My buddy asked me to service at his 113h for him. Long story short, I disassembled the reel and found that the post the sleeve slides over on the bridge was loose. It actually spun freely and wobbled some. Never saw one do that before. There is very little "up and down" play in it, but it certainly is not solid in the bridge as every other post is I have seen.
Is the bridge trash or will it operate properly in this condition...............(I hear you laughing) :)
My instincts were screaming at me to chuck it and replace it but I would be lying if I told you I knew why, other than the fact that it was lose, spinning, and had a