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John January 29th 04 12:30 AM

Pinhole leak
 
I recently purchased a used aluminum Jon boat. It has a pinhole about 6 or 8
inches away from the drain plug hole. If a person was inclined to try and
repair this pinhole, what would be the best method.

I have used Devcon (an aluminum putty) for other repairs (not on boats). I
also have access to aluminum welding process.

Any advice would be appreciated.




Wayne.B January 29th 04 03:37 AM

Pinhole leak
 
On Thu, 29 Jan 2004 00:30:29 GMT, "John"
wrote:

I recently purchased a used aluminum Jon boat. It has a pinhole about 6 or 8
inches away from the drain plug hole. If a person was inclined to try and
repair this pinhole, what would be the best method.

I have used Devcon (an aluminum putty) for other repairs (not on boats). I
also have access to aluminum welding process.

==========================================

An aluminum weld is probably the most professional approach IF you
have the proper eqipment, skills AND knowledge of what aluminum alloy
you are dealing with. Not all alloys are created equal and some are
almost impossible to weld.

If it was my boat I'd probably be inclined towards a cheap and dirty
approach such as drilling out the pinhole, tapping threads for a small
stainless machine screw, and securing with lockwasher, nut and a dab
of 3M 5200. Also put some 5200 on the machine screw before you thread
it in.




JR North January 29th 04 03:50 AM

Pinhole leak
 
Stuff a Democrat's head in the hole. It will fit.
JR

John wrote:

I recently purchased a used aluminum Jon boat. It has a pinhole about 6 or 8
inches away from the drain plug hole. If a person was inclined to try and
repair this pinhole, what would be the best method.

I have used Devcon (an aluminum putty) for other repairs (not on boats). I
also have access to aluminum welding process.

Any advice would be appreciated.


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Calif Bill January 29th 04 07:37 AM

Pinhole leak
 
Either Devcon or 3M 5200. Avoid the welding if just a pinhole. As the area
around the weld gets affected, and has a tendency to crack ir strained.
Bill

"John" wrote in message
...
I recently purchased a used aluminum Jon boat. It has a pinhole about 6 or

8
inches away from the drain plug hole. If a person was inclined to try and
repair this pinhole, what would be the best method.

I have used Devcon (an aluminum putty) for other repairs (not on boats). I
also have access to aluminum welding process.

Any advice would be appreciated.






basskisser January 29th 04 12:24 PM

Pinhole leak
 
JR North wrote in message ...
Stuff a Democrat's head in the hole. It will fit.
JR


What an intelligent reply.

Don White January 29th 04 01:19 PM

Pinhole leak
 
I was thinking an aluminum rivet to fill the hole....

Wayne.B wrote in message
snip
If it was my boat I'd probably be inclined towards a cheap and dirty
approach such as drilling out the pinhole, tapping threads for a small
stainless machine screw, and securing with lockwasher, nut and a dab
of 3M 5200. Also put some 5200 on the machine screw before you thread
it in.






Mark Browne January 29th 04 02:20 PM

Pinhole leak
 
If the material around the pinhole is sound, I would second the rivet
option. I would be very concerned about cracks. They start from an area of
high stress and propagate as the material flexes. If a small crack has
started at the pinhole and has grown past the area where the rivet will be
driven, the rivet will spread the crack and drive the continued crack
formation. You need good solid metal on all sides of the rivet.

If the material has thinned to the point where it will not hold a rivet
properly it will not weld very well - even if it is a weldable alloy. When
the arc hits it well just melt through.

I would look to a doubler plate and rivets on the corners of the doubler.
Use some type of sealer as you place the plate.

Mark Browne

"Don White" wrote in message
...
I was thinking an aluminum rivet to fill the hole....

Wayne.B wrote in message
snip
If it was my boat I'd probably be inclined towards a cheap and dirty
approach such as drilling out the pinhole, tapping threads for a small
stainless machine screw, and securing with lockwasher, nut and a dab
of 3M 5200. Also put some 5200 on the machine screw before you thread
it in.








JR North January 30th 04 02:32 AM

Pinhole leak
 
I have my moments...
JR

basskisser wrote:

JR North wrote in message ...
Stuff a Democrat's head in the hole. It will fit.
JR


What an intelligent reply.


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John January 31st 04 04:54 PM

Pinhole leak
 
Thanks to ALL for all your helpful advice. That is what makes this NG so
wonderful. People helping people.



"John" wrote in message
...
I recently purchased a used aluminum Jon boat. It has a pinhole about 6 or

8
inches away from the drain plug hole. If a person was inclined to try and
repair this pinhole, what would be the best method.

I have used Devcon (an aluminum putty) for other repairs (not on boats). I
also have access to aluminum welding process.

Any advice would be appreciated.






Mark Browne January 31st 04 06:33 PM

Pinhole leak
 
If the material around the pinhole is sound, I would second the rivet
option. I would be very concerned about cracks. They start from an area of
high stress and propagate as the material flexes. If a small crack has
started at the pinhole and has grown past the area where the rivet will be
driven, the rivet will spread the crack and drive the continued crack
formation. You need good solid metal on all sides of the rivet.

If the material has thinned to the point where it will not hold a rivet
properly it will not weld very well - even if it is a weldable alloy. When
the arc hits it well just melt through.

I would look to a doubler plate and rivets on the corners of the doubler.
Use some type of sealer as you place the plate.

Mark Browne
P.S. Sorry if this is a duplicate - it did not come through on my news
reader!


"Don White" wrote in message
...
I was thinking an aluminum rivet to fill the hole....

Wayne.B wrote in message
snip
If it was my boat I'd probably be inclined towards a cheap and dirty
approach such as drilling out the pinhole, tapping threads for a small
stainless machine screw, and securing with lockwasher, nut and a dab
of 3M 5200. Also put some 5200 on the machine screw before you thread
it in.









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