Got a saw with a hole in the bar oil tank. I'm thinking JB weld. Good, bad, other ideas? Epoxy better? Heck I might try to fix the busted case on my other one too...maybe I'll have two saws running.
David B said:Got a saw with a hole in the bar oil tank. I'm thinking JB weld. Good, bad, other ideas? Epoxy better? Heck I might try to fix the busted case on my other one too...maybe I'll have two saws running.
klickitatsacket said:weld the plastic.
Lakeside53 said:I've welded a number of tanks with a professional quality hot air welder. and used the correct PA66 (nylon) rod. It is the very best solution. Takes quite a bit of practice though to get 1) good) and 2) a nice result. Practice with old tanks first... Plenty to be had at any saw shop...
rbtree said:Ah ha!! A friend has an 020 tank in need of repair. And I've just been hearing that this might be the solution to repair my very expensive ski boots that have loads of life in them but have defective plastic and they cracked--too late to get a new pair. I've been meaning to call my old friend Kelly Timmons who used to be the US Ski Team Lange boot tech rep.
Cut4fun said:Hey David B is that the saw that came from KY that I found with the hole on the bar side. Hope everything works out, let us know how the fix holds up. I am always looking for ways to fix things without using up my roll of duct tape too. http://cgi.ebay.com/JONSERED-2050-P...ryZ20538QQssPageNameZWDVWQQrdZ1QQcmdZViewItem