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Welding a bobcat backhoe bucket

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Ignoramus18451

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Jan 26, 2012, 7:31:37 PM1/26/12
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I bought a backhoe bucket for a Bobcat, as part of a big package deal
(not complaining).

The bucket has rust and rusted through on one side.

Can I just take a 1/8 steel plate and weld it as a patch? Should I do
it on the outside or inside?

I could also just sell it as is, with rust damage shown.

i

Lloyd E. Sponenburgh

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Jan 26, 2012, 8:05:29 PM1/26/12
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Ignoramus18451 <ignoram...@NOSPAM.18451.invalid> fired this volley in
news:X7SdnQ02xuv0bbzS...@giganews.com:

> Can I just take a 1/8 steel plate and weld it as a patch? Should I do
> it on the outside or inside?
>
> I could also just sell it as is, with rust damage shown.
>

Sell it as-is, and "discount" it based upon what it would cost you to do
the patch.

LLoyd

Karl Townsend

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Jan 26, 2012, 8:17:26 PM1/26/12
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I do this sort of thing all the time.

In general, I cut the bad area out, then make new parts fit just right and
weld in. A bit a grinding and its better than new.

Karl



Pete C.

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Jan 26, 2012, 9:42:39 PM1/26/12
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Don't forget the hardfacing on the key wear edges...

Gunner Asch

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Jan 26, 2012, 11:55:39 PM1/26/12
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And it wont be 1/8" sheet metal either will it?

Gunner

One could not be a successful Leftwinger without realizing that,
in contrast to the popular conception supported by newspapers
and mothers of Leftwingers, a goodly number of Leftwingers are
not only narrow-minded and dull, but also just stupid.
Gunner Asch

Ecnerwal

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Jan 28, 2012, 12:17:13 PM1/28/12
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In article <X7SdnQ02xuv0bbzS...@giganews.com>,
Karl has posted the correct method - replacing the section rather than
scabbing on a patch. Cut it out, bevel the edges, weld it in. Stronger,
doesn't screw up the way the bucket digs.

However the correct method for you is sell at a price where someone else
gets to do that. I'd be stunned if you got your money back on taking the
time to repair it.

--
Cats, coffee, chocolate...vices to live by
Please don't feed the trolls. Killfile and ignore them so they will go away.

Ignoramus9985

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Jan 28, 2012, 1:10:54 PM1/28/12
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On 2012-01-28, Ecnerwal <MyName...@ReplaceWithMyVices.Com.invalid> wrote:
> In article <X7SdnQ02xuv0bbzS...@giganews.com>,
> Ignoramus18451 <ignoram...@NOSPAM.18451.invalid> wrote:
>
>> I bought a backhoe bucket for a Bobcat, as part of a big package deal
>> (not complaining).
>>
>> The bucket has rust and rusted through on one side.
>>
>> Can I just take a 1/8 steel plate and weld it as a patch? Should I do
>> it on the outside or inside?
>>
>> I could also just sell it as is, with rust damage shown.
>
> Karl has posted the correct method - replacing the section rather than
> scabbing on a patch. Cut it out, bevel the edges, weld it in. Stronger,
> doesn't screw up the way the bucket digs.
>
> However the correct method for you is sell at a price where someone else
> gets to do that. I'd be stunned if you got your money back on taking the
> time to repair it.
>

Yep, screw it, I will just take honest pictures and sell it as
shown. I am completely buried in stuff to do. Plus people call me
every 15 minutes about something or other, very distracting.

I now have a very efficient way of listing stuff for sale. My employee
cleans stuff, assigns inventory numbers, and photographs. Then he
connects the camera and runs a Linux bash shell function that saves
pictures from camera, resizes them, and saves them in folders by
inventory numbers.

They are uploaded to my webserver in batches.

Then I get a cart with stuff to my office, where I write descriptions
and do pricing. I can list stuff at the rate of two minutes per item.

When phone calls come in the middle of my listing, it is kind of
distracting.

i

Bruce L. Bergman (munged human readable)

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Feb 4, 2012, 2:12:56 PM2/4/12
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Clean it up really good, get off the loose rust, grind down to good
metal and put a coat of penetrating rust-stop on the rest. DO NOT use
a zinc cold galvanize, it'll mess up the lungs of the next guy to weld
on it.

This is not to try and hide the damage, it's to make an honest showing
of "We've cleaned it up and stopped the rust, and these are the areas
that need to be replaced." Then the buyer doesn't get the feeling of
a pig in a poke.

You can prime or paint the rest of it, but I'd leave the bad parts in
rust-stop or Weld-Through Primer only. Someone will be welding on it.

Ignoramus27096

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Feb 4, 2012, 3:36:16 PM2/4/12
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Bruce, this is an excavator bucket, no paint is going to hold up to
its use.

i
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