Already gone and bought a kit for it, but managed to screw up the install and made things worse, so its now either this works, i pay a machine shop to do it (which would probably cost me close to what a new oil pan would) or i need a new (to me) oil pan. I'm happy to admit to the theory that there is such a thing as too much heat and too big a flame, so will be doing this very carefully/increasing the heat a bit at a time until i get it right. Esp with a flame that goes up to 1900'C.ducati_paul wrote:can't you helicoil it? Aluminium Brazing is a pain in the arse, just when you think you have the right amount of heat in it it turns to a molten blob and all collapsesdone it YEEEEEEEEEEEARS ago during my welding apprenticeship.
Exactly my theory, besides i figure the cost of buying the blowtorch as just buying another tool that can be handy later on if not needed here. At worst i've bought some tools now that i can use for plumbing jobs later and an oil pan, at best i have some new tools.aggerz wrote:SpookyI actually ordered some of those rods last week hopefully they turn up soon if they do I'll give them a go next weekend.
Seems like not much support for them here but I figured for the cost ($30) i would give them a bash, not a big loss if it doesn't work out.
Jonno wrote:Can you drill n tap for a larger size plug?
Exactlyoldman wrote:I didn't mean to sound negative about your project, you may very well succeed in your first attempt and it sounds like your pan is screwed anyway.
No problem, i at least know to look out for the parent aluminium going shiny as *ANY* more heat at that point and it will meltoldman wrote:Just, as earlier mentioned, be careful of the temp as you can go from ok to a puddle of shit in about a nano second.
No problem, it was worth a shot anyway.oldman wrote:I still could not pull up the video. My computer is old, just like me and the CPU and memory will not accept the Adobe 10.??? upgrade. Thanks anyway.
Well one reason i want to use this stuff is that the hardness on the brinell scale is more-so than aluminium, so if i do it right, the thread is going to be stronger than when the part was first cast.oldman wrote:Another way to do it would be to solder it with acid core solder. I believe the melting temp of solder is very low and the acid core would take care of any cleaning issues in the area you are welding. I haven't tried this on aluminum but it works on cast iron. It's not as strong as the original metal but does hold things together ok.
My excursion with screwing the helicoil tap has shot the crap out of that idea. There's also insufficient metal there for me to safely take it up beyond a 16mm plug. Which is only 0.6mm larger than the size of the helicoil insert which i mangled the tap for, so insufficient metal there again.Jonno wrote:Can you drill n tap for a larger size plug?
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