So just how do you do it with out it collapsing?
First I borrowed a Harbor Freight bender from a friend of mine to see if I could do it. Then I had to make a jig to work with the bender. Lastly, test on some scrap ( old piece).
The Jig build.
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From update _10_1_2012
From update _10_1_2012
With me so far? The half inch ply was a perfect fit. But if not I would have glued spacers in if needed.
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On the bender.
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Ok, so what is the secret ingredient? I actually found it on an Chinese industrial website for industrial benders. Dead simple when you know. It is a spacer/filler. Made from a piece of scrap plastic/Delrin.
Insert it in the track. It MUST be a tight fit.
Add captionFrom update _10_1_2012
From update _10_1_2012
Now bend it.
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First test on scrap. Then buy some track. I got mine here: http://www.curtain-tracks.com/ My problem was I had to match my current track. If you don't have to do this, then you may want to go a different route.
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More bending.
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Finished piece.
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I hope this helps anyone who needs to bend some track. It's not hard and can be done fairly inexpensively. If you have friend with a bender. I should say that of course this is not the only way to do it. It's just the way I did it.
Tuesday, July 22, 2014
How to bend shower track
Mike of s/v Chalice takes us thru the process. With the right tools, jigs and with the secret ingredient, it is easy!
Labels:
carpentry,
howto,
s/v Chalice
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