IndyJay
Veteran Member
- Joined
- Apr 23, 2021
- Messages
- 1,425
- Location
- S.E. Indiana
- Tractor
- 2021 Kioti DK4510MS w/Loader, Grapple Prev: Massey 1250
coil #9 "more feline" as in 9 lives?A coil #9 wire has many uses! Its more feline than coat hangers.
coil #9 "more feline" as in 9 lives?A coil #9 wire has many uses! Its more feline than coat hangers.
Ahh. Flexible!coil #9 "more feline" as in 9 lives?![]()
I have brazed a hydraulic fitting with flux coated silver brazing rods. The ones I have seen are coated with either red, white, or blue depending on the mfr. It worked fineI am a refrigeration tech so I will be applying my practices and tools to this. I will be using an air acetylene turbo torch with a rosebud about the size of your thumb nail. I usually have no problem doing up to inch and an eighth copper with an MC tank. Most of my experience with steel is brazing copper lines into steel king valves on compressors. We use a paste flux on the mating surfaces and then a 45 to 55% silver alloy brazing rod. Or a hollow core brazing rod with flux inside. I will blast the oil out of the tube with nitrogen and then set my regulator to bleed a low pressure feed of nitrogen through the tube while I heat it up. Probably float the high silver and flux combo all over the top of the trouble area because it is runny, and then switch to the 15% silver alloy brazing rod to cap it because it will build up a patch better. Bleeding the nitrogen through the tube while I heat it will eliminate any oxygen in the line that could allow any residual hydraulic fluid to catch fire, and prevent oxidation and pollution on the inside of the pipe. My first challenge is a bit embarrassing, as I attempted to bubble gum the leak first, so I will have to get the epoxy patch off of the area and get it back down to clean metal. I will document what I do and report back in a day or so.
Save your consumables and time. Buy a new line. You will never get the oil film removed from the inside. Procedure is correct, job is wrong.I am a refrigeration tech so I will be applying my practices and tools to this. I will be using an air acetylene turbo torch with a rosebud about the size of your thumb nail. I usually have no problem doing up to inch and an eighth copper with an MC tank. Most of my experience with steel is brazing copper lines into steel king valves on compressors. We use a paste flux on the mating surfaces and then a 45 to 55% silver alloy brazing rod. Or a hollow core brazing rod with flux inside. I will blast the oil out of the tube with nitrogen and then set my regulator to bleed a low pressure feed of nitrogen through the tube while I heat it up. Probably float the high silver and flux combo all over the top of the trouble area because it is runny, and then switch to the 15% silver alloy brazing rod to cap it because it will build up a patch better. Bleeding the nitrogen through the tube while I heat it will eliminate any oxygen in the line that could allow any residual hydraulic fluid to catch fire, and prevent oxidation and pollution on the inside of the pipe. My first challenge is a bit embarrassing, as I attempted to bubble gum the leak first, so I will have to get the epoxy patch off of the area and get it back down to clean metal. I will document what I do and report back in a day or so.
Go back to the beginning. He described that the machine would have to be majorly disassembled to remove/replace the line. And I think he mentioned he has the new line onhand.Save your consumables and time. Buy a new line. You will never get the oil film removed from the inside. Procedure is correct, job is wrong.
Back in the day when going thru my apprenticeship in the pipe welding shop we performed burst testing on brazed copper tube and not once did a brazed joint fail at over 5000 psi, typically the tube would fail with a split similar to a frozen pipe.What kind of pressures can a brazed patch handle? I don't know much about brazing but hydraulics run such high pressures that I don't think I would even try to weld on them let alone braze. I would just replace the line with a flexible hose built for hydraulics. It would suck to have it break down "in the field" with no way to get it back to the shop.