Larry
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« Reply #13 on: June 28, 2010, 07:11:21 am » |
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Well, I took the coil into a welder and he would not touch it. He was afraid that the leak would seap out of the sides afterwards. He suggested a radator guy so they can dip it and then weld it.
The radiator guy said that he wasn't interseted in fooling with it either. He recommeneded epoxy, and suggested that after I clened the area for an hour, to clean it some more. Plus, most epoxies state that you can use the coil right away. His advice was to leave it set overnight.
So I cleaned the coil with a wire brush,scotch brite, sandpaper, acetone, and the finally my Dremel with a wire wheel. I leak checked it and all tha cleaning must have fused the leak. It didn't leak after that. So I recleaned all the soap off, heated, scuffed, and re-acetoned (a new word I made up) the coil, like the epoxy instructions recommended. I ended up using the red epoxy and a heat gun. Plus I put the coil in a vacuum so if there was a slight leak it would hopefully draw some material in the pinhole and plug it.
I followed the directions and it said that it was cured after the epoxy turns gold. Just for a referance, it is red, then it turns purple, then gold. Anyway, it is cured when it is gold. So I took the radiators guys advice and let it set over night. Pressure tested, vacuumed, and charged the coil. It works great.
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