Stupid mistake attempting to repair furling strut

NigelCraig

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There was one section of the luff groove on the aluminium furling strut for the jib on my Crabber which narrowed and I foolishly tried to widen it by inserting the blade of a chisel and rotating it. All I achieved was to put a number of small nicks in the aluminium which could possibly snag the sail. Is it possible to file down aluminium to get a smooth surface? - I had an idea that was difficult.
 
There was one section of the luff groove on the aluminium furling strut for the jib on my Crabber which narrowed and I foolishly tried to widen it by inserting the blade of a chisel and rotating it. All I achieved was to put a number of small nicks in the aluminium which could possibly snag the sail. Is it possible to file down aluminium to get a smooth surface? - I had an idea that was difficult.

Only problem is that ali can clog the file.

Traditional engineering remedy was to chalk the file.

Finish with a fine file, fine emory or wet and dry.
 
Little nicks will file ok. Its not as though you will be filing off masses of metal.

if the damage is very slight emery cloth or some wet & dry might be adequate.

If you have one of those "Dremels" or similar combitool maybe a use for it.


The trouble is that you will be removing the anodising! :(
 
Little nicks will file ok. Its not as though you will be filing off masses of metal.

if the damage is very slight emery cloth or some wet & dry might be adequate.

If you have one of those "Dremels" or similar combitool maybe a use for it.


The trouble is that you will be removing the anodising! :(

Good point - removing a larger area of anodising will probably make it worse - perhaps better to just put a bit of electrical tape over the nicks so that the luff of the sail doesn't catch.
 
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