[Apparently it can by using a solder called Alusol. a low temprature cored soft solder works a treat.
Dave Wooley[/quote]
Have seen it at a show, chap punched a hole in a coke can & then "soldered"* it OK so far but it didn't hold water
well not after I flexed the ali under it. * all he did was flow some low temp metal, bismuth? onto it. Look in the gag shops for the disappearing spoon trick. When the spoon is placed in a hot cup of coffee the spoon melts
As I remember it was a very expensive option.
The reason ali cannot be soldered normally is that ali oxidizes extremely quickly in air. To really solder ali, the trick is to pop oil on the surface & then scrub the ali to clean the surface under the layer of oil, then use a really red hot iron to plunge through the oil onto the items to be soldered, not for the faint hearted nor indoors the smell of burning oil is not good!
Also Super glue in machining is only used as a temporary measure on brass articles as it comes apart after a while.
Whilst I realise there are technical advances going on I really think some most of these items are useless & a waste of money!
IF I really had to have a metal hull I would go for brass & solder, or thin sheets of steel, known as shim steel, available down to at least .01mm
[Apparently it can by using a solder called Alusol. a low temprature cored soft solder works a treat. :thumbs_up_1:
Dave Wooley[/quote]
Have seen it at a show, chap punched a hole in a coke can & then "soldered"* it OK so far but it didn't hold water :big_grin:
well not after I flexed the ali under it. * all he did was flow some low temp metal, bismuth? onto it. Look in the gag shops for the disappearing spoon trick. When the spoon is placed in a hot cup of coffee the spoon melts
As I remember it was a very expensive option.
The reason ali cannot be soldered normally is that ali oxidizes extremely quickly in air. To really solder ali, the trick is to pop oil on the surface & then scrub the ali to clean the surface under the layer of oil, then use a really red hot iron to plunge through the oil onto the items to be soldered, not for the faint hearted nor indoors the smell of burning oil is not good!
Also Super glue in machining is only used as a temporary measure on brass articles as it comes apart after a while.
Whilst I realise there are technical advances going on I really think some most of these items are useless & a waste of money!
IF I really had to have a metal hull I would go for brass & solder, or thin sheets of steel, known as shim steel, available down to at least .01mm