Sujet : Re: RE: Re: Machine Shop
De : funkmaster (at) *nospam* hotmail.com (Zen Cycle)
Groupes : rec.bicycles.techDate : 05. Mar 2025, 20:21:57
Autres entêtes
Organisation : A noiseless patient Spider
Message-ID : <vqa88l$2hfiv$4@dont-email.me>
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User-Agent : Mozilla Thunderbird
On 3/5/2025 2:01 PM, cyclintom wrote:
On Tue Mar 4 12:03:42 2025 Frank Krygowski wrote:
On 3/4/2025 12:44 AM, AMuzi wrote:
>
For a typical dent, this Waterford for example:
http://www.yellowjersey.org/wfd12a.jpg
>
the tube is rolled to reform the greater part of the deformation:
>
http://www.yellowjersey.org/wfd12b.jpg
>
then the remaining low spots are filled with polyester bondo or with
metal (brass, silver, lead. I use lead):
>
http://www.yellowjersey.org/wfd12c.jpg
>
and finished:
>
http://www.yellowjersey.org/wfd12e.jpg
>
Could you explain what's meant by "the tube is rolled"? As I said
earlier, I'd thought the first step would be pushing a mandrel through
(if the dent was in the seatpost) to partially push out the dent. Of
course, that wouldn't work except on a seat tube, and I suppose would
still require filling. Are you skipping that step entirely?
>
BTW, my antique BMW has a slight dent in the top of the gas tank,
apparently from something falling onto it. I've heard of "paintless dent
repair" for car bodies and wondered about it, but never looked deeply
into it. I gather that some skilled body workers can do pretty well at
pushing dents back out from the underside.
Have you got this now? Skilled body workers sometimes find a dent that they push on from the opposite side and the dent pops out. Wait a minute - you are all saying that is impossible.
No one ever said it's not possible to pop a dent out of a top tube, dumbass
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