Fork tube sleeve replacement ideas

Minimichael

Well-Known Member
#22
These are all great ideas, and shows the resourcefulness, creativity and depth of knowledge y'all have here. I shoulda known the topic would generate such traffic.

Hey has anyone seen any of their ideas in action? The brass sheeting, ... pill bottles?
 
#25
Look for Nylatron. That is the name brand for a special plastic that can be easily machined but wears really well. It can even wear steel down. Comes in lots of different shapes solids, rounds, and sheets. Used for bushings, washers and places that ordinarily plastic would fail. McMaster Carr. Easy to drill and machine but really tough when used
 

Minimichael

Well-Known Member
#26
Look for Nylatron. That is the name brand for a special plastic that can be easily machined but wears really well. It can even wear steel down. Comes in lots of different shapes solids, rounds, and sheets. Used for bushings, washers and places that ordinarily plastic would fail. McMaster Carr. Easy to drill and machine but really tough when used
Thanks for this tip.

Nylatron and nylacast appear to be too thick walled (1/2") to be practical, I think, since I'd have to have it machined. And down to less than a 1/16" wall thickness.

I might go with these for first trial.
 

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Minimichael

Well-Known Member
#33
Calipers, too. Thanks for the tips. I'll post again on this. I have some fresh repop plastic sleeves, and also bought brass tubing, and might even try each. I thought about copper shim but what if that were to corrode inside the tubes? I mean this is my children's inheritance I'm working on :p
 
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Minimichael

Well-Known Member
#38
I figured out the ideal thickness of the bushing should be approx. 0.058"... (Maybe 3/64's?). To allow space for lubrication. Both the old stock (trashed) ones and the new repops are about that. And the brass I'm working with will match that, too.
 
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