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Metalworking (rec.crafts.metalworking) Discuss various aspects of working with metal, such as machining, welding, metal joining, screwing, casting, hardening/tempering, blacksmithing/forging, spinning and hammer work, sheet metal work. |
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#1
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Bob Engelhardt wrote:
I am repairing an aluminum brake (i.e., a brake for bending aluminum house flashing/cladding). It is made of aluminum castings and extrusions, held together with steel bolts and screws. Every single bolt/screw is corroded in place! Not so much rusted as bound-up by corrosion of the aluminum it's in. AND ... all the screw are Phillips head! &!@^&%^%$&*?! If you are having trouble getting those Phillips head screws out, get a hand impact driver. 20 years of working on motorcycles demonstrated the value of these inexpensive tools to me. With a proper fitting driver tip and a few whacks with a hammer, almost any screw will come out. BobH |
#2
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I am repairing an aluminum brake (i.e., a brake for bending aluminum
house flashing/cladding). It is made of aluminum castings and extrusions, held together with steel bolts and screws. Every single bolt/screw is corroded in place! Not so much rusted as bound-up by corrosion of the aluminum it's in. AND ... all the screw are Phillips head! &!@^&%^%$&*?! Anyhow, I WILL get the screws out and when I put it back together I will not use Phillips heads and I will coat them. So, the question is: do I coat them with anti-seize, or with anti-oxidant? If anti-seize, does it matter which form? Thanks, Bob |
#3
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You'd best move up to stainless fasteners. AL does this to steel.
karl |
#4
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On 5/28/2010 3:34 PM, Bob Engelhardt wrote:
I am repairing an aluminum brake (i.e., a brake for bending aluminum house flashing/cladding). It is made of aluminum castings and extrusions, held together with steel bolts and screws. Every single bolt/screw is corroded in place! Not so much rusted as bound-up by corrosion of the aluminum it's in. AND ... all the screw are Phillips head! &!@^&%^%$&*?! Anyhow, I WILL get the screws out and when I put it back together I will not use Phillips heads and I will coat them. So, the question is: do I coat them with anti-seize, or with anti-oxidant? If anti-seize, does it matter which form? Thanks, Bob To remove the screws, a hammer impact driver works best. Get an antiseize with no copper. Look at the ones they use on outboard motors. Am not at home, or would look on the tube at home. |
#5
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Karl Townsend wrote:
You'd best move up to stainless fasteners. AL does this to steel. karl It does it with Stainless fasteners too... -- Richard Lamb |
#6
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bharbour wrote:
Bob Engelhardt wrote: I am repairing an aluminum brake (i.e., a brake for bending aluminum house flashing/cladding). It is made of aluminum castings and extrusions, held together with steel bolts and screws. Every single bolt/screw is corroded in place! Not so much rusted as bound-up by corrosion of the aluminum it's in. AND ... all the screw are Phillips head! &!@^&%^%$&*?! If you are having trouble getting those Phillips head screws out, get a hand impact driver. 20 years of working on motorcycles demonstrated the value of these inexpensive tools to me. With a proper fitting driver tip and a few whacks with a hammer, almost any screw will come out. You beat me to it. That is the tool for this job Top picture. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Impact_driver |
#7
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bharbour wrote:
If you are having trouble getting those Phillips head screws out, get a hand impact driver. 20 years of working on motorcycles demonstrated the value of these inexpensive tools to me. With a proper fitting driver tip and a few whacks with a hammer, almost any screw will come out. I'm glad you said "almost" any screw. I've BEEN whacking on my impact driver & all that's happened is I've bent the "flutes" of the phillips bit! http://home.comcast.net/~bobengelhardt/MangledBit.jpg The part that these screws are in is going to be replaced, so drilling-out is the next step. Bob |
#8
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Karl Townsend wrote:
You'd best move up to stainless fasteners. AL does this to steel. But it's not the steel that's the problem - it's the aluminum. For example, one of the fastenings is a through bolt with a nut. I had to use an impact wrench to loosen the bolt shaft in the smooth hole! This is a nice tool, but definitely not made to be repaired. I think I'll send them a note! Polite, but pointed. Bob |
#9
