cleaning up a 68 sunn 200s that definitely spent some time in coastal air (lots of rust/corrosion)
so vain me decided to remove the transformer end bells to remove the rust and hit with black paint
that's when i discovered this:
straight up rubbed bare wire in ot secondary. others not far behind
spend the extra dollar for some grommets please!
PRR wrote:
Plotting loadlines is only for the truly desperate, or terminally bored.
just finished up a 71 sceptre and remember it having *something* there
this wasn't so much railing against conrad and co as whoever's been in here since (can cap was replaced ~2012 based on the date code)
i can say i have personally been tempted to go without when i didn't have the right size. i found they sell assortments at home depot so that is no longer an issue
PRR wrote:
Plotting loadlines is only for the truly desperate, or terminally bored.
If I'm doing hand stuff on a chassis, deburring/countersink tools are a must have; and unless it is getting machine cut, everything gets center-punched.
I just picked up this set on ebay
s-l400.jpg
Heyco has been at it for years, use their stuff all the time.
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For small holes, you can simply use a larger drill bit to slightly chamfer the edge. That and sandpaper.
I also have a deburring tool but do not find it that much usefull. I used to do all my metalworking without one during years, and I should be able to still do without, if I were to loose mine.
I've done similar things with a drill bit but had one grab one or two times and pull through and ruin my hole (making it too big). I've become wary of that method. On the other hand, the deburring tools only take small cuts of metal and work very well imo.
pompeiisneaks wrote: ↑Fri Jul 17, 2020 5:02 pm
I've done similar things with a drill bit but had one grab one or two times and pull through and ruin my hole (making it too big). I've become wary of that method. On the other hand, the deburring tools only take small cuts of metal and work very well imo.
oh then you're using it like a deburring tool.. nice. makes sense. Since I now have some good deburring tools, I guess that's a moot point, but I do feel dumber for having tried it w/ the press
pompeiisneaks wrote: ↑Fri Jul 17, 2020 5:14 pm
oh then you're using it like a deburring tool.. nice. makes sense. Since I now have some good deburring tools, I guess that's a moot point, but I do feel dumber for having tried it w/ the press
~Phil
I have a set of these that work well in a drill press when working on a steel chassis. Still a good idea to set the depth stop. Also work well for countersinking screw heads in either metal or wood. I'm sure they work fine in AL too, but I find it quicker to just grab a larger bit and twist by hand.