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- May 9, 2014
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I everyone hope you are doing well i, i am having a issue with a casting i purchased some time ago and the issue is porosity in the flywheel as you can see in the picture .
Just thought i would see if anyone had any better ideas than trying to braze it .
I have read a lot about how to make quality castings that don't have any significant defects, and so far I am having good luck with iron castings that do not have porosity or other defects.Hi, I've made some castings in brass and they had porosity problems, I've learned since that the solution is to add some phosphorus in the form of a stick of copper/phosphorous brazing rod which is commonly used in brazing joints in refrigeration applications. This stuff is cheap and I've got some but haven't tried it yet. It happens with bronze castings as well, I read in an old Model engineer magazine from the 1940's that porosity used to be considered inevitable in non - ferrous castings.
The problem with Cretors castings is that they were nickel plated, and the plating tends to peel off after a long period of time.
If it were just a raw unplated iron casting, it may be possible to flux it, heat it, and apply lead-free (or leaded if you perfer that) solder, which could then be machine or buffed off for a clean surface.
The nickel plating would probably create problems if you tried to fill it with solder.
The old car bodies were filled with soft solder back in the day, and there was an art to that.
I have not tried this method, but I think it could work with a clean fluxed casting.
Edit:
Note that original Cretors castings are worth a significant amount of money, even with the defects shown above, so I would hang onto that flywheel, or sell it.
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