Yea you can use hose clamps but that means you have to have the right size at hand. And those are quite bulky so they snag on stuff. There is a slicker way to do the job .
Wire will work but it has to be tight.
To accomplish that you use a tool like this one that runs about $70 on line. . . yea a bit steep I say.
This is the general idea on how it is used.... I figure I can build something like that
Find a scrap five inch length of 1/16th wall half inch aluminum pipe and jamb a thinner piece of copper tube inside it to take up some slack .
A scrap piece of 1/4 SS dowel cut to about inch and a half . Make a slot in one end and it will become the tip of the tool.
Drill and pin the SS tip with a roll pin . Then mill out a slot about two inches long in the tube .
The Harbor-Fright mini-mill comes in handy occasionally .
A five inch length of quarter inch threaded rod drilled and pinned with another roll pin and a wing nut completes the job .
A 24 inch piece of SS safety wire bent into a U and double wrapped around the joint , then the slotted tip of the tool goes in the U of the wire, and the two wire tabs are wrapped over the first roll pin , around the second one and twisted together . Then wind up on the butterfly nut to draw it tight while being careful to line up the wires correctly on the joint .
When it is good and tight, flip it over to set the clamp , trim the wire tabs off and press the ends down into the hose .
Et voila !!
Except when you are a hack like me and your cross hole on the threaded rod is not quite centered so the end sheers off after a couple uses .
No problem , a carriage bolt with the head cut off and a properly centered hole works better anyhow .
A nylon washer makes the wingnut turn easier . Grind the SS tip on a bevel so it can get closer to the hose .
There, now I can mend the splits in my garden hoses. And I was even with it enough to remember to slip on a piece of heat shrink tube before clamping the joint together . Does make for a slick repair job .
There, now I can mend the splits in my garden hoses. And I was even with it enough to remember to slip on a piece of heat shrink tube before clamping the joint together . Does make for a slick repair job .
Here is a video showing how to use the tool
Neat!
ReplyDeleteYea, I thought so too, so I copied someone's idea.
DeleteHow are ya liking that harbour freight mill, Mike? Any chance you would have one of their mini lathes too? Gawd - I am green with envy!!!
ReplyDeleteYou should blog more. It's good to see ya back!!! I'd given up on you!
Yea, I kinda lost my mojo there as I had not much to post about lately. Haven't done any flying in quite some time and all the car and airplane events got canceled due to the chinky-flu.
DeleteThe Harbor-Fright mini-mill was something I scored used for 300$ a few years ago when someone was upgrading. It's not exactly a precision instrument, more like a glorified drill press, but its OK for a hack like me to do silly projects like this one. I have yet to bring myself to spend the six dead Benjamins the chinese tool emporium wants for the lathe. I am keeping my eyes open for an older bench lathe.
For shame! If I had your wealth and money, why... I’d be in the air all the time!😉
DeleteYep, that's me rolling in dough!!!! LOL Alas I am a slave to the mortgage.
DeleteMike, #MaxEgorov #AdvokoMAKES #Survival (very inventive Russian fellow) offered this solution last year - The Clamper | Old Tool Reborn - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mRc7ZDRcgrQ. I admire your creativity.
ReplyDeleteOh Jeez , now I am going to have to make one of them too. I had not seen that before. Looks very effective. Thanks
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