Rich,
You covered this briefly in the tang thread but, for the benefit of anyone doing a search down the road, would you please repeat and expand on exactly what you think should be done with these chainplates?
They have pretty deep wire brush marks from when they were made. There is no visible sign of surface penetration at the rust line where the deck bedding ended.
The chainplate slots through the angle as shown here so the weld at the base is secondary:
In addition to the surface metaleurgy, I would also like to double the thickness so as to be a closer fit for the toggle jaws and eliminate the bending stress on the clevis pin. Plan A is to have a disk made with a bevel that fits the top of the chainplate and a hole that is slightly larger. This would be welded all around with enough weld build up in the hole that it can be redrilled out to the proper size to fully bear on the pin.
Plan B is to simply double the chainplate down to the base in a similar fashion. The strength isn't needed but, why not? A constant section would also make it easier to install slotted finish plates to cover and protect the bedding seal at the deck. The new piece would have a full penetration weld to the angle.
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You covered this briefly in the tang thread but, for the benefit of anyone doing a search down the road, would you please repeat and expand on exactly what you think should be done with these chainplates?
They have pretty deep wire brush marks from when they were made. There is no visible sign of surface penetration at the rust line where the deck bedding ended.
The chainplate slots through the angle as shown here so the weld at the base is secondary:
In addition to the surface metaleurgy, I would also like to double the thickness so as to be a closer fit for the toggle jaws and eliminate the bending stress on the clevis pin. Plan A is to have a disk made with a bevel that fits the top of the chainplate and a hole that is slightly larger. This would be welded all around with enough weld build up in the hole that it can be redrilled out to the proper size to fully bear on the pin.
Plan B is to simply double the chainplate down to the base in a similar fashion. The strength isn't needed but, why not? A constant section would also make it easier to install slotted finish plates to cover and protect the bedding seal at the deck. The new piece would have a full penetration weld to the angle.
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