
 
"ATP*" wrote in message
...

"DeepDiver" wrote in message
...
"Randy H." wrote in message
news:UhAaf.578$zu6.180@fed1read04...

I had a little accident involving a fork lift and one of my glass
lathes.


What is a glass lathe?


A lathe for turning glass as it is blown. One of the local metalworkers
works as a mechanical engineer and gave me a tour of his facility. That
was one of the cooler toys they had.

http://www.littonengr.com/Lathes.html


Cool. Thanks for the info and the link. Too bad the images are small and
there are no photos of the lathes in operation.



Harold and Susan Vordos November 4th 05 08:27 AM

Cast alluminum
 

"Randy H." wrote in message
news:UhAaf.578$zu6.180@fed1read04...
Hi all,

I had a little accident involving a fork lift and one of my glass lathes.
End result was one of the cranking wheels to move the carriage was broken.
The spokes broke free of the hub. I believe it is cast aluminum.

What would be the best way to fix it other than something like JB Weld?

Thanks,

Randy Hansen


Given the chance you can place a piece of support material around the broken
spokes, your idea is actually quite a good one. In a moment of stupidity,
I tipped over my rather trashy Crapsman overarm saw, which has been
indispensable in building our shop and house. The handle broke off the
saw when it tipped over, so I repaired it exactly as you suggested, with a
couple small strips of aluminum added to each side of the handle to lend
strength. It's been that way for a few years now and has worked perfectly,
although it's not very pretty. That's OK, I'm not, either. :-)

Welding by any means is likely to result in a rather crooked running wheel,
although with care it might turn out fine. You would have complete control
using epoxy, which, I think, in this instance, would be my first choice. I
keep thinking of a small piece of tubing placed over each of the spokes, if
you get my drift.

Good luck!

Harold



Nick Müller November 4th 05 11:00 AM

Cast alluminum
 
DeepDiver wrote:

Too bad the images are small


"Click for larger photo" worked here.

To come back to the subject:
Yes, welding MIG/TIG would be OK. No big load (as long as fork lifts are
not involved).

Nick
--
Motor Modelle // Engine Models
http://www.motor-manufaktur.de
DIY-DRO - YADRO - Eigenbau-Digitalanzeige

DeepDiver November 4th 05 01:10 PM

Cast alluminum
 
""Nick Müller"" wrote in message
...
DeepDiver wrote:

Too bad the images are small


"Click for larger photo" worked here.


I was referring to the "larger" photos! Perhaps I should have been more
clear: too bad the images are not of higher resolution and more detailed.

- Michael




~Roy November 4th 05 05:16 PM

Cast alluminum
 
I would try TIG'ing it, or put it together using JB weld, use it as a
pattern and have a backyard metalcaster type cast you a new
one........


On Thu, 3 Nov 2005 19:15:46 -0800, "Randy H."
wrote:

===Hi all,
===
===I had a little accident involving a fork lift and one of my glass lathes.
===End result was one of the cranking wheels to move the carriage was broken.
===The spokes broke free of the hub. I believe it is cast aluminum.
===
===What would be the best way to fix it other than something like JB Weld?
===
===Thanks,
===
===Randy Hansen
===
===



==============================================
Put some color in your cheeks...garden naked!
"The original frugal ponder"
~~~~ }((((o ~~~~~~ }{{{{o ~~~~~~~ }(((((o

[email protected] November 4th 05 10:25 PM

Cast alluminum
 

Randy H. wrote:
Hi all,

I had a little accident involving a fork lift and one of my glass lathes.
End result was one of the cranking wheels to move the carriage was broken.
The spokes broke free of the hub. I believe it is cast aluminum.

What would be the best way to fix it other than something like JB Weld?


You may want to look at
http://www.use-enco.com/
and search for "handwheels". MSC, Mcmaster-Carr, and
several other vendors also carry them. It may be simpler
just to replace it with a new one that is similar.
--Glenn Lyford


Brian Lawson November 4th 05 11:39 PM

Cast alluminum
 
On Thu, 3 Nov 2005 19:15:46 -0800, "Randy H."
wrote:

Hi all,

I had a little accident involving a fork lift and one of my glass lathes.
End result was one of the cranking wheels to move the carriage was broken.
The spokes broke free of the hub. I believe it is cast aluminum.

What would be the best way to fix it other than something like JB Weld?

Thanks,

Randy Hansen


Hey Randy,

Does it look like any of these??

https://reidecom.reidtool.com/xephr/edit/CATEGORY?query=*START_WITH_ID=3532

Bob Engelhardt November 5th 05 12:42 AM

Cast alluminum
 
Randy H. wrote:
.... cranking wheels to move the carriage was broken.
The spokes broke free of the hub. I believe it is cast aluminum.

....

If it is aluminum, not pot metal, and you don't have a welder, you could
use that aluminum soldering stuff ("Alumiweld" or something like that).
Works with a propane torch, MAPP is better. Kinda pricey, though.
If you could scrounge up a little zinc, it would probably work just as
well (the alumiweld is mostly zinc). A roofer might have some zinc scraps.

Or just use JBWeld, there isn't much force on the wheel.

Bob

Martin H. Eastburn November 5th 05 02:54 AM

Cast alluminum
 
Once there was a product called Liquid Al and Liquid Steel. In a tube.
See if you can find it in a hardware store.

Martin

Martin Eastburn
@ home at Lions' Lair with our computer lionslair at consolidated dot net
NRA LOH, NRA Life
NRA Second Amendment Task Force Charter Founder



Randy H. wrote:
Hi all,

I had a little accident involving a fork lift and one of my glass lathes.
End result was one of the cranking wheels to move the carriage was broken.
The spokes broke free of the hub. I believe it is cast aluminum.

What would be the best way to fix it other than something like JB Weld?

Thanks,

Randy Hansen




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Randy H. November 6th 05 08:16 AM

Cast alluminum
 
Thanks for all the help. It's much appreciated!





Chas November 6th 05 10:22 AM

Cast alluminum
 

"Randy H." wrote in message
news:UhAaf.578$zu6.180@fed1read04...
Hi all,

I had a little accident involving a fork lift and one of my glass lathes.
End result was one of the cranking wheels to move the carriage was broken.
The spokes broke free of the hub. I believe it is cast aluminum.

What would be the best way to fix it other than something like JB Weld?

Thanks,

Randy Hansen


My choice would be OA fusion welding using 5% silicon filler rod. Should not
be difficult if carefully pre-heated and supported.
--
Regards,

Chas.

(To E-Mail me replace 'xxx' with tango papa golf)





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