DIYbanter

DIYbanter (https://www.diybanter.com/)
-   Metalworking (https://www.diybanter.com/metalworking/)
-   -   looking for particular form of blind rivet (https://www.diybanter.com/metalworking/217674-looking-particular-form-blind-rivet.html)

_[_2_] October 16th 07 01:24 PM

looking for particular form of blind rivet
 
Had to drill a bunch of these out to get the body panels off my car. The
look like a normal (large) pop-rivet on the outside, but on the inside the
cylinder split into 4 tongues that curled outwards. I suppose the idea is
to give a larger bearing surface on the blind side.

I'll need about 50 of 'em.

[email protected] October 16th 07 01:40 PM

looking for particular form of blind rivet
 
On Oct 16, 8:24 am, _
wrote:
Had to drill a bunch of these out to get the body panels off my car. The
look like a normal (large) pop-rivet on the outside, but on the inside the
cylinder split into 4 tongues that curled outwards. I suppose the idea is
to give a larger bearing surface on the blind side.

I'll need about 50 of 'em.



Hanson has "T rivets"
http://www.hansonrivet.com/w33.htm

and "Tri-rivets"
http://www.hansonrivet.com/w36.htm

Not sure those are generic names.

Or did you mean a drive rivet?


Dave


_[_2_] October 16th 07 04:50 PM

looking for particular form of blind rivet
 
On Tue, 16 Oct 2007 05:40:34 -0700, wrote:

On Oct 16, 8:24 am, _
wrote:
Had to drill a bunch of these out to get the body panels off my car. The
look like a normal (large) pop-rivet on the outside, but on the inside the
cylinder split into 4 tongues that curled outwards. I suppose the idea is
to give a larger bearing surface on the blind side.

I'll need about 50 of 'em.



Hanson has "T rivets"
http://www.hansonrivet.com/w33.htm


That's them.

and "Tri-rivets"
http://www.hansonrivet.com/w36.htm


Those look nicer.

Has anyone use these enough to recommend one variety over another?

Roger Shoaf October 17th 07 02:54 PM

looking for particular form of blind rivet
 

"_" wrote in message
...
On Tue, 16 Oct 2007 05:40:34 -0700, wrote:

On Oct 16, 8:24 am, _
wrote:
Had to drill a bunch of these out to get the body panels off my car.

The
look like a normal (large) pop-rivet on the outside, but on the inside

the
cylinder split into 4 tongues that curled outwards. I suppose the idea

is
to give a larger bearing surface on the blind side.

I'll need about 50 of 'em.



Hanson has "T rivets"
http://www.hansonrivet.com/w33.htm


That's them.

and "Tri-rivets"
http://www.hansonrivet.com/w36.htm


Those look nicer.

Has anyone use these enough to recommend one variety over another?


The T rivets are used where you need maximum strength, the Tri rivets are
used in soft material like plastic to prevent pull through.

I have seen the T rivets used to hold window regulators in a car door, and
if I recall these were 1/4" diameter and you needed the pop rivet tool that
looks like a tree branch lopper to set them.

--

Roger Shoaf

About the time I had mastered getting the toothpaste back in the tube, then
they come up with this striped stuff.



_[_2_] October 17th 07 04:22 PM

looking for particular form of blind rivet
 
On Wed, 17 Oct 2007 06:54:19 -0700, Roger Shoaf wrote:

"_" wrote in message
...
On Tue, 16 Oct 2007 05:40:34 -0700, wrote:

On Oct 16, 8:24 am, _
wrote:
Had to drill a bunch of these out to get the body panels off my car.

The
look like a normal (large) pop-rivet on the outside, but on the inside

the
cylinder split into 4 tongues that curled outwards. I suppose the idea

is
to give a larger bearing surface on the blind side.

I'll need about 50 of 'em.


Hanson has "T rivets"
http://www.hansonrivet.com/w33.htm


That's them.

and "Tri-rivets"
http://www.hansonrivet.com/w36.htm


Those look nicer.

Has anyone use these enough to recommend one variety over another?


The T rivets are used where you need maximum strength, the Tri rivets are
used in soft material like plastic to prevent pull through.

I have seen the T rivets used to hold window regulators in a car door, and
if I recall these were 1/4" diameter and you needed the pop rivet tool that
looks like a tree branch lopper to set them.


Mine were used to hold FRP panels together. I think I'll get 3/16 T ones,
and hope that my good but not tree-lopper-size rivet tool will work.

Jeff Wisnia October 17th 07 10:43 PM

looking for particular form of blind rivet
 
_ wrote:


snipped


I have seen the T rivets used to hold window regulators in a car door, and
if I recall these were 1/4" diameter and you needed the pop rivet tool that
looks like a tree branch lopper to set them.



Mine were used to hold FRP panels together. I think I'll get 3/16 T ones,
and hope that my good but not tree-lopper-size rivet tool will work.



If it doesn't, see if you can get ahold of one of these "lazy tongs"
style riveters:

http://tinyurl.com/36gqka

I had the opportunity to use one of those long ago and it was the cat's
pajamas for effortless pop rivet setting. Much easier than trying to
clench your hand on the levers of the more common pliers style tool.

Someday I'll get the time to sit down and figure out how they work. I've
got a feeling a little analysis will show it's the equivalent of a two
handled "branch lopper" type with handles equal to the combined length
of the lazy tongs links. (Or maybe it's half those links.)

Jeff
--
Jeffry Wisnia
(W1BSV + Brass Rat '57 EE)
The speed of light is 1.8*10^12 furlongs per fortnight.



All times are GMT +1. The time now is 10:53 AM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004 - 2014 DIYbanter