I am sooo smart. At least some people tell me so but sometimes I’m not so sure. Read on if you want to bask in my blazing intellect. :person_facepalming:
I decided to use a different method to tap the battery tube threads than the big brass nut I used on the copper threads so I cut a piece of 1” PVC and cut a slice from it so that it would fit inside another section. I needed to ream the inside of the inner piece so the brass battery tube would also fit. Once that was done there was a gap at the ends because the PVC is thicker than the brass collar pieces. So I cut a ring to fill the gap and keep it all centered in the outer PVC tube. Then I tapped and taped a short piece of aluminum tube to also center the tap in the PVC tube. Here it is all put together. Now I just need to grab it somehow. I did the tail end first since the threads are shallower at that end. There’s a 5/8” bit wrapped in tape shoved inside to prevent it from crushing. So far so good. Then I switched it around to do the other end which gets ~20 mm of threading. For awhile it went just fine but then the brass began to slip inside the PVC so I put the whole thing in the pipe jaws of the 5” bench vise. It still slipped some and each time it did I tightened the vise a bit more. All good right ? Wrong! The pipe jaws corrugated the brass. I tried annealing it and rolling it, annealing it and pressing another pipe through it. Finally annealed it one too many times just a bit too hot and effed up the seam and rippled the tube. Trashed two days work with my smarts. I already have replacement parts started and an idea how to prevent a reoccurrence but this sucks the big one. Small update
So many details of construction to work out and it is a real bummer when something goes wrong after so much time being invested. Good luck with V.2 :+1:
I think I spent as much of the evening trying to fix it as it took to mess it up in the first place. Fortunately it’s not a case of something I can’t do just something I did wrong. An epic fail would involve harder to replace items like the wood. With any luck I’ll be able to improve MkII.
Ouch… I’ve used the nut guide method in the past on a pontiac engine build tapping to replace push-in rocker arm studs with screw-in studs intended for a big block chevy (after adding helicoils). After damage from a saboteur (one of my brothers) a big block chevy rocker arm broke but the studs held. 700+ hp engine. 1958-1963 big block pontiac engine converted to hei and coupled to a 400 turbo trans in a 77 firebird formula. It produced enough torque you could feel the car twist.
Thumbs fine, that’s just the elastic bandage wadding me up. After the first 24 hours the wrist is pretty stiff and ~50% oversized. Feels like a stubbed toe right in the joint. Another day and it will be more colorful, already showing a bit yellow.
Me too. I passed out walking to stick it in ice water. Came to ~20’ from my last conscious position. Took about half an hour to pull myself together. First 24 hours was ice packs an now I’m alternating with compression bandage and heat. Wilma has me locked out and I can’t reach my beer though. :cry: