I was thinking of May be filling the dips with liquid metal and then gently grinding back, or maybe brazing which I don't really know much about although Ed had good result on a floor plan on wheeler dealers

When you say brushed in do you mean brushed into the pitting?coaster wrote:Loading the area with lead might be possible but brazing will need a lot of heat (cherry red) over a wide area which could cause distortion/buckling. Brass is also very hard and will take a lot of grinding. I'd be tempted to use JB weld, it is very liquid and could be brushed out.
Yes, that's what I meant although it is slow to set unlike other epoxy mixes, several hours to 'stiffen up'. Therefore it will self level to an extent and will probably drip through any large holes so put some tape over the rear firstsydduckett wrote:When you say brushed in do you mean brushed into the pitting?coaster wrote:Loading the area with lead might be possible but brazing will need a lot of heat (cherry red) over a wide area which could cause distortion/buckling. Brass is also very hard and will take a lot of grinding. I'd be tempted to use JB weld, it is very liquid and could be brushed out.
I have de-seamed using lead with good results but only to paint over not sure if powder coat would take to leadGLscoot wrote:On a similar note, on last years project with the powder coat. Condensation has emerged under the powder coat coming from the seams on the Vespa and has started to rust, nothing major and should be ok for another year. My plan was to weld up the seams and get it powder coated again.
Does anyone have ideas on what to do as in welding the seams, Lead would be a nice option as would brazing, I like the fact that it would all be different, but I am worried about the heat distorting the frame.