Will L.
Well-Known Member
I can promise you:
how it would not tighten down normally, the seat is toast.
Welding it up and re cutting it means re temper it. The amount of labor involved shoots the cost way past doing it. I don’t know many guys that understand how to do it right that would because of the liability. This is WAY more dangerous than driving around with half the brakes not working.
On the tapered seat- you have to understand it holds incredible force. That little nut with the cotter pin just keeps a proper fit taper from jarring loose. Think about when you take one apart that is good- take off the nut then how hard is it to pop apart? That isn’t because it is old or rusted. That’s because the wedged force holding them together.
The nut shears off whenever the taper is toasted. Think about how much easier and cheaper it would be if the manufacturer could use a bolt, washer and nut. But they don’t because the force applied is insane. Adding washers or welding the nut to the ball joint is not going to hold. Might welding it for a hour, day, week, month? Who knows? All depends how lucky you are.
My suggestion would be sit down with email/ phone getting ahold of junkyards in Southern California, Nevada, Arizona because they might have some not rusted if new is not available.
how it would not tighten down normally, the seat is toast.
Welding it up and re cutting it means re temper it. The amount of labor involved shoots the cost way past doing it. I don’t know many guys that understand how to do it right that would because of the liability. This is WAY more dangerous than driving around with half the brakes not working.
On the tapered seat- you have to understand it holds incredible force. That little nut with the cotter pin just keeps a proper fit taper from jarring loose. Think about when you take one apart that is good- take off the nut then how hard is it to pop apart? That isn’t because it is old or rusted. That’s because the wedged force holding them together.
The nut shears off whenever the taper is toasted. Think about how much easier and cheaper it would be if the manufacturer could use a bolt, washer and nut. But they don’t because the force applied is insane. Adding washers or welding the nut to the ball joint is not going to hold. Might welding it for a hour, day, week, month? Who knows? All depends how lucky you are.
My suggestion would be sit down with email/ phone getting ahold of junkyards in Southern California, Nevada, Arizona because they might have some not rusted if new is not available.