I have a few kits, due to wear & tear, where the screw holes are too large for the screw I'm using. Instead of using a larger screw, I was wondering if anyone uses some form of putty to fill in the hole to make the origional screw work again?
Thanks
Gordon
Brought to you by the letters C.P.R. as well as D&H!
K1a - all the way
Old trick: Take a piece of plastic castin sprue, heat it, pull it out to a taper. Cut it off in the middle of the taper, stick it into the hole and secure it with solvent cement. Cut it off flush. When dry, drill it 1/16", tap 2-56, use a 2-56 screw to mount the truck.
---
Gary M. Collins gmcrailgNOSPAM@gmail.com
===================================
"Common Sense, Ain't!" -- G. M. Collins
http://fhn.site90.net
Drill out the old hole to 1/8". Glue in 1/8" Evergreen tubing and cut flush after allowing it to dry overnight. The hole in the tubing is just right for #2 self tapping screws.
An even quicker fix is to insert an appropriatelt-sized piece of strip styrene into the hole - .010"x.020" usually works well. Cut it off so that it doesn't protrude, put the truck in place and re-install the screw. The screw threads will mash it, providing enough interference to keep the screw in place.
Wayne
No laws against subbing the next larger machine screw. (Simple)..
All my Rivarossi passenger cars sport #6 sheet metal screws, replacing 'factory frictional' truck pins..