hzbloke wrote:Thanks for the replies. I've had a look at the welds with a loupe and can't see any cracks so they must in the 'inside' of the bracket. I'm guessing that means that welding won't help. Putty doesn't seems to be a long-term fix so I like the idea of flooding it with solder.
That sounds worth a try, but I'm a bit pessimistic. Solder is substantially softer than steel, so the stresses/vibrations that caused the crack to propagate in the first place are likely to flex the soft solder 'covering' the crack. That is to say that there will still be a 'stress riser" underneath the solder. (Imagine a putty covered crack).
Soldering the crack might work, especially if the solder is thick over the crack and then tapers to thinness. Personally I would be inclined to stay away from solder and use something stronger and more flex resistant. Silver solder I think would be a good choice. Using an acetylene torch, when the silver solder comes up to temperature (with appropriate flux) the silver solder aggressively wicks to wherever it is hot enough to liquify the silver solder. Conventional brazing rod (cu/zn) seems to be a bit more touchy to use. You have to get the rod to a higher temperature and it doesn't wick very well unless the surrounding steel comes up to red-hot temperature. Recently I've used a 15% silver, 80% copper, and 5% phosphorous rod which I got from a plumbing supply and which I believe is intended for sweating the joints of copper tubing. The flux for that rod looks very much like regular borax brazing flux. That rod is my new rod of choice for closing up the pin-hole leaks that show up in air compressor tanks (because the owner-me-wasn't prudent about letting the water out of the tank.)
Oh, whatever you do, you will need to have the surrounding area squeaky clean. That means a wire brush removing paint, scale, and rust. Luckily silver solder and the brazing rod I'm talking about is very good at wicking through rust when brought up to temperature.
Caveat: This stuff originates mostly from my fertile mind. There's a slight chance I don't know what I'm talking about.
And perhaps ME109 or some other experienced welder will come along and give you better advice.
Ken, modest in Oklahoma