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Bending with heat?


belfastguzzi

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I hope to get the crashed Griso back together and running in the next day or two.

 

I know it's not a procedure in the MG Service Manual, but I decided to bend the damaged footbrake lever back towards its original shape using heat.

 

I didn't have a pattern for what shape exactly it should be, when I started on it after midnight last night.

Fitting it to the bike this morning, it is not quite right. I've found a pic on the web and I see that I have made it too straight.

 

The question is, should I leave well alone now, rather than heat the alloy a second time and risk making it too brittle?

 

And don't bother telling me off for doing it in the first place!

Oh ok... fire away...

 

5853748261_18c7a8dc57.jpg

 

5854302092_6f8b9bd217.jpg

 

5853749897_98f8f02358.jpg

 

5853751397_8fcd5242da.jpg

 

5854303492_77b9fbf77d.jpg

 

This is what it should be like:

5853773213_1767d858fd.jpg

 

 

I suspect that it should come out at the rear of that lower bracket lozenge shape, rather than underneath it.

5854306794_a5a013bc51.jpg

 

I would appreciate if anyone else with a Griso can check this for me. Even better if you can take a photo.

I'm going to bolt it up properly now: maybe it is ok as it is.

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Drop the unit into boiling water, or wrap area with boiled wet rag, this eliminates cracking or shearing potential of direct flame gettin one part too hot between cold zones. :thumbsup:

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Good work, and I doubt reheating it would hurt so long as you stay below 875 F. It will be softer than it was when cast I would think, so I wouldn't be surprised if it deforms under hard braking or another wreck. But heck - its a rear break - so its largely decorative. Just keep from touching it and things will be fine.

 

I think you did great! (But would stop while you'e ahead - it is my experience that most of the damage I've done is moving from "pretty good" to "perfect").

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Good work, and I doubt reheating it would hurt so long as you stay below 875 F. It will be softer than it was when cast I would think, so I wouldn't be surprised if it deforms under hard braking or another wreck. But heck - its a rear break - so its largely decorative. Just keep from touching it and things will be fine.

 

I think you did great! (But would stop while you'e ahead - it is my experience that most of the damage I've done is moving from "pretty good" to "perfect").

Thanks all.

Yes, only doing it because it's the rear brake.

I put it on the bike last night – and it will do ok as it is. Not perfect (I'll have to buy a new lever for that) but it works fine.

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I think you did great! (But would stop while you'e ahead - it is my experience that most of the damage I've done is moving from "pretty good" to "perfect").

 

+1 Looks good and there is a lot of truth to the "leave well enough alone" adage.

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