CAPTAIN FANTASTIC
Well-Known Member
The scissor type will do all rivets but you need a steady hand, and to be careful as it tends to snap off fingers too.
You should use Monel pop rivets NOT aluminium as they have a steel pin which will rust. You'll need to use a lazy tong or lever type riveter and should be ok for up to 5mm diameter rivets. Available from most chandlers, get a selection for various thicknesses.Toolstation it is!
What size rivets selection should I get?
Do I drill a hole exactly the given size of the rivet?
Thanks everyone
TS
You should use Monel pop rivets NOT aluminium as they have a steel pin which will rust. You'll need to use a lazy tong or lever type riveter and should be ok for up to 5mm diameter rivets. Available from most chandlers, get a selection for various thicknesses.
I've done my mast steps with this cheap lazy tong riveter, nearly 100 of them,
Good tip Norman E. Not that I have ever used a Rivnut , but if I do, I will do that.
For the OP, for WI Worth.
I agree with the others for emergency use the long handled jobs are the things to have. You need something that will pull a 1/4in monel rivet, as a lot of mast fittings are daftly over strength for manufacturing convenience. Beware - I got a pair off tinternet that would not open far enough to accept the larger mandrels. In extremis I had to grind them down to fit but the thing had to go back in the end, so, even if it says 1/4 in on the box - Check It Works.
Lazy tongs are good for speed but you need to be well braced to use them, not always easy on a boat. Eclipse/Spiralux are a well respected set and the newer ones (Chinese) will do 1/4in. The older ones which you may still find (Sheffield made) have max 3/16th jaws.
Get a mix of rivets, even alloy can be useful though they are only 2/3rd the strength of monel they have their uses being quick and easy to set.
PS
Don't fall into a trough of despond if you find your rivets have plain steel mandrels, that is all I have ever found in my local chandlers.
I always knock the pins out. Some monel rivets I bought had steel pins, unless monel sticks to a magnet.
So where can you get monel rivets with either monel pins or else pins that come out completely (rather than breaking) when pulled does anyone know ?
Boo2
But they usually have steel mandrels which WILL rust on a boat as a portion is always left inside.For rivetting into aluminium I'd use aluminium rivets - they're far easier to set and will last pretty well I find.
Good tip Norman E. Not that I have ever used a Rivnut , but if I do, I will do that.
For the OP, for WI Worth.
I agree with the others for emergency use the long handled jobs are the things to have. You need something that will pull a 1/4in monel rivet, as a lot of mast fittings are daftly over strength for manufacturing convenience. Beware - I got a pair off tinternet that would not open far enough to accept the larger mandrels. In extremis I had to grind them down to fit but the thing had to go back in the end, so, even if it says 1/4 in on the box - Check It Works.
Lazy tongs are good for speed but you need to be well braced to use them, not always easy on a boat. Eclipse/Spiralux are a well respected set and the newer ones (Chinese) will do 1/4in. The older ones which you may still find (Sheffield made) have max 3/16th jaws.
Get a mix of rivets, even alloy can be useful though they are only 2/3rd the strength of monel they have their uses being quick and easy to set.
PS
Don't fall into a trough of despond if you find your rivets have plain steel mandrels, that is all I have ever found in my local chandlers.
Just resurrecting this thread to ask if this rivet gun in man enough to cope with 6mm monel rivets?
https://www.toolstoday.co.uk/faithfull-heavy-duty-long-arm-riveter
And a question.. How do you remove a rivet should the need arise? Drill it out?
TudorSailor
Yes, that is the precise model that I have. I bought it primarily to fit folding mast steps, with 1/4" monel rivets to my main mast. No problem.
To remove unwanted rivets, drill off enough so that the remainder can be punched through.,