Well its your call.flutego12 wrote:Even then I know my limits and will not attempt that which I'm not comfortable. Dents and straightening?... you bet I'm going for it! Tenon resizing too. Rod straightening I'm not sure, don't like power tools, ditto the rest. I'd rather purchase the spare parts. That will be second or third year stuff. I am not taking this lightly. There is a lot of skill involved and I highly respect that. I know you mean well though it is beginning to sound a little condescending.
Dents and straightening?... you bet I'm going for it!
Let me start by saying you must know how to fit a pad before doing any other repair, everything else is pointless without this skill to start with, example you have a bent key, once you straighten it you need to be able to get the pad level again or change it. If I have bent keys, after the repair I always fit a new pad to that key.
Tenon resizing too.
Ill address this one for you while on the topic. To make a joint fit properly you have to work out why its loose, is it loose because the tenon is worn or the socket is worn, if the socket is worn then you need to enlarge it and square it up, we use tools called plug gauges to do this, if the tenon is worn or undersized you need to expand this with a tenon expander and then shrink it back to size, when you roll the tenon to size, its not parallell, so this is why we shrink it back, because the shrinking tool makes it a parallel, most times its a combination of both tools that is required to achieve a properly seated tenon
Rod straightening I'm not sure, don't like power tools, ditto the rest. I'd rather purchase the spare parts.
Most spare parts cannot be purchased, this is why people are called technicians, they have to fabricate the stuff themselves to suit the job at hand.
I know you mean well though it is beginning to sound a little condescending.
Im sorry you think so
Steve
www.mirwa.com.au