




I'll post a picture later today, but kept it simple. Underneath the tube notcher part that raises and lowers for adjusting I drilled another hole in my work table and secured a long bolt to the table. Then I ran a nylon lock nut down the bolt and put a 2 inch steel spacer on top of it which pushes the notcher up/down by adjusting the nylon lock nut up/down.pgk wrote:At least now you have a sweet tubing notcher, just notch out another tube and keep practising those aluminum welds! lol What did you have to do for the height adjustment?
Pete
Start with gas. 30 cfph. I use 1/8th cerriated tungsten. I sharpen to a point then ball by switching to max cleaning (ep).Coolidge wrote:By all means thanks!
Nice. How much does it cost per pound?Coolidge wrote:TIG with carbon fiber filler rodOscar wrote:how you gonna weld up that carbon fibre tube?Coolidge wrote:I used mine the other day to cope some carbon fiber tubing with a diamond hole saw.
My leg guy at one point told me the prosthetic main body was aluminum. As I found out, it is not. Not only will carbon fiber conduct amperage after a certain threshold, the resin is typically shellfish based (the ones I've used at least) and it emits a nasty puff of smoke...Oscar wrote:Nice. How much does it cost per pound?Coolidge wrote:TIG with carbon fiber filler rodOscar wrote: how you gonna weld up that carbon fibre tube?