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#1
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plan on going a bit deeper than that. you have to cut a long enough slot so
that the hose clamp can easily clamp it down and provide enough surface area to prevent slippage. i would plan on about double the tube diameter for the length of the slot. After you cut the slot use a round or half round file to take off the burrs inside or they can get between the tubes and make it hard to get them apart. "Ed" wrote in message . 192.196... Just received my order of telescoping aluminum tubing rods from Texas Towers. Sizes range from 1" OD to smaller and all 6 feet long. I plan on using them as a collapsible verticle on the motor home. Before I start hack-sawing away on the ends to cut slots around which I will place my hose clamps, does anyone here have any particular tips or techniques to do this? I figure I'd just cut two slots with a hacksaw about 1" or so deep. If there's a better suggestion, I'd like to hear it before wacking away on my expensive tubes. Ed |
#2
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On 5 Aug, 11:51, "Dave" wrote:
plan on going a bit deeper than that. you have to cut a long enough slot so that the hose clamp can easily clamp it down and provide enough surface area to prevent slippage. i would plan on about double the tube diameter for the length of the slot. After you cut the slot use a round or half round file to take off the burrs inside or they can get between the tubes and make it hard to get them apart. "Ed" wrote in message . 192.196... Just received my order of telescoping aluminum tubing rods from Texas Towers. Sizes range from 1" OD to smaller and all 6 feet long. I plan on using them as a collapsible verticle on the motor home. Before I start hack-sawing away on the ends to cut slots around which I will place my hose clamps, does anyone here have any particular tips or techniques to do this? I figure I'd just cut two slots with a hacksaw about 1" or so deep. If there's a better suggestion, I'd like to hear it before wacking away on my expensive tubes. Ed- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Circular saw with a thin wheel grinder/cutter. |
#3
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![]() Circular saw with a thin wheel grinder/cutter. You mean like a small cutting disk on a Dremel Tool? Ed |
#4
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Ed wrote:
Circular saw with a thin wheel grinder/cutter. You mean like a small cutting disk on a Dremel Tool? Ed That would be ok as long as the combined width of the slots will allow the larger tubing to be clamped to the smaller tubing. I have always just used a hacksaw, and made slots 90° apart, making the slot length about twice the diameter of the tubing. 73. Bryan WA7PRC |
#5
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![]() That would be ok as long as the combined width of the slots will allow the larger tubing to be clamped to the smaller tubing. I have always just used a hacksaw, and made slots 90° apart, making the slot length about twice the diameter of the tubing. 73. Bryan WA7PRC I was figuring on making only one set of slots, 180 degrees opposite. This tubing is quite close fitting ( a 9/1000 " difference between inside and outside diamters ) and will require very little compression of the slotted end to make a tight fit, I would think. Ed K7AAT |
#6
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Ed wrote:
That would be ok as long as the combined width of the slots will allow the larger tubing to be clamped to the smaller tubing. I have always just used a hacksaw, and made slots 90° apart, making the slot length about twice the diameter of the tubing. 73. Bryan WA7PRC I was figuring on making only one set of slots, 180 degrees opposite. This tubing is quite close fitting ( a 9/1000 " difference between inside and outside diamters ) and will require very little compression of the slotted end to make a tight fit, I would think. Ed K7AAT If slots 180° apart clamps it fine, you're done. If not, more slots or widening of the two slots are in order. Bryan WA7PRC. |
#7
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On 5 Aug, 12:22, Ed wrote:
Circular saw with a thin wheel grinder/cutter. You mean like a small cutting disk on a Dremel Tool? Ed No. I meant a normal 6 1/2 0r 7' power saw with a thin grinding blade or steel cutting blade. The cut width will be better than a hack saw which I have found often to be to narrow as well as difficult to control Art |
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