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03-07-2007 08:41 PM #1
Dry Ice
This stuff comes in handy for press fitting parts like GM power steering pumps. 5 minutes on dry ice will shrink the pump, 15 minutes in the oven @ 220 will expand the housing. Little grease and they pop together nicely. This week I will try it on cam bearings. Local grocery outlets carry it. Bring leather gloves if you are going to handle.
http://www.dryiceinfo.com/
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03-07-2007 11:57 PM #2
At work we freeze press bearings alot . We use it on 6 to 8 inch bearing with a press fit of .002 or .003 . If you have a deep freezer this will work leave it in there about 4 hours or so . Our freezers our set at 95 below zero just for this app. There a special industrial in our Tool & Die department.Last edited by bluestang67; 03-08-2007 at 11:31 PM.
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03-08-2007 10:50 AM #3
Originally Posted by 42K3
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03-08-2007 10:56 AM #4
It also blows up in water ........do not transport it in the rain.Its gunna take longer than u thought and its gunna cost more too(plan ahead!)
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03-08-2007 06:48 PM #5
Originally Posted by bluestang67
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03-08-2007 11:03 PM #6
Originally Posted by shawnlee28
When I was in high school one day in machine shop we dropped some in a can of water that we'd been heating by sticking an old piece of cold rolled steel in and out of the kiln. I didn't see that much fog again until I made it to So. Cal.Ken Thomas
NoT FaDe AwaY and the music didn't die
The simplest road is usually the last one sought
Wild Willie & AA/FA's The greatest show in drag racing
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03-11-2007 10:36 AM #7
Its also good for removing tile. Just place it on the tile and it freezes the thin set and pop goes the tile.
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03-11-2007 12:41 PM #8
I know its the preffered noise maker of those who wish to make big booms,. ..even better than acetaline bombs!!!!Its gunna take longer than u thought and its gunna cost more too(plan ahead!)
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03-11-2007 01:08 PM #9
Damage from dry ice in a plastic soda bottle cap. He shook it, then held on to it.
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03-11-2007 01:55 PM #10
Why does it always get ya right between the eyes
I was silly kid once and hung a paper target for my new bb gun on a brick wall ,then backed off about 40 feet to be ""SAFE"" and let her rip right into the bulls eye Then the theory of relativity kicked in on that solid bb and returned it to me at the same velocity it was shot at and of course it hit me right dead center between the eyes and stuck!!!!!!!!Its gunna take longer than u thought and its gunna cost more too(plan ahead!)
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03-11-2007 02:07 PM #11
has anyone ever heard of using it to pop out hail dents? the way i heard is heat up dent with a heat gun and drop a piece of dry ice on the dent. just curious if it's bs or real
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03-11-2007 02:13 PM #12
I am not a body man...but I do know heat exspands and cold contracts.Not sure how much more it would do than a wet rag?Its gunna take longer than u thought and its gunna cost more too(plan ahead!)
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03-11-2007 07:23 PM #13
You don't have to heat it first, thus you don't damage the paint.
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03-11-2007 07:35 PM #14
Liqiud Nitrogin ?
WE use it in our area to put brands on cattle. Just the opposite of heat but will burn the hell out of em and when healed the brand if white. I also have some in the semen tank and that will sure make it small and VERY brittle. If you drop it after it's been in the juice it's broke. You use a styrofoam container and place the item you want to shrink in the container and pour nitrogin in it and cover. Won't take long but you do need a tank. Seems like it's 212 deg below sea level.
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03-22-2007 01:33 PM #15
yes. it does work for dents. but heating the metal sounds like asking for trouble damage to both metal and paint. also makes cheap fog effects for halloween. of course, these days you'd probably be sued when a kid touched it and got hurt.
how about this...i need to replace the pitman arm on my '94 c1500 pickup. the nut on the sector shaft has been there since the truck rolled off the line in '93 and is, of course, stuck pretty securely. i was going to apply heat to the nut and expand it, but what about applying dry ice to the sector shaft instead? i know the nut would get cold, too, but maybe not at the same rate, if their compositions are slightly different. i just know that if i go at the thing with a breaker bar (can't find a 1-5/16" socket in 1/2" drive, anyway) i'll break something. i have a bad habit of snapping stuff.
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