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![]() "Bob Engelhardt" wrote in message ... I am repairing an aluminum brake (i.e., a brake for bending aluminum house flashing/cladding). It is made of aluminum castings and extrusions, held together with steel bolts and screws. Every single bolt/screw is corroded in place! Not so much rusted as bound-up by corrosion of the aluminum it's in. AND ... all the screw are Phillips head! &!@^&%^%$&*?! Anyhow, I WILL get the screws out and when I put it back together I will not use Phillips heads and I will coat them. So, the question is: do I coat them with anti-seize, or with anti-oxidant? If anti-seize, does it matter which form? Thanks, Bob Get the Aluminum filled anti-seize. If you want, put Heli-coils in all the holes. |
#10
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Buerste wrote:
Get the Aluminum filled anti-seize. Thank you. It does make sense, but so does anti-oxidant G. If you want, put Heli-coils in all the holes. Oh - good idea. I've just never been able to justify the expense of the heli-coil tools. Bob |
#11
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![]() "Bob Engelhardt" wrote in message ... Buerste wrote: Get the Aluminum filled anti-seize. Thank you. It does make sense, but so does anti-oxidant G. If you want, put Heli-coils in all the holes. Oh - good idea. I've just never been able to justify the expense of the heli-coil tools. Bob A threaded insert is another option. http://www.mcmaster.com/#key-locking...nserts/=7aie5u Art |
#12
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![]() "Bob Engelhardt" wrote in message ... Karl Townsend wrote: You'd best move up to stainless fasteners. AL does this to steel. But it's not the steel that's the problem - it's the aluminum. For example, one of the fastenings is a through bolt with a nut. I had to use an impact wrench to loosen the bolt shaft in the smooth hole! This is a nice tool, but definitely not made to be repaired. I think I'll send them a note! Polite, but pointed. Bob Oh, I know what you mean. I've got several AL irrigation pipes that have a steel pipe threaded in for the riser. If you twist on the riser pipe it just takes a layer of AL with it. Karl |
#13
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On Fri, 28 May 2010 19:25:48 -0400, "Buerste"
wrote: "Bob Engelhardt" wrote in message ... I am repairing an aluminum brake (i.e., a brake for bending aluminum house flashing/cladding). It is made of aluminum castings and extrusions, held together with steel bolts and screws. Every single bolt/screw is corroded in place! Not so much rusted as bound-up by corrosion of the aluminum it's in. AND ... all the screw are Phillips head! &!@^&%^%$&*?! Anyhow, I WILL get the screws out and when I put it back together I will not use Phillips heads and I will coat them. So, the question is: do I coat them with anti-seize, or with anti-oxidant? If anti-seize, does it matter which form? Thanks, Bob Get the Aluminum filled anti-seize. If you want, put Heli-coils in all the holes. This site says zinc. Look down the page at the application table. http://www.sacskyranch.com/antiseize.htm Pete Keillor |
#14
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Bob Engelhardt wrote:
Buerste wrote: Get the Aluminum filled anti-seize. Thank you. It does make sense, but so does anti-oxidant G. If you want, put Heli-coils in all the holes. Oh - good idea. I've just never been able to justify the expense of the heli-coil tools. Bob Amend that last statement: Should read " ...tools until now." technomaNge -- I am a racist. I am a racist because I think this should be a country of law abiding citizens instead of a country where people with power get away with anything they want. I am a racist because I want the rights guanteed by the constitution to apply to citizens, non-citizens have a limited set of rights that are granted temporarily. If non-citizens break our laws they go home. I am a racist because I want my taxes to pay for strong defence of this country, not abortions or social programs. I am a racist because I believe any politician foolish enough to ask for a poll before taking a position should follow the results of that poll. People didn't want the healthcare reform, it got passed anyway. I am a racist because I believe a politician should live up to campaign promises. I am a racist because I believe public officials must be responsible for their decisions. I am a racist because I believe tolerance means when you say Allah I can hear it as Jesus and when I say Jesus you can hear it as Allah. If it doesn't work that way on your side, you aren't tolerant. I am a racist because I believe all Americans have equal opportunity. Equalizing wealth is not a function of government. |
#15
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Pete Keillor wrote:
This site says zinc. Look down the page at the application table. http://www.sacskyranch.com/antiseize.htm Pete Keillor Great! Thank you. I Googled "ZINC ANTI-SEIZE" and waded through 15 pages of hits. I found a number of sources for the 1 lb (!) can of Loctite, around $35; sacskyranch has 8 oz for $28; and acehardwareoutlet has a 2 oz size for $4.55. http://www.acehardwareoutlet.com/Pro...?SKU=991000050 Considering that the 1 oz tube of all-purpose anti-seize that I have has lasted me 15 - 20 years, so far, 2 oz should be plenty. Bob |
