After finishing frame number 1, an un-planned incident resulted in a dent in the downtube (long story here http://www.velocipedesalon.com/forum...ned-35413.html)
So, I thought I’d document the replacement of the downtube here, from a complete newby perspective. After a bit of advice on the above thread, I went for it, and here are some of my findings and thoughts, plus a few pictures.
My starting point was a finished frame (lugged, brass brazed) with a 3 inch section cut out of the down tube.
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Plan A – Melt the brass out, and pull the tube out
I plastered a lot of flux all over the head tube / down tube joint and then went to work with the torch, trying to heat the entire downtube segment so I could pull it out, leaving the headtube and lug untouched. After blasting the head tube lug with full heat for aeons, the end result was a black ugly mess, with maybe half a pea sized blob of brass sitting 0.5 cm down from the lug point.
Result – 0 / 10
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Plan B – Cut the tube right down and then melt / peel off the segments from the inside of the lug (courtesy of bencooper)
So, I cut off most of the tube, leaving about an inch to grab hold of and went to work with the hacksaw to cut a notch down the tube to the lug to act as a weak starting point. Then focused the heat on the inside (ie the dead tube) and with the pliers tried to peel off the tube. A got a few chunks off this way but found it hard to remove the sections of tube closest to the headtube – because of the way the headtube curves it makes it really hard to get in close without damaging the headtube. For the BB / downtube joint I got maybe half of the lug clean
Result – 3 / 10 (casulties included one screwdriver, two small files and a pair of pliers all of which got melted / bent during the heating stage)
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Plan C – grind the tube out from the inside
With the bottom bracket / downtube joint, this worked really well, as you can get un restricted access right down into the lug. So using a combination of grinding and sanding attachments on the drill head, plus files and sandpaper, I went through the down tube, back to the original lug. This was cool cos you eventually grind through the silver tube back to the gold brass and then through that to the silver lug again so you have a brilliant visual indicator of your progress. With the head tube, again, the restricted access proved really tricky, and I couldn’t get a power tool in close enough, so still had a significant chunk of the remaining tube inside the lug. This was incredibly slow..
Result – 6 / 10 (casulty - one dead drill that I seemingly burnt out whilst doing the bb)
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Plan D - ?????
I was out of plans at this stage, the bb lug was clean and ready to go, but the head tube lug still had a significant chunk of the old tube in it, with no way to get purchase on it to pull it out whilst hot or to grind / file / sand it out. At this stage I’d been fairly brutal with the frame, putting a huge amount of heat into both joints and some fairly harsh grinding and physical treatment of the frame, so I wasn’t entirely sure of any structural damage I’d caused….so I felt from here on I really didn’t have anything to lose…so… I cut the tangs of the head tube lug and filed / ground the lug / dead tube flush back to the head tube. This resulted in a reasonably (!!!) flat base on which to fillet braze the new tube. My fillet brazing is very much in the beginner stages, and the result looked a lot like lumps of chewing gum holding the tubes together….but the tubes were held together, at least for now.
Result – short term - 10 / 10. Long term – to be determined….
(picture taken before brazing)
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I’ve built the frame up and taken it for a very gentle, very short spin and I didn’t die in a horrific accident, and I had a really good look at all the joints after I disassembled the frame again. So, it looks like its holding up for now.
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Things I’ve learnt –
* Removing a tube is 10000000000 x times harder than putting it in there in the first place
* Its next to impossible (for me) to get an area the size of a typical lug up to temp at the same time
* My joints were actually pretty dam good. During this I got to see the inside of the joints, which is a pretty good deal, and they looked great, brass all round and full penetration – this confirmation of the original build made the whole exercise worth while (nearly!)
* Removing a tube is really really hard
* Did I mention how hard it is to remove a tube?
Thanks to all for the advice in the original thread. The frame is now drying after being painted (rattle cans in the shed) and I’ll ride it gently with the full knowledge that its a complete and utter bodge and with the expectation of a failure at the some point in the not too distant future.
I’ve ordered tubes and lugs for frame numbers 2 and 3 (and for anyone who read the original thread –I’ve ordered the tools to finish the frames myself as well!!)
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