trail-blazer
Retro Guru
The story begins with me having a frame that I want powder-coated but had pitting all over it. I didn't want to remove too much material with blasting etc so I sanded it down (after stripping the paint) and looked for a product that would fill the pits but withstand 400 degrees. I was pointed in the direction of JB weld which is a steel epoxy.
After smothering the frame in this grey goop and leaving until the next day to cure, I then had the tedious task of sanding it back to remove the high-spots which covered up the pits pretty well.
Anyway, I had a little bit of this stuff left and thought about trying it on something else - a wobbly Sakae SA crank arm. This thing was ruined due to some numpty riding around with a loose crank arm - not me BTW. This stuff sets really hard so I thought it had to be better than a coke can shim.
After keying the affected area of the crank arm, I greased the tapered axle lightly before applying the JB weld to the crank arm before sliding it on and tightening. JB Weld can be runny so I left the bb in a frame and placed it on the floor so gravity would take it's course.
I knew I would be removing my crank to inspect it but you could miss this step out if you were fitting the crank to the bike it came off etc.
Mine came off the axle clean and it has filled the gaps perfectly - I have no idea how long this bodge will hold up but it has to be better than a shim...
My pics aren't brilliant but they will give you a rough idea of what the JB Weld has achieved. I need to trawl through Photobucket to find a before picture - back soon...
I have the drive arm to match and really didn't want to chuck this arm away so I thought it had to be worth a shot...
After smothering the frame in this grey goop and leaving until the next day to cure, I then had the tedious task of sanding it back to remove the high-spots which covered up the pits pretty well.
Anyway, I had a little bit of this stuff left and thought about trying it on something else - a wobbly Sakae SA crank arm. This thing was ruined due to some numpty riding around with a loose crank arm - not me BTW. This stuff sets really hard so I thought it had to be better than a coke can shim.
After keying the affected area of the crank arm, I greased the tapered axle lightly before applying the JB weld to the crank arm before sliding it on and tightening. JB Weld can be runny so I left the bb in a frame and placed it on the floor so gravity would take it's course.
I knew I would be removing my crank to inspect it but you could miss this step out if you were fitting the crank to the bike it came off etc.
Mine came off the axle clean and it has filled the gaps perfectly - I have no idea how long this bodge will hold up but it has to be better than a shim...
My pics aren't brilliant but they will give you a rough idea of what the JB Weld has achieved. I need to trawl through Photobucket to find a before picture - back soon...
I have the drive arm to match and really didn't want to chuck this arm away so I thought it had to be worth a shot...