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#1
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New to riveting here.
Reading on basics show the impact on the manufactured head is transmitted along the rivet and forces the bucking bar off the bucktail. It then slams back, causing the rivet shaft to begin to deform. Because the bucking bar needs to move, does this mean it can not be clamped in a vice? - Mike |
#2
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On Sep 5, 7:58*am, mhorowit wrote:
New to riveting here. Reading on basics show the impact on the manufactured head is transmitted along the rivet and forces the bucking bar off the bucktail. It then slams back, causing the rivet shaft to begin to deform. Because the bucking bar needs to move, does this mean it can not be clamped in a vice? - Mike You could clamp it in vice. There is a process called back riveting in which the rivet gun and a flush set is used to directly upset the buck tail while the manufactured head is held against the bucking bar; I have seen it used when someone is riveting flush rivets in thin skins and the flush head is held against a flat plate. This would be similar to what you propose. The key is to keep the slamming effect to a minimum by keeping pressure through the rivet from the gun to the bucking bar. Once the bar or the set or the rivet really move around that is when you will have smiles at best or tool strikes at worst. John Dupre' |
#3
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![]() "mhorowit" wrote in message ... New to riveting here. Reading on basics show the impact on the manufactured head is transmitted along the rivet and forces the bucking bar off the bucktail. It then slams back, causing the rivet shaft to begin to deform. Because the bucking bar needs to move, does this mean it can not be clamped in a vice? - Mike The "slam back" of the bucking bar is classroom theory, in reality a vice-mounted bucking bar will make the same shop head as a hand-held bar (try it). Picture a bulldozer pushing a Mercedes into a concrete wall, same process as when using a hand-held or pneumaric rivet squeezer. |
#4
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In article
, mhorowit wrote: New to riveting here. Reading on basics show the impact on the manufactured head is transmitted along the rivet and forces the bucking bar off the bucktail. It then slams back, causing the rivet shaft to begin to deform. Because the bucking bar needs to move, does this mean it can not be clamped in a vice? - Mike I would not clamp my rivets in a vice. What kind of vice do you have in mind? Gambling? Drinking? Sloth? Gluttony? Fornication? Or, do you mean "vise"? -- Remove _'s from email address to talk to me. |
#5
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Orval Fairbairn wrote:
In article , mhorowit wrote: New to riveting here. Reading on basics show the impact on the manufactured head is transmitted along the rivet and forces the bucking bar off the bucktail. It then slams back, causing the rivet shaft to begin to deform. Because the bucking bar needs to move, does this mean it can not be clamped in a vice? - Mike I would not clamp my rivets in a vice. What kind of vice do you have in mind? Gambling? Drinking? Sloth? Gluttony? Fornication? Or, do you mean "vise"? I have an assortment of vises for various purposes. I guess my vice is vises? Or vice versa? Dan, U.S. Air Force, retired |
#6
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Dan wrote:
Orval Fairbairn wrote: In article , mhorowit wrote: New to riveting here. Reading on basics show the impact on the manufactured head is transmitted along the rivet and forces the bucking bar off the bucktail. It then slams back, causing the rivet shaft to begin to deform. Because the bucking bar needs to move, does this mean it can not be clamped in a vice? - Mike I would not clamp my rivets in a vice. What kind of vice do you have in mind? Gambling? Drinking? Sloth? Gluttony? Fornication? Or, do you mean "vise"? I have an assortment of vises for various purposes. I guess my vice is vises? Or vice versa? Dan, U.S. Air Force, retired The man is truly wice beyond his years!! |
#7
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Jerry Wass wrote:
Dan wrote: Orval Fairbairn wrote: In article , mhorowit wrote: New to riveting here. Reading on basics show the impact on the manufactured head is transmitted along the rivet and forces the bucking bar off the bucktail. It then slams back, causing the rivet shaft to begin to deform. Because the bucking bar needs to move, does this mean it can not be clamped in a vice? - Mike I would not clamp my rivets in a vice. What kind of vice do you have in mind? Gambling? Drinking? Sloth? Gluttony? Fornication? Or, do you mean "vise"? I have an assortment of vises for various purposes. I guess my vice is vises? Or vice versa? Dan, U.S. Air Force, retired The man is truly wice beyond his years!! Vise guy. Dan, U.S. Air Force, retired |
#8
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On Sep 5, 4:58*am, mhorowit wrote:
Because the bucking bar needs to move, does this mean it can not be clamped in a vice? - Mike Not in my experience, and I would dispute the assertion that the bucking bar actually has to move. I've done plenty of rivets with a bucking bar clamped in a vise, and have found it a perfactly reasonable way to go. The dynamics are a bit different than with the bucking bar held by hand, but plenty workable. Where I found it necessary to control the dynamics of a bucking bar, I constructed a machine that uses a Bilstein shock absorber to rebound and reposition the bar. That was for riveting HP-18 sailplane box spars. There's a page about it at Wayne Paul's Screder Sailplane Designs web site: http://www.soaridaho.com/Schreder/Co...ting_Tool.html Thanks, Bob K. |
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