| Forget it Dave. The job cannot be done properly. I have a box full of cracked
OS 40 cases all cracked from the front right to rear left screw hole on the
bottom of the case.
I have tried getting them welded many ways, the best found was Mig(sp) welding
which is quite expensive. It does distort the case and it needs to be
re-machined to get things to fit and align properly. What also happens is the
heat changes the grain structure and weakens the case so it break's again soon
after.
After saying that from the crack you describe you may be able to do a "fence
wire" repair that will last a short time at least.
This is when it gets difficult translating to American describing a component.
People who call a spanner a wrench!!!???.
Get yourself a small hose clamp. The type of clamp used to hold the radiator
hoses on your car but only very small, about the same � as the carb mount. File
part of the clamp away so it fits on to the mount. Mark and drill the positions
of the carb mounting screws in the clamp. It could be worth getting some
Locktite aluminum cement but it will not add that much.
Position the clamp, tighten it up, fit the carburetor, cross your fingers and
give it a go.
Best of luck.
John.
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| I agree with the last suggestion if your carb will stay in place
ok. Silicone will hold up well if it is only sealing the crack.
As long as you don't have an air leak, the damaged case shouldn't
cause any problems. I wouldn't try anything drastic to patch the
case. Too bad it isn't the older FSR model where the front of the
case is a separate piece. THe cost would be reasonable to replace
it.
Good luck,
Charlie
|
| My brother is a university physics student and is now taking a class where they
get acquainted with a machine shop (you know, to put together all those
nifty toys for those experiments they do). Anyway, a friend of ours has
an ASP with cracked case somewhere where the carb attaches (I haven't seen it
so I can't tell you exactly where). Anyway, they are going to try and repair
this in the machine shop. I'll report on the success (also a bent crankshaft,
they want to try and machine a new one).
They also have a plan I am trying to convince him/them is not a good plan, if
nothing else, a waste of time. They want to take apart his Royal .40 and
measure all the parts, CAD them up on a PC, and then machine their own engine,
buying bearings and using a ringed piston, not ABC like the Royal is. I said
that it was a waste of time, if it worked it wouldn't run as well as a bought
engine ($65), etc. Comments?
Chad
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