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This is a question Bodge Jobs

If you can't fix it with a hammer and a roll of duck tape, it's not worth fixing at all, my old mate said minutes before that nasty business with the hammer and a roll of duck tape. Tell us of McGyver-like repairs and whether they were a brilliant success or a health and safety nightmare.

(, Thu 10 Mar 2011, 11:58)
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So...
heating the whole lot up, then rapidly cooling the aluminum components would potentially free them?
(, Fri 11 Mar 2011, 15:11, 2 replies)
that sounds like a good solution
I suggest using first a blowtorch and then a CO2 fire extinguisher
(, Fri 11 Mar 2011, 15:17, closed)
*Checks man drawer*
Nope, can't see a blowtorch or CO2 extinguisher, what about heating it on the cooker and plunging it in the sink?
(, Fri 11 Mar 2011, 15:22, closed)
What's for dinner?
Could work - fill the sink with iced water, heat the whole area and the plunge the aluminium part into the ice.
(, Fri 11 Mar 2011, 15:24, closed)
Maybe....
The problem is that as you heat it up the joint will get tighter (the aluminium will expand more than the steel). However, aluminium is very conducting - much more so that steel and so you may be able to free it by then cooling the aluminium part quickly while the steel stays hot.

The other approach is to cool the whole area. When the whole lot cools, the aluminium will shrink more than the steel. Not too sure whether practical methods of cooling it will be enough thou'.


Edit vipros' method of a CO2 extinguisher might do it: -78'C. Wear gloves.
(, Fri 11 Mar 2011, 15:21, closed)

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