5030
Epic Contributor
- Joined
- Feb 21, 2003
- Messages
- 26,993
- Location
- SE Michigan in the middle of nowhere
- Tractor
- Kubota M9000 HDCC3 M9000 HDC
Seriously???? Vee it out and multi-pass????
It is just 1/4" steel at them most. And then you are going to fishplate overtop of that.
And this thing doesnt have to be within .000001 on alighnment either. It's just a freaking BH boom:confused2:
Like I said, If it were mine, 2 hours and I'd be back digging and be stronger than before. It wouldnt break there ever again unless every other part of the hoe was bent and mangled along with it.
Absolutely grind out and multi pass. preferrably with 7018LH reverse polarity if SMAW and 70 series wire with 75-25 gas if it's to be MIG. It's going to be a highly stressed point (the original break line) and it needs to be fish plated on all sides. If I was doing it in the shop for myself, I'd TIG weld the break. However, TIG isn't an economical alternative unless you happen to own a machine. The problem is that the break also encompasses an original fish plate and broke around the end radius.
Frankly, I can't see anyone holding a millionth of an inch on any fabrication...maybe you can.....
From my perspective, it's a take off, just to inspect the pins and bushings, if anything. I've line bored more than one set of backhoe bushings and lapped in pins on more than one ocassion. Actually, I just did a complete hoe for a local guy. Crowding the boom against an immovable object places serious lateral strain on bushings and pins and tends to wallow them out as evidenced by a friendly 'wagging' backhoe.....
Do it right the first time.