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Re: Damaged compound


MERTON B BAKER
 

Indeed there is, I'd forgotten. I used it to restore the threads on the
cross feed screw on a lathe I was restoring. It works, but follow the
directions carefully or it will "Loctite". We live & learn, sometimes.

Mert

-----Original Message-----
From: 7x12minilathe@...
[mailto:7x12minilathe@...]On Behalf Of Roy
Sent: Wednesday, October 12, 2011 9:42 PM
To: 7x12minilathe@...
Subject: [7x12minilathe] Re: Damaged compound


There's a Loctite product that may help restore the original threads. I've
had some success with it and some failures - you'll have to decide if it's
worth the bother.


d-repair-kit-48-ml

Roy

--- In 7x12minilathe@..., Andrew <akayton1@...> wrote:

UPDATE:

A trip to the bolt store and 79 cents later I have a 5mm longer bolt. It
has 6 turns before it snugs down. Much better than before. The original
tool post stud makes 8 turns to hit the bottom of the same hole.

So for it looks like the simplest answer is a longer bolt and no repair
or replacement. This weekend will tell when I continue with machining
the cylinder.

Thank you to all who responded. That is what I love about this forum.

Cheers,

Andrew

On Tue, 2011-10-11 at 20:59 -0700, george curtis wrote:

i gave up on helicoils over 25 years ago. they are just the worst
thing. i've since used time serts.

george



______________________________________________________________________
From: Andrew <akayton1@...>
To: 7x12minilathe@...
Sent: Tue, October 11, 2011 3:33:41 PM
Subject: Re: [7x12minilathe] Damaged compound


I was thinking of seeing if a "helicoil" could work. Of course where
do
I get it done?

More importantly, does the toolpost bolt have to be absolutely square
to
the surface?

Cheers,

Andrew







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