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Merry Christmas and Happy Holidays!

 

For Christmas this morning I was ecstatic to find a 225e shell beneath a few layers of wrapping paper. Unfortunately, I took it out of the box and found the shell had split in half! 

 

The two pieces fit together perfectly, and when attached to a chassis the crack is barely noticeable, but I'd rather have the shell in one piece. What can I use to bond the shell pieces together? Epoxy? Solder? Glue?

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I vote for JB Weld. The orginal, not the JB Quick as its about twice as strong. Strip the paint first. Leave it clamped for 24 hrs before working on it.  Don't wipe off the excess epoxy that oozes out. After it hardens then file and sand smooth like body filler. Then repaint using sanding primer to fill in the file marks.

Pete

I recommend NOT using epoxy. Epoxy is very viscous and will tend to hold the pieces apart, preventing a tight fit. Epoxy is great for adhesion to smoother surfaces and where a tight fit is not needed. You want a low viscosity adhesive like superglue that can flow out of the way as needed. It will allow a tight fit and wipe off the excess on the outside before it dries. Also, these castings tend to be a bit porous where they are broken so a low viscosity adhesive will soak in much better and give a stronger bond.   If the fit is as tight as it looks and you get a tight fit with the adhesive, I do not think you will need any reinforcement.

I have not worked with JBWeld. I understand it is very strong, but I also understand it is very viscous so I would not recommend it unless you thin it considerably. That would considerably extend its time to cure.

Engine97 posted:

It fits together perfectly on the frame.

 

I ask, can you notice the crack?

225E Shell

You work look great i see no crack . So did you use the JB Weld ?

I ask as i had a 1994 jeep cherokee at the time wit 120,000 miles with a 4 inch crack in my oil pan that leaked oil the way it sat under everything to replace pan motor had to be lifted or pulled.

Drained it wiped it over and over again applied jb weld put another 180,000 miles on it and then junked it because of holes in floor several next to the 2 front seats that rocked bad because of weakened floor.

Till the day i junked it it never leaked from the jb weld fix.

Miss that jeep as that inline 6 cylinder still ran excellent with 300,000 miles on it but did not want to drive it Fred Flintstone style.

Steamer posted:

I mix my JB a tad on the runny side just so it will flow, then leave it alone for several days to fully cure. I started my 4-8-4 at least 10 years ago without any reinforcement other than another layer of JB on the inside.

I've had one of my cars apart for about 15 years.   Not only that but I've been dumb enough to take a few more apart since.  Don't be like me!!!!!!!!!!!! Nothing is more upsetting than having your favorite car apart that long 😡

 

that's why I'm not sweating it being over 5 years since the road runner was supposed to be painted....it's together, and I can fire it up and go for a ride anytime (except when it's 5 degrees and four inches of snow outside like now. I've seen too many guys take a car apart, and suddenly it's 20 years later and the car is buried (ore the owner) and the car never sees the road. Or worse...I know several guys that have the cars done and they never come out of the garage.

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