Posted by Chris TickTock on 26/01/2020 11:54:46:
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What is thrown out as advice is the argument I've never done it or would never do it it and no credible reason given. Loctite again dependent upon which one we are talking about and which use we may wish to put it may be seen as a tool and / or material to achieve a particular purpose. As always there may well be alternatives but surely it is up to the person making the repair to decide in the light of his judgement reflecting on all known facts.
chris
I mostly agree : there is loads of outdated advice and folklore floating about in Model Engineering. Examples:
- Trying to buy a long gone proprietary oil because it's recommended in an antediluvian manual. (The oils are nothing special, use a modern equivalent.)
- Myford is the best lathe for Model Engineering. (Good, not perfect, many more alternatives available today, often better value.)
- Buying cheap tools is always a waste of money. (Tools need only be fit for purpose.)
- The dangerous workshop chemicals of yesteryear work better than modern equivalents. (Maybe!)
- Good tools depend on careful craftsmanship. (Rather than mass-production with modern plant.)
- Old steel is higher quality than modern steel. (Unlikely on average.)
- Far Eastern is always inferior to British. (Times change.)
- Imperial is easier than Metric and more patriotic. (Only for the over sixties and Americans…)
On the other hand, and this is important, Model Engineering and Clockmaking as practised in small workshops hasn't changed significantly in well over a century. For us, old ways really are often the best ways, tried and tested over decades. Not to be ignored lightly. Other times, silly old duffer is repeating what his silly old grandad told him in 1968 about a half-forgotten trick apprentice grandad misunderstood in 1912. I strongly recommend reading Model Engineer magazines published between about 1950 and 1965. And books from the same period. Many of the authors were professionals trained before industry went high-tech, and most of what they say about workshops, tooling and methods is first-class. The main problem is they wrote before DRO's, Carbide, many new materials, and a bunch of other developments. There's a gap because books written after about 1970 tend to be aimed squarely at academic engineers, not you and I. Sometimes the gap can be filled, for example reading Sparey's The Amateur's Lathe, and Neil Wyatt's 'The Mini-lathe', (which I think is the most modern lathe book) gets the best of both worlds. Other times you have to make your own mind up.
But, do not trust personal judgement or opinion in the absence of experience and book learning. The way to disaster is to look intelligently at an old clock and imagine there's a problem. Maybe no-one else has had that problem in the last 300 years, and you've spotted a new opportunity. Or maybe it's a Fairy at the end of the Garden. But don't worry, propose a solution like Blue Loctite on the forum, get a variety of ideas, and carry on regardless even though the majority opinion is mostly negative. That's unwise – you can do better!
Perhaps there are only 3 answers to any proposal:
- It's a good idea, well-known with maybe a few tweaks and risks to consider, but go for it.
- It's a bad idea, notoriously stupid or with a high risk of expensive failure. Don't do it!
- It's a middling idea, possibly novel and contentious and unclear if there's any advantage or what the risks are. If that's the case don't guess – engineers don't do that. The correct approach is more research, ideally from someone who has done before. Now I know from their comments that experienced clock-makers on the forum are generally against Loctite, I'd want to be sure it was a good idea before trying it on a real clock. Why not experiment? Make a brass plate representing a clock and thread it. Loctite some threads and not others. Is there a measurable improvement? Does undoing cause any difficulty or damage? After a successful experiment, much safer to apply the idea in the real world.
Reading the answers the original question may have been misinterpreted? I think Chris's idea is to use Loctite when re-inserting a screw to lock the thread without applying much torque to ancient threads. Instead of tightening conventionally to get a friction grip, he will instead barely tighten the screw and rely on glue to hold it in place. Others have focussed on Loctite's usual purpose, which is to stop fully-tightened bolts from coming loose due to vibration or heat-cycling. Which problem is it? Loctite in the first case might be a good idea, Loctiting a clock for the second reason feels wrong.
Dave