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#11
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![]() Is that your foot? What the hell did you do to your toe?
Last edited by WarDog; 09-13-2015 at 11:46 PM. |
#12
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![]() I would just brace the bend with two pieces of aluminum flat bar. Just put a piece on each side of the tube at a 45° angle so the bend now looks like a triangle, drill a say 1/4" size hole through the bars and tube at both ends and put a 1/4" bolt through the holes and tighten up with a nylock nut. This method does take up some real estate on both the horizontal and vertical part of your tube and I'm not sure how much you have to spare. Hope this made any type of sense at all.
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#13
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![]() Yes it makes sense. I was thinking along those lines too, but want to come up with a cleaner look than that.
I have some spared lengths so I'm going to try making a bigger radius bend. That might help enough. If all else fails I'll hang it fron the ceiling, but I'm trying to avoid the industrial style look of that. |
#14
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![]() If you are going to bend a new one, what about inserting a steel rod before you bend the aluminum. It will be harder to bend, but a lot stronger. And it will still look shiny
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#15
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#16
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![]() From my aircraft building experience: Two ways to do it.
1. Cut two pieces of same tube about 3 inches. Use a suitable size round file to shape the ends to fit over the bent tube to form a triangle corner support. Leave the ends slightly longer to form tabs where you drill and rivet to the main tube. And/or you can rivet the sides for extra strength and stability. Shape and file the edges to make it fit perfectly and look pretty. This will be the most professional finish. 2. Cut two small triangle aluminum gussets to fit on each side of the bent tube, and rivet (4 rivets per gusset). File to round the edges and it will look pretty good as well. Also note that you should not mix aluminum and steel. Dissimilar metals cause corrosion and will eventually lose strength and loosen up.
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#17
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Otherwise, option #1 sounds nice. |
#18
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Not sure how heavy the fixture is, but bear in mind this only strengthens the bent tube area, and if your tube size isn't large enough, you could still get bending and flex with the weight. If you need more strength overall, you can make the cut tubes (or gusset) longer. A larger gusset can also be rounded on the outboard side towards the middle to provide more clearance if necessary (and it will look prettier). For the gussets, I would use .040" or .060 sheet pieces. Your local metal shop usually have scrap bins, and should let you pick out small pieces at no cost. Oh, and use T6 6061 aluminum for superior corrosion resistance.
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#19
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![]() With the steel tube insert method, you could also use linseed oil (should be able to buy it a hardware store) inside and seal the ends (with epoxy). If there is no air (O2) then it will not corrode.
__________________
Reef Pilot's Undersea Oasis: http://www.canreef.com/vbulletin/sho...d.php?t=102101 Frags FS: http://www.canreef.com/vbulletin/sho...d.php?t=115022 Solutions are easy. The real difficulty lies in discovering the problem. |
#20
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