Hello everyone. My first post I am here for advice found this site via a google search about aluminum wheel repair. I did some reading and saw one "Bob" that goes by the handle "AAMetalMaster" that seems to have great knowledge in this area. I tried to private message Bob without success so apparently I'm locked out via registration or whatever. Maybe with some luck he'll come across my post????
I've got an aluminum motorcycle rear wheel that somehow developed a crack at one of the 10 spoke interfaces to the flat inside wheel area. It may have been overzealous use of the tire iron during a tire replacement as I do not recall hitting a serious bump. It amounts to a crack possibly an inch long at the spoke wheel interface in a longitudinal wheel travel direction. I am trying to figure out what to do as this is an expensive forged MC wheel. I am not excited about welding it fearing annealing the base material and losing strength. Also considered aluminum soldering but same concerns. Was considering Miller-Stephenson Epoxy 907 but not sure if that would hold up. Similar to JB Weld but better with tensile strength is 3100psi under ideal conditions on etched aluminum, obviously I would have to machine out the crack probably not too wide at the inside and outside to form a plug of sorts. Probably have to drill out the ends of the crack to stop it too and was considering running a mini hacksaw blade through from one end to the other to open it up just so much for epoxy penetration in the middle(relatively thin wheel fwiw) and would consider extending the epoxy repair across the inner and outer flat surface to maximize adhesion and tensile strength possibly?. The big concern is aluminum oxide formation and removal before repairing and I'm not sure I have the expertise to properly manage that. Considered alumiprep 33 and alodine prior to epoxy application??
Wondered your thoughts on all this. You seem to know aluminum welding and aluminum wheel repair. I have been using the wheel for several thousand miles with a large tire type rubber patch contact cemented inside the wheel over the minute crack that actually got through the inside. Problem arose as a slow leak and I figured I had another nail situation you know? Couldn't find the nail and investigated further.... Nothing. Finally upon more careful inspection found the crack at the spoke. It amounted to a slow leaker before I patched it. Interested in your thoughts and experience seeing as you mentioned great amounts of wheel repair experience in several posts you made.... I'm in Hamburg/Buffalo NY and you seem not to far away. Could you weld it for me? Several MC wheel repair places claim they can fix it no problem using TIG welding. Thanks for your considerations.
I've got an aluminum motorcycle rear wheel that somehow developed a crack at one of the 10 spoke interfaces to the flat inside wheel area. It may have been overzealous use of the tire iron during a tire replacement as I do not recall hitting a serious bump. It amounts to a crack possibly an inch long at the spoke wheel interface in a longitudinal wheel travel direction. I am trying to figure out what to do as this is an expensive forged MC wheel. I am not excited about welding it fearing annealing the base material and losing strength. Also considered aluminum soldering but same concerns. Was considering Miller-Stephenson Epoxy 907 but not sure if that would hold up. Similar to JB Weld but better with tensile strength is 3100psi under ideal conditions on etched aluminum, obviously I would have to machine out the crack probably not too wide at the inside and outside to form a plug of sorts. Probably have to drill out the ends of the crack to stop it too and was considering running a mini hacksaw blade through from one end to the other to open it up just so much for epoxy penetration in the middle(relatively thin wheel fwiw) and would consider extending the epoxy repair across the inner and outer flat surface to maximize adhesion and tensile strength possibly?. The big concern is aluminum oxide formation and removal before repairing and I'm not sure I have the expertise to properly manage that. Considered alumiprep 33 and alodine prior to epoxy application??
Wondered your thoughts on all this. You seem to know aluminum welding and aluminum wheel repair. I have been using the wheel for several thousand miles with a large tire type rubber patch contact cemented inside the wheel over the minute crack that actually got through the inside. Problem arose as a slow leak and I figured I had another nail situation you know? Couldn't find the nail and investigated further.... Nothing. Finally upon more careful inspection found the crack at the spoke. It amounted to a slow leaker before I patched it. Interested in your thoughts and experience seeing as you mentioned great amounts of wheel repair experience in several posts you made.... I'm in Hamburg/Buffalo NY and you seem not to far away. Could you weld it for me? Several MC wheel repair places claim they can fix it no problem using TIG welding. Thanks for your considerations.
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