#16
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Larry Jaques wrote:
On Fri, 28 May 2010 19:16:58 -0400, Bob Engelhardt wrote the following: bharbour wrote: If you are having trouble getting those Phillips head screws out, get a hand impact driver. 20 years of working on motorcycles demonstrated the value of these inexpensive tools to me. With a proper fitting driver tip and a few whacks with a hammer, almost any screw will come out. I'm glad you said "almost" any screw. I've BEEN whacking on my impact driver & all that's happened is I've bent the "flutes" of the phillips bit! http://home.comcast.net/~bobengelhardt/MangledBit.jpg The part that these screws are in is going to be replaced, so drilling-out is the next step. Quite often, when a bolt or screw won't back out, I'll reverse the impact and give it a go that way. The next reverse impact usually pulls it out. It just wanted to be loosened by tightening. Maybe they're feminine screws using feminine logic, I dunno. Plus, just twist a little as you whack, so it generates more downward force compared to the rotational force. Kinda "unloads" the threads a bit more. I'd even try switching back and forth multiple times in addition to the usual penetrating oil tricks. |
#17
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On Fri, 28 May 2010 18:34:37 -0400, Bob Engelhardt
wrote: I am repairing an aluminum brake (i.e., a brake for bending aluminum house flashing/cladding). It is made of aluminum castings and extrusions, held together with steel bolts and screws. Every single bolt/screw is corroded in place! Not so much rusted as bound-up by corrosion of the aluminum it's in. AND ... all the screw are Phillips head! &!@^&%^%$&*?! Anyhow, I WILL get the screws out and when I put it back together I will not use Phillips heads and I will coat them. So, the question is: do I coat them with anti-seize, or with anti-oxidant? If anti-seize, does it matter which form? Thanks, Bob Burndy Penetrox A. It's used on aluminum antenna towers. The metallic particles are zinc. $13.95 for an 8 oz squeeze bottle, a lifetime supply for the likes of we. I'd give a cite but I'm on very slow dial up for a few days. Google Penetrox, you'll find it. I smear a dab of this stuff on ally lightbulb bases before screwing them in. I haven't had a stuck light bulb in a decade. |
#18
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![]() Don Foreman wrote: On Fri, 28 May 2010 18:34:37 -0400, Bob Engelhardt wrote: I am repairing an aluminum brake (i.e., a brake for bending aluminum house flashing/cladding). It is made of aluminum castings and extrusions, held together with steel bolts and screws. Every single bolt/screw is corroded in place! Not so much rusted as bound-up by corrosion of the aluminum it's in. AND ... all the screw are Phillips head! &!@^&%^%$&*?! Anyhow, I WILL get the screws out and when I put it back together I will not use Phillips heads and I will coat them. So, the question is: do I coat them with anti-seize, or with anti-oxidant? If anti-seize, does it matter which form? Thanks, Bob Burndy Penetrox A. It's used on aluminum antenna towers. The metallic particles are zinc. $13.95 for an 8 oz squeeze bottle, a lifetime supply for the likes of we. I'd give a cite but I'm on very slow dial up for a few days. Google Penetrox, you'll find it. I smear a dab of this stuff on ally lightbulb bases before screwing them in. I haven't had a stuck light bulb in a decade. I had to remove stuck bulbs from a pair of fixtures over my fireplace. I put a couple drops of Breakfree on top of the bulbs one eveining, and unscrewed them the next morning with no problems. No telling how long they had been there. The sockets were brass, and the bulb bases were cheap aluminum. -- Anyone wanting to run for any political office in the US should have to have a DD214, and a honorable discharge. |
#19
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On May 29, 1:03*am, Don Foreman wrote:
On Fri, 28 May 2010 18:34:37 -0400, Bob Engelhardt ... Burndy Penetrox A. *It's used on aluminum antenna towers. *... Ox-Gard OX-100 also works well on aluminum antennas with stainless hardware. LPS-3 has kept steel bolts from freezing in aluminum on the engine of my 20 year old truck. It seems to protect zinc from rainwater quite well too. It's a little less effective against road salt and tannic acid from oak leaves. jsw |
#20
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Larry Jaques wrote:
Quite often, when a bolt or screw won't back out, I'll reverse the impact and give it a go that way. The next reverse impact usually pulls it out. ... Thanks - I've heard of this but don't generally do it, so I tried it. Several times, on 2 different screws - no good. I'm getting the drill! Bob |
#21
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Gentlemen, we seem to have convergence.
This has been an interesting thread - replies that said use zinc anti-seize and another or 2 for anti-ox (e.g., Penetrox). Looking up Penetrox, I find that it's zinc based! As is my bottle of Noalox. The MSDS for Noalox shows that it's only 20% zinc, so I'd say zinc anti-seize would be better, but still basically the same thing. Thanks to all, Bob |
#22
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![]() "Karl Townsend" wrote in message anews.com... You'd best move up to stainless fasteners. AL does this to steel. karl Karl: I had a sailboat out in the Marshall Islands and the SS bolts thru the aluminum mast and cross tubes quickly corroded. The mild steel bolts actually lasted longer but in the end corroded also. The zinc based anti-seize made a big difference. stu Fields |
#23
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On May 28, 6:34*pm, Bob Engelhardt wrote:
I am repairing an aluminum brake (i.e., a brake for bending aluminum house flashing/cladding). *It is made of aluminum castings and extrusions, held together with steel bolts and screws. *Every single bolt/screw is corroded in place! *Not so much rusted as bound-up by corrosion of the aluminum it's in. *AND ... all the screw are Phillips head! &!@^&%^%$&*?! Anyhow, I WILL get the screws out and when I put it back together I will not use Phillips heads and I will coat them. *So, the question is: do I coat them with anti-seize, or with anti-oxidant? *If anti-seize, does it matter which form? Thanks, Bob I spoke to a gentleman who runs an outboard motor shop. Outboards are typically made of aluminum castings with stainless fasteners. He recommended to me that I use pipe dope to coat the threads instead of anti-seize. I used Rectorseal, and the next time I dissasembled my motor it came apart easily. Good luck, Andy |
#24
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On May 28, 4:34*pm, Bob Engelhardt wrote:
I am repairing an aluminum brake (i.e., a brake for bending aluminum house flashing/cladding). *It is made of aluminum castings and extrusions, held together with steel bolts and screws. *Every single bolt/screw is corroded in place! *Not so much rusted as bound-up by corrosion of the aluminum it's in. *AND ... all the screw are Phillips head! &!@^&%^%$&*?! Anyhow, I WILL get the screws out and when I put it back together I will not use Phillips heads and I will coat them. *So, the question is: do I coat them with anti-seize, or with anti-oxidant? *If anti-seize, does it matter which form? Thanks, Bob In my experience, anti-sieze is used on fasteners, anti-oxidant is used between aluminum electrical components. I've used teflon pipe dope, like the other poster, on steel fasteners going into aluminum car components, it worked. It's a dielectric material, so keeps the corrosion couple from forming, also excludes liquid and humidity, which I think is what really does the trick. Probably could use chewing gum or roofing tar and get the same effect. Stan |
#25
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On May 29, 8:38*pm, wrote:
In my experience, anti-sieze is used on fasteners, anti-oxidant is used between aluminum electrical components. *I've used teflon pipe dope Yes! The problem with different-metal fasteners is partly electrolytic corrosion, and you can't depend on grease (it squeezes out) or anti-sieze (which has particles that don't squeeze out, but which aren't gonna block moisture penetration or oxygen). Soft solids like teflon are like grease except don't squeeze out or wash away. I like the teflon tape, myself, but the pipe dope should work similarly. |
#26
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DanG wrote:
Don't I remember there being something pretty simple that would eat the steel bolts and not affect the aluminum? It may have been alum. ... Oh, yeah - I remembered nitric acid would dissolve steel, but not aluminum, and alum does, too. In my case, though, I didn't need to preserve the aluminum, so drilling out made the most sense. Easy & fast - I should have just done it in the 1st place. I've tried the penetrants, the home made Ed's red, electrolysis, hand impacts, welded on nuts. I guess we all have. It is always a joy when you get any one of them to work, ... A joy, indeed - especially satisfying to have avoided making things worse. It is always satisfying to solve or save or resurrect someone's old piece of junk. There is always the luxury of saying before launching in, "it doesn't work now, does it. I guess we can't hurt it very much. Be aware there are no guarantees." Ah, "resurrecting" - I love resurrecting. Just helped a fella get out some bolts on an 85 Subaru PU catalytic converter. Ended up drilling out the thoroughly rusted/corroded bolts in the shop. Guessed center pretty well, the old stuff never let go until I used SAE tap in the metric holes ( I don't own metric) . He was able to buy new #10's and reuse the holes. With any luck, he has skills and/or tools that you don't & will reciprocate. Bob |
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