lilscorpion
Well-known member
Man I do dig aluminum repairs like this. Nice job!


Very impressive repair!Nice repair Mike.
Nice real world repair. Looks stout.
*Like*
Awesome repair!
Great repair work as always.
jhn9840
John
Very impressive repair!
I thought oh **** when I saw welding had gone over to the case side! But then I forgot you had a mill, and a surface plate to lap the casing true!
I like the brass plug which should hopefully prevent a recurrence of cross threading.
I’d never even heard of Formax until this morning. My grandpa told me to run the carbide bit across some ivory soap prior to grinding aluminum. Works like a champ, but dang.
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Great job Mike! Thanks for all the pictures to go along with the description, it’s very helpful!
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I'm glad to see forum members helping one another. We should do it more often here.
Nice work as always Mike!
Is this the Formax product you are using? If so, what grade is it and where do you get it from. https://formaxmfg.com/product/tallow-based-grease-sticks/
I was hoping you would do the case repair so we could see how it was done the right way!
Thanks for taking the time to post.
Kevin
Looking good Mike. Not sure what it is about that repair but it was sure satisfying to read. Probably that you've got all the required tools and it just flowed, no hackery required.

Now I have about 32-36 inches for whatever may come in to the shop in the near future...…..

Yes, but is "it" already ordered??![]()

You'll have to wait and see what fills that spot in a few days.![]()

I lost in the guessing what is in the big box game, but here goes.
Cold Saw
Kevin
I say, something that “plunges”.
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It was either that or you get 50 suggestions from GJ on what you NEED to spend your money on.![]()


t I have commented on in the past as wanting
I'll take "give me a brake for $200 Alex".

And you would be correct......![]()

And you thought I haven’t been paying attention![]()

Dang, I was all ready to post brake (I do remember you mentioning wanting a 48"). Mine is a 4" and it turned out to be so useful I left it in the garage and bought a 5" for the workshop down the hill. Mine are both Grizzlys but I bet yours is a Baleigh.
I was going to say dungarees. Heard you have been trimming down doing Pilates and yoga. Lol.
I just got a nice 24” finger break and has come in handy a couple of times already.
Shorty Korte
Always remember quality in QST
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A brake was my guess before Cam beat me to it, I'm going to guess a press brake though to get a bit more specific.
JB
Diacro has some nice stuff. One of their 24" manual press brakes would be handy in your shop as well...![]()
Is this the Formax product you are using? If so, what grade is it and where do you get it from. https://formaxmfg.com/product/tallow-based-grease-sticks/
I was hoping you would do the case repair so we could see how it was done the right way!
Thanks for taking the time to post.
Kevin


For the correct answer, I bought a DiAcro 24" finger brake that appears to be in nice condition but far from new. I will need to fabricate a stand for it as it didn't have one.
This way I get a small finger brake that takes up less floor space yet. I know a 48" brake would have a larger work envelope but most of my projects are on the smaller side anyways so I think the 24" DiAcro will work perfectly for my needs. From my research I have learned that as far as small brakes go, the DiAcro is one of the nicest/best for a small shop.
Nice score on the DiAcro! They made some of the nicest fab equipment on the market, overbuilt/engineered in a lot of ways. I'm looking forward to seeing it and the stand you build.


Great video on the case repair!![]()

"New" tools are never a bad thing!
I've decided when one builds a shop, he needs another one built the same size for "cold storage," that way you can keep the work space and store extra toys....just thinking out loud here.