mindofone
Member
That's what I was afraid of. Ok, new challenge then. Thanks!
This, I hate to have to say, is one of those not-nice 'theres no free lunch' situations.
That part can be mended, but the only reasonably good way to do it would be to clean up the ragged scars around that tapped hole with a little carbide rotary file, then braze in to fill the scars. Once cool, file to flatness, use the jaw itself as a jig to locate the hole, and drill with the drill size for a heli-coil tap. Tap for heli-coil, run the insert, and you'll have a sound repair.
In short, if you don't do welding/brazing, get someone who does to help you.
You could opt to 'mickey-mouse' the job by de-rusting the part, cleaning whatever existing threads may still be there with a tap, then run a wax (resist) coated bolt into the hole, and pack with Devcon or equivalent steel powder/epoxy putty. That wouldn't work very well, to be sure, but it might be 'better than nothing' for gentle use, or display.
cheers
Carla



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