Joining two pieces of 10mm stainless steel bar at right angles.

Advert

Joining two pieces of 10mm stainless steel bar at right angles.

Home Forums General Questions Joining two pieces of 10mm stainless steel bar at right angles.

Viewing 11 posts - 1 through 11 (of 11 total)
  • Author
    Posts
  • #105457
    Grizzly bear
    Participant
      @grizzlybear

      Help please, Joining two pieces of 10mm stainless steel bar at right angles.

      Before you ask, its for a Neff oven. Extra shelf supports, 4 off. They are £35 each plus post & packing. So its a DIY job.

      One length is 410mm, and at right angles at one end is a 30mm length.

      The original rods have a real sharp 90° bend. I intend to bolt them together using a M4 bolt.

      I'm after the neatest configuration. Tools; ML7 & vert slide + it will not beat me.

      Regards, Bear..

      Advert
      #22359
      Grizzly bear
      Participant
        @grizzlybear

        Help

        #105459
        Peter Tucker
        Participant
          @petertucker86088

          Hi Bear,

          I would bend them in the bench vice, making a tight bend with the hammer, remove any brusing with abrasive paper, and polish. Or you could cut, weld, grind, and polish.

          Good luck.

          Peter.

          #105462
          Gray62
          Participant
            @gray62

            A drawing would be helpful giving thicknessess of materiel to be joined, overall dimensions, is it solid or tubular etc etc.

            What grade of SS are you intending to use?

            CB

            #105465
            Stovepipe
            Participant
              @stovepipe

              Probably a silly question, but why can you not bolt the additional supports together in the same way as the originals ?

              Dennis

              #105479
              Ian P
              Participant
                @ianp

                As it happens I have just joined two SS bars at 90 degrees. On bar has a concave recess cut after drilling and tapping axially. The other bar is crossdrilled and counterbored to take the head of a turned down hex bolt that was then filed off flush. I was pleasantly surprised how strong the resulting joint was.

                Ian

                ss rod bolted and cleaned up.jpg

                #105483
                Ian P
                Participant
                  @ianp

                  I forgot to say, in the picture above the bar is 16 diameter and the bolt is M10.

                  For 10mm diameter bar I would suggest using M6 with the head diameter reduced to 7 or 7.5mm.

                  Ian

                  #105488
                  Grizzly bear
                  Participant
                    @grizzlybear

                    Hi Everyone, Thank you all for your input, Coalburner,Grade 304, the other details are in the O.P.

                    I haven't got welding equip.

                    Ian, that look like a nice job, that is the way I'll go.

                    I didn't think I could get a tight enough bend on it without it cracking, not got enough to experiment with.

                    Regards, Bear..

                    Edited By Grizzly bear on 04/12/2012 22:55:20

                    #105489
                    Siddley
                    Participant
                      @siddley

                      It'll bend 90 degrees just fine if you can get it red hot first, I sometimes forge pieces fron stainless.

                      #105495
                      JasonB
                      Moderator
                        @jasonb

                        You could also cut a cope like Ian has done above and silver solder the two together, just use HT5/Tenacity No5 flux.

                        #105841
                        Grizzly bear
                        Participant
                          @grizzlybear

                          Hello Everyone, I have just created my first album, please bear with me. Four pictures of the oven rods (Shelf supports). The job didn't turn out as good as Ians', but my customer was very pleased with the results.

                          Regards, Bear..

                        Viewing 11 posts - 1 through 11 (of 11 total)
                        • Please log in to reply to this topic. Registering is free and easy using the links on the menu at the top of this page.

                        Advert

                        Latest Replies

                        Home Forums General Questions Topics

                        Viewing 25 topics - 1 through 25 (of 25 total)
                        Viewing 25 topics - 1 through 25 (of 25 total)

                        View full reply list.

                        Advert

                        Newsletter Sign-up