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Dan.. You pure iz Jedi bredrin!!!
So the conclusion is you can't weld alloy to steel unless you have a chemical coating! That's what I said.
Just for the record... as I feel very strongly about this having spent 18 year of my life studying and working in the field... if the question is "Can I weld aluminum to steel with the GMAW or GTAW welding process?" Then the answer is while aluminum can be joined to most other metals relatively easily by adhesive bonding or mechanical fastening, special techniques are required if it is to be arc welded to other metals such as steel. Very brittle intermetallic compounds are formed when metals such as steel, copper, magnesium or titanium are directly arc welded to aluminum. To avoid these brittle compounds, some special techniques have been developed to isolate the other metal from the molten aluminum during the arc welding process. The two most common methods of facilitating arc welding of aluminum to steel are bimetallic transition inserts and coating the dissimilar material prior to welding.Take for example Bimetallic Transition Inserts. Bimetallic transition materials are available commercially in combinations of aluminum to such other materials as steel, stainless steel and copper. These inserts are best described as sections of material that are comprised of one part aluminum with another material already bonded to the aluminum. The method used for bonding these dissimilar materials together, and thus forming the bimetallic transition, are usually rolling, welding, friction welding, flash welding or hot pressure welding, and not arc welding. The arc welding of these steel aluminum transition inserts can be performed by the normal arc welding methods such as GMAW or GTAW. One side of the insert is welded steel-to-steel and the other aluminum-to-aluminum. Care should be taken to avoid overheating the inserts during welding, which may cause growth of brittle intermetallic compounds at the steel-aluminum interface of the transition insert. It is good practice to perform the aluminum-to-aluminum weld first. In this way, we can provide a larger heat sink when the steel-to-steel welding is performed and help prevent the steel aluminum interface from overheating. The bimetallic transition insert is a popular method of joining aluminum to steel and is often used for producing welded connections of excellent quality within structural applications. Such applications as attaching aluminum deckhouses to steel decks on ships, for tube sheets in heat exchangers that have aluminum tubing with steel or stainless steel tube sheets, and for producing arc welded joints between aluminum and steel pipe lines.You could also try coating The Dissimilar Material Prior To Welding where a coating can be applied to steel to facilitate its arc welding to aluminum. One method is to coat the steel with aluminum. This is sometimes achieved by dip coating (hot dip aluminizing), or brazing the aluminum to the surface of the steel. Once coated, the steel member can be arc welded to the aluminum member, if care is taken to prevent the arc from impinging on the steel. A technique must be used during welding to direct the arc onto the aluminum member and allow the molten aluminum from the weld pool to flow onto the aluminum coated steel. Another method of joining aluminum to steel involves coating the steel surface with silver solder. The joint is then welded using aluminum filler alloy, taking care not to burn through the barrier layer of silver solder. Neither of these coating type joint methods are typically depended upon for full mechanical strength and are usually used for sealing purposes only.Now that took ages to type so I hope you got it all
Olly I can't believe you said gentlemans relish!!
dont sling em in the bin, bring em to me!!!i can remove the pins, i clamped the pins in mine in my model vice then tapped the pedal out of the pin then replaced the pin with one out of another pedal
You can't weld steel to alloy. Alloy melts at a much lower temperature against steel.
Enough about pins for a moment. Does anyone have any of the re-pop end caps? My pedals are OK but the end caps are mashed where I took them out to swap the spindles round for LHD Better still, does anyone have any used, but OK end caps? A brand new set would look a bit out of place on my used bodys
might be able to help you there Alex as I need a pukka new pair for my DX so can flow you the others I have if you thought they were good enough... will do a pic
Quote from: discostu on April 16, 2012, 03:56 PMYou can't weld steel to alloy. Alloy melts at a much lower temperature against steel. Nope.. you said "You can't weld steel to alloy" and you can Don't think stu has smelt kevs breath, that could weld anything together!
olly the other option is to remove a pin and take it cp fastenings and see if they can find anything to match it, try asking them for engineering roll pinsalso have a look on vintagebmx.com for a guy called ted carl, he done a full dx resto, removed the pins, mirror polished the bodys and fitted new pins etc... very in depth guide on how to do it, i used it when i did my resto