Loctite 660 (use of)
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I recently had to remove and refit a rear strut tube from the hub housing.
Unfortunately, in the process the hub housing has lost metal (much corrosion at the interfaces) and the interference fit is now minimal (1 thou or less at a guess). The tube can be twisted by hand in the housing.
I have cleaned everything up and re fitted the tube using Loctite 660 metal repair - it seems to have worked.
Quick question - is this an acceptable repair and will this product work in shear? I am a somewhat concerned and wonder whether I should shrink a collar onto the tube to stop the hub housing sliding up to be certain?
Views of the wise would be welcome.
Cheers
Jon
Unfortunately, in the process the hub housing has lost metal (much corrosion at the interfaces) and the interference fit is now minimal (1 thou or less at a guess). The tube can be twisted by hand in the housing.
I have cleaned everything up and re fitted the tube using Loctite 660 metal repair - it seems to have worked.
Quick question - is this an acceptable repair and will this product work in shear? I am a somewhat concerned and wonder whether I should shrink a collar onto the tube to stop the hub housing sliding up to be certain?
Views of the wise would be welcome.
Cheers
Jon
- jono
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...my instinct says the same, however I am not familiar with the actual durability of the product and whether it would suffice on it's own.
According to the guff, it will accomodate up to 0.5mm of wear and is sold as a metal repair (and retaining) product for taking up wear between adjoining metal surfaces, shafts, splines, bearing housings etc.
Jon
According to the guff, it will accomodate up to 0.5mm of wear and is sold as a metal repair (and retaining) product for taking up wear between adjoining metal surfaces, shafts, splines, bearing housings etc.
Jon
- jono
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If you think about it even if you had a transition borderline clearance fit you would need only the smallest amount of "grip" for the assembly to be locked and to withstand any suspenion load.
just think how the front struts are clamped to the hub carrier on most modern vehicles, its a split collar with lots of clearance when undone, you only need to nip up the pinch bolt fractionally for it to be rock solid.
You still have an interference fit which would almost certainly be OK without the loctite but I would use it, I have recovered many worn bearing housings in the past with anaerobic sealants, the problem is only ever getting the things apart again in the future as a massive amount of heat is needed.
just think how the front struts are clamped to the hub carrier on most modern vehicles, its a split collar with lots of clearance when undone, you only need to nip up the pinch bolt fractionally for it to be rock solid.
You still have an interference fit which would almost certainly be OK without the loctite but I would use it, I have recovered many worn bearing housings in the past with anaerobic sealants, the problem is only ever getting the things apart again in the future as a massive amount of heat is needed.
- Chancer
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