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Old brake disks???
- KZQ
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- Walking Behind the Corn May Not Be All That!
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27 Jul 2006 17:56 #65291
by KZQ
www.KZ1300.com
Riders:
1968 BSA 441 Shooting Star, 1970 BSA 650 Lightning, 1974 W3, 1976 KZ900, 1979 KZ750 Twin, 1979 KZ750 Twin Trike, 1981 KZ1300, 1982 KZ1100 Spectre, 2000 Valkyrie, 2009 Yamaha Roadliner S. 1983 GL 1100
Projects:
1985 ZN1300
Old brake disks??? was created by KZQ
I'd give way too much for a NOS rear brake disk for my 1985 1300. Unfortunately, "Way too much..." doesn't seem to be important, they're aren't any.
Years ago I interviewed for a couple of jobs that involved using some sort of plasma system to spray metal onto worn aircraft parts to allow them to be remachined and reused.
Foward thirty years: Why can't I just weld em up?
Probably because they'd warp unpredictabally.
The real question is hasn't any one figured out a way to resurface brake disks?
KZCSI
Years ago I interviewed for a couple of jobs that involved using some sort of plasma system to spray metal onto worn aircraft parts to allow them to be remachined and reused.
Foward thirty years: Why can't I just weld em up?
Probably because they'd warp unpredictabally.
The real question is hasn't any one figured out a way to resurface brake disks?
KZCSI
www.KZ1300.com
Riders:
1968 BSA 441 Shooting Star, 1970 BSA 650 Lightning, 1974 W3, 1976 KZ900, 1979 KZ750 Twin, 1979 KZ750 Twin Trike, 1981 KZ1300, 1982 KZ1100 Spectre, 2000 Valkyrie, 2009 Yamaha Roadliner S. 1983 GL 1100
Projects:
1985 ZN1300
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- 77KZ650
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27 Jul 2006 18:12 #65294
by 77KZ650
07 MDP Rookie of the Year
01 ZX-12R street/drag bike. 8.97 @155.7 pump gas, dot tires, no bars, no power adders. top speed in the 1/4: 161MPH
Replied by 77KZ650 on topic Old brake disks???
just an idea, but maybe a cam company could do it? they weld on extra metal then grind to their specs
07 MDP Rookie of the Year
01 ZX-12R street/drag bike. 8.97 @155.7 pump gas, dot tires, no bars, no power adders. top speed in the 1/4: 161MPH
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- craigpuckett
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27 Jul 2006 18:37 #65307
by craigpuckett
Replied by craigpuckett on topic Old brake disks???
KZCSI wrote:
flywheel grinder/surfacer works.
The real question is hasn't any one figured out a way to resurface brake disks?
KZCSI
flywheel grinder/surfacer works.
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- KZQ
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27 Jul 2006 19:30 #65327
by KZQ
www.KZ1300.com
Riders:
1968 BSA 441 Shooting Star, 1970 BSA 650 Lightning, 1974 W3, 1976 KZ900, 1979 KZ750 Twin, 1979 KZ750 Twin Trike, 1981 KZ1300, 1982 KZ1100 Spectre, 2000 Valkyrie, 2009 Yamaha Roadliner S. 1983 GL 1100
Projects:
1985 ZN1300
Replied by KZQ on topic Old brake disks???
I'm looking to add material!
KZCSI
KZCSI
www.KZ1300.com
Riders:
1968 BSA 441 Shooting Star, 1970 BSA 650 Lightning, 1974 W3, 1976 KZ900, 1979 KZ750 Twin, 1979 KZ750 Twin Trike, 1981 KZ1300, 1982 KZ1100 Spectre, 2000 Valkyrie, 2009 Yamaha Roadliner S. 1983 GL 1100
Projects:
1985 ZN1300
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- Pterosaur
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27 Jul 2006 20:28 #65351
by Pterosaur
Replied by Pterosaur on topic Old brake disks???
Been awhile since I've done any real technical reading on the process you're referring to - metallizing.
Used to be done to high-buck value industrial machinery - shafts, trunions, high-wear pieces that would be extraordinarily expensive to replace - and as an anti corrosion treatment to items like jet engine compressor stages.
Still can be done, but I think the process has been bypassed technologically by solid-state lubricant bonding with teflon and ceramics.
Mostly done for corrosion control now, it seems...
www.sulzermetco.com/
Anyways, my guess is that between the deposition alloy, the area involved and the machine processes necessary to spec out a disc, it just ain't cost effective - easier and cheaper to get a 12" steel rod blank and machine a new disc.
Used to be done to high-buck value industrial machinery - shafts, trunions, high-wear pieces that would be extraordinarily expensive to replace - and as an anti corrosion treatment to items like jet engine compressor stages.
Still can be done, but I think the process has been bypassed technologically by solid-state lubricant bonding with teflon and ceramics.
Mostly done for corrosion control now, it seems...
www.sulzermetco.com/
Anyways, my guess is that between the deposition alloy, the area involved and the machine processes necessary to spec out a disc, it just ain't cost effective - easier and cheaper to get a 12" steel rod blank and machine a new disc.
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- rgpbeme
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27 Jul 2006 21:00 #65359
by rgpbeme
Replied by rgpbeme on topic Old brake disks???
could a machine shop redrill the mounting holes on a 1000 or something close in size
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