Thanks, MauiK3. I’m definitely putting in some time and a lot of elbow grease into this bike that we don’t know for sure runs yet... But we are definitely getting somewhere.
I spent a good part of today giving attention to my exhaust. Here’s a chronology of how that all went down:
Essentially, I made a silicone gasket material sandwich out of some shiny plumbing pipe.
Went to Home Depot and picked up a shiny pipe that was close to the diameter of the exhaust pipe
Next, I got my angle grinder with a cut-off wheel and chopped up the pipe. One piece to fit inside the exhaust and one more that was larger, covering the hole on the outside
I clamped both strips together and drilled 1/8” holes on the ends and lined that over the top of the exhaust to make sure those holes all correspond to receive an 1/8” aluminum rivet. Light scuffing on the mating surfaces of the pipe strips was done to ensure a decent mechanical bond. I then smeared some high-temp silicone gasket material inside and around the hole
and then fished the thinner strip inside and kept that in place with a couple of tiny drill bits, smearing more and more of the gasket material over top (acetoxy and these household-type silicones are condensation cure-based so they’re not easily inhibited by other chemicals and cure relatively quickly at room temp and multiple layers can be coated)
After allowing this to dry for a bit, I gooped on more silicone material over the area and on the inside of the larger strip, squished that pipe cover on and quickly riveted the layers together while still wet
I decided to cover another tiny hole using only a thumbnail of the plumbing pipe and smeared some gasket material on and riveted it on just the same. While allowing this all to dry, other areas cleaned up easy with acetone.
I’m fairly confident this will all hold at least for a little while and the repair, which thank goodness is on the bottom is not too obtrusive. Whether the silicone gasket material will hold to the rust on the inside, well, that’s why the sandwich with the two strips and hopefully there’s enough tension on it preventing any of the exhaust pressure to escape. Fingers crossed this works at least well enough to get it going for a little while.
Here are some horrible nighttime photos, well, because it got dark
Luckily the Holiday has allowed me some time to get a little creative with these repairs, besides I want to minimize my spending on this project especially since I don’t know yet if it’s going to run. Getting closer and closer to kickstart. Stay tuned...
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