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Published: 2010-02-15 04:04:50 +0000 UTC; Views: 363; Favourites: 2; Downloads: 27
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Description
Last summer I bought a motorbike from a guy who had crashed it, and have been fixing it up. The pavement scraped up the pipes, and the heat shields turn signals, battery case, and part of the air cleaner cover were gone. I fixed the brakes, and had new tires, primary chain, and final drive belt put on, along with a lot of other little thing. To save some money, and for the cool factor, I decided to make some of my own parts from copper. The first thing was to deal with the problem of setting my pants on fire with the bare, scraped to hell exhaust pipes. I used my girlfriend's angle grinder to remove the gouges, and painted the pipes with stove blacking, and then hammered out and riveted together a set of copper heat shields. When I first put them on and went out on the road I was a bit distracted by the beautifully changing heat colors on the copper. The next step was to make a battery case. I made the windows on it in the shape of the sky in a little landscape scene in the Cascades.Related content
Comments: 8
celticabria [2010-07-17 13:22:10 +0000 UTC]
Wow! It should have been really hard to do this fine details!
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willofthewisp In reply to celticabria [2010-08-23 00:29:23 +0000 UTC]
It wasn't all that bad. What was hard was fitting the heat shields to the exhaust pipes.
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willofthewisp In reply to OenghusLok47 [2010-02-15 21:46:49 +0000 UTC]
Thanks. It's being fun.
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ron-paul-for-premier [2010-02-15 07:21:26 +0000 UTC]
Pretty creative.....
That's the nice thing about copper... You heat it right up to firscale and then clean it off and start all over with another bunch of really cool colors. Get yourself a chunk of bronze rod and chew up a bit with a fine flap disc, then go over some of the 'highlights' of the copper heat shields and you'll get some nice purples and blues... Fun stuff.
BTW, how did you do the scenery ? Engraving tools or something ?
cheers,
/J...
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willofthewisp In reply to ron-paul-for-premier [2010-02-15 21:46:08 +0000 UTC]
I used a couple or three little line punches ranging from straight with sharp corners, to quite rounded. I punched the metal over a smooth anvil so that the metal would be displaced rather than warping the whole piece. The cutting I did with a small gauge jeweler's saw.
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ron-paul-for-premier In reply to willofthewisp [2010-02-15 22:35:32 +0000 UTC]
Well Done !
You should post some close-ups of your work for everyone to see !
Cheers,
/Joe..
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