The airbox was spot welded to hold every thing in place, then brazed by the manufacturer.
Now it is spot welded and brazed. I bet those spot welds do more than just hold things in place for brazing!
The airbox was spot welded to hold every thing in place, then brazed by the manufacturer.
You can bet on what ever you like, the answer to your other question is, ( 19-3 ) look it up it gives all the info you need.Now it is spot welded and brazed. I bet those spot welds do more than just hold things in place for brazing!
One or two people made that mistake, therefore everyone on the thread thinks that. Sometimes your application of logic astounds me.What's really amazing to me is, so many here didn't even recognize brass when they saw it, yet know every thing there is to know about repairing an airbox that was made using it.
You can bet on what ever you like, the answer to your other question is, ( 19-3 ) look it up it gives all the info you need.
16OK, I'll bite. What is 19-3?
A useful post that provided meaningful information even to me, who knows little about metal work. (As opposed to riddles, innuendos, and inside jokes with no knowledge exchange)I build bicycle frames as a hobby using 4130 chromium molybdenum (chromoly) tubing, and join the frame tubes using either investment cast steel lugs or fillet brazing. For thin walled chromoly tubing (wall thickness typically ~0.5mm) used in bicycles, brazing with the appropriate flux is the preferred joining method because the heat required is significantly lower than for welding which compromises the strength of the steel in the HAZ (heat affected zone), and properly done either lugged or fillet brazed joins are as strong as the tubing itself.
Since the OEM join was brazed, it should not be repaired by welding (AC 43.13-1B 4-77 states NOTE: Never weld over a previously brazed joint.).
I would be fine with Tom's repair.
I build bicycle frames as a hobby using 4130 chromium molybdenum (chromoly) tubing, and join the frame tubes using either investment cast steel lugs or fillet brazing. For thin walled chromoly tubing (wall thickness typically ~0.5mm) used in bicycles, brazing with the appropriate flux is the preferred joining method because the heat required is significantly lower than for welding which compromises the strength of the steel in the HAZ (heat affected zone), and properly done either lugged or fillet brazed joins are as strong as the tubing itself.
Since the OEM join was brazed, it should not be repaired by welding (AC 43.13-1B 4-77 states NOTE: Never weld over a previously brazed joint.).
I would be fine with Tom's repair.
Look it up. Why should I do your home work just to add to your thread creep?OK, I'll bite. What is 19-3?
Who asked for your opinion?The parent material is beat and cracked to snot. Globbing more brass on top is not a structurally sound repair, in my opinion.
Making a point, not being rude - Who asked for your original post?Who asked for your opinion?
No one, but it certainly got 52 posts,Making a point, not being rude - Who asked for your original post?
And, swing and a miss on getting the point.No one, but it certainly got 52 posts,
Would you rather I kept things like this secret?
the point was made long before you came along to heap on.And, swing and a miss on getting the point.
Why would anyone think that someone posting their opinion of that post on a public forum is somehow inappropriate? That is the point I'm making.I took Tom's OP as simply pointing out a common problem with the C-150 O-200 air box cracking, and recommending C-150 owners check for cracking. He described his fix for the problem.
Why would anyone think that post in the Maintenance Bay is somehow inappropriate?
The FIX.
You did when you made the original post. No need to act like a jerk if you disagree with another.Who asked for your opinion?
You can bet on what ever you like, the answer to your other question is, ( 19-3 ) look it up it gives all the info you need.
Tom- you are the one who brought up whatever 19-3 is supposed to be. Either answer the question, or don't inject it into the conversation.Look it up. Why should I do your home work just to add to your thread creep?
Questionable by who? What qualification do you have to question anyone's work. Who are you to decide what is good and what is not?It is certainly "a" fix.
If you come on to a public forum with pictures of questionable work, be prepared for other opinions.
He probably has the same qualifications you do.Questionable by who? What qualification do you have to question anyone's work. Who are you to decide what is good and what is not?
It's easy to hid behind you cute little moniker and snipe others, but until you can show who you are and are able to prove your qualification, your credibility is zero.
Appeal to authority logical fallacy. His qualifications do not factor into whether his observations are valid or not.Questionable by who? What qualification do you have to question anyone's work. Who are you to decide what is good and what is not?
It's easy to hid behind you cute little moniker and snipe others, but until you can show who you are and are able to prove your qualification, your credibility is zero.
Questionable by who? What qualification do you have to question anyone's work. Who are you to decide what is good and what is not?
It's easy to hid behind you cute little moniker and snipe others, but until you can show who you are and are able to prove your qualification, your credibility is zero.
Tom- you are the one who brought up whatever 19-3 is supposed to be. Either answer the question, or don't inject it into the conversation.
Prove it.I am a licenced AME in Canada.
All of this is sooo much like jr. High.
You guys have so much knowlege, why the ****ing matches?
Tom- prove you have any qualifications to fix planes. I know the laws of physics and chemistry apply in Canada too because when I work with customers there, the same techniques work here and there. So the way to fix aircraft is the same or close enough to work in both places.Prove it.
Living and working under a different set of rules, and judging us Figures.
There is really one person here who makes such a habit.We pilots for the most part don't disparage each other when discussing different methods of doing things flying related, yet it seems that a lot of A&P's want to jump allover each others **** when someone does something differently. Why is that?
There is really one person here who makes such a habit.
Well, Tom generally seems to be in the middle of such "discussions"No, there are a few.
I used to feel the same as you until I saw he has a tendency to post "beyond his knowledge". When someone attempts to correct him, he gets very defensive and goes further into wrong information. It is as if I posted some very incorrect biochem information (as an example, I attempt to claim proteins carry genetic information rather than DNA), you try to correct me, and I start pulling more "facts" from my butt. You would, properly, question the rest of my knowledge in areas in which you may not have expertise.Tom's been repairing aircraft longer than I've been doing anything. I myself will tend to defer to his judgement when it come stop aircraft maintenance.
We pilots for the most part don't disparage each other when discussing different methods of doing things flying related, yet it seems that a lot of A&P's want to jump allover each others **** when someone does something differently. Why is that?
You could probably teach a monkey to fly. Nobody will ever teach a monkey to fix an airplane. It's complex. I'm not putting down pilots; I am one myself, was a flight instructor.
pilots for the most part don't disparage each other when discussing different methods of doing things flying related
lot of A&P's want to jump allover each others