I sure hope that I don't weaken its structural integrity by drilling into it.
HOLY BAT FINS!!View attachment 202742
Your redneck sheet metal press still has more finesse than my two pairs of vice grips l.As I posted yesterday, I discovered that the seatstays are solid rod. I moved forward with drilling deep into it, and then decided to try and use a cheap #8 wood screw foolishly thinking it would groove it's way into the stay. It went most of the way in but then I tried to tighten it too far and the head sheared off. I couldn't get it torked out with visegrips and I can't remember where my easyout set is.
View attachment 202705
So I pivoted to a second plan and decided to make an offset bracket that could attach to an existing hole in the dropout.
I broke out my trusty yard sale rollaway cot spring steel that I've continued to use for every build off. Also broke out the yard sale vise I grabbed from some old garage. I've got great use out of this as both a vise as an improvised sheet metal brake. I just secure the workpiece in the vise and use the pavers as the brake to bend the piece.
View attachment 202706View attachment 202707View attachment 202708View attachment 202709View attachment 202710View attachment 202711View attachment 202712View attachment 202713View attachment 202714View attachment 202715
. . . and the 40s Batmobile had wheel skirts.
View attachment 202768
Enter your email address to join: