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How to Get Flange Perfectly Flat

scratchedup

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Aug 13, 2012
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Fayetteville, GA
This is a 3" V-Band set up. It got ever so slightly warped during the weld up.

What is the best way to gently get a perfectly flat surface....Surface Plate with sand paper...chuck it up in a lathe......?





THX
 
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t100

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Sep 3, 2009
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there are different ways to do it. just remember you don't have to have them perfectly flat, the band will pull them together.

#1. get a 3rd flange and lock the band(assume there's no plastic/rubber in the band)

#2. get fittings with longer tube, so your welds are further away from the flange.

#3. crank up the welder, higher amperage, faster welding speed and only weld about 1.5" at a time. dunk it in a bucket of cold water to cool it and weld again.

some times you can sit the fitting in a bowl(stainless steel bowl) of water after tacking it up, use the water to cool the parts. but it may cause hydrogen embrittlement.

btw, your weld looks kinda cold.
 
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scratchedup

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Joined
Aug 13, 2012
Messages
834
Location
Fayetteville, GA
there are different ways to do it. just remember you don't have to have them perfectly flat, the band will pull them together.

#1. get a 3rd flange and lock the band(assume there's no plastic/rubber in the band)

#2. get fittings with longer tube, so your welds are further away from the flange.

#3. crank up the welder, higher amperage, faster welding speed and only weld about 1.5" at a time. dunk it in a bucket of cold water to cool it and weld again.

some times you can sit the fitting in a bowl(stainless steel bowl) of water after tacking it up, use the water to cool the parts. but it may cause hydrogen embrittlement.

btw, your weld looks kinda cold.

thx...no o-ring......next time i will get the one with an o-ring
 

ezzzzzzz

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Jan 25, 2012
Messages
359
I used one of these on the s/s exhaust system for my 240Z. Don't worry about the slight warpage. It will seal up nicely with the band and a bit of carbon buildup over time.
 

RoosterBooster

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Apr 24, 2014
Messages
225
Location
Vegas (winter) ...somewhere in the Utah mountains
i used a wide belt sander on all my Turbo/CC/WG flanges
some elbow grease and a sheet of sanding paper on a surface plate would probably work just as well ;)

i did not use any gaskets (except a high temp metal one between turbo and exhaust manifold)
a exhaust/turbo fabricator told me to spray high temp exhaust paint on each surface before assembly ....
i dont have any leaks (and no chance of blowing a seal out) ... but i have only about 3000 miles on the turbo :dunno:
 

srmofo

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Oct 15, 2009
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6,161
Location
SW ohio
i used a wide belt sander on all my Turbo/CC/WG flanges
some elbow grease and a sheet of sanding paper on a surface plate would probably work just as well ;)

i did not use any gaskets (except a high temp metal one between turbo and exhaust manifold)
a exhaust/turbo fabricator told me to spray high temp exhaust paint on each surface before assembly ....
i dont have any leaks (and no chance of blowing a seal out) ... but i have only about 3000 miles on the turbo :dunno:

I always used copper seal at those joints
 

Kevin54

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Jan 12, 2005
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Location
Urbana, Ohio
This is a 3" V-Band set up. It got ever so slightly warped during the weld up.

What is the best way to gently get a perfectly flat surface....Surface Plate with sand paper...chuck it up in a lathe......?

You hit the nail on the head. Either one of those will work just great, Either double side tape some sandpaper to the surface plate, and work it down to flat, or if you know that you can get it into a lathe and run fairly true, then go that route.

I'm assuming that you have some machinist background?
 

A_Pmech

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May 8, 2007
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8,002
Location
IL
Yup! That's what those cheap 8x12 chinese surface plates are good for. Perfect size for a sheet of sandpaper and no worries when the plate is toast. Throw it in the creek and buy anther one! :lol:
 
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quietsailor

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May 22, 2012
Messages
34
Location
Cork, Ireland
I used to work at sea and there we'd use waste porthole glass placed on a flat surface (for support) plus grinding paste.

Then we'd put move the part in a figure - of - eight motion so you got an even grind across the full surface
 

MoonRise

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Nov 5, 2010
Messages
4,031
Location
NJ
Lap the flange faces on a piece of glass or a 'cheap' surface plate.

No need for double-stick tap or anything, just put a piece of wet-dry sandpaper of the desired appropriate grit right onto the 'flat' surface item (glass is usually flat enough for non-critical uses, a cheap surface plate is more than flat enough) wth a bit of oil/water (whatever you are using for 'lube') between the sandpaper sheet and the flat surface. Surface tension of the liquid (oil or water) is usually plenty to keep the sheet in place during lapping.
 

FlyingLow

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Joined
Mar 10, 2014
Messages
127
Location
Vancouver Island
I wouldn't put it on a lathe unless the flanges are dead square, you'll make the flange to thin on one side. 180 or 220 sandpaper would be a good start.
 

theknurl

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Joined
Dec 18, 2010
Messages
921
Location
SoCal
I'd use my 16" Apex disc grinder, 30-40 seconds......done:thumbup:

the weld is cold....crank it up

next time use a rotary table, tack it 3 times .....

don't cool it off, the tacks work as preheat

don't even use rod.....burn the flange down and into the tube :thumbup:

that weld will look like a skinned flattened chrome earthworm :thumbup:

welding for 59 years :)
 

Sticky Grips

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Joined
Aug 13, 2014
Messages
92
I would use a block of wood and sand paper to square it up. Also...I've found that having a piece of piping sticking out of one v band helps drastically in line up and sealing.
 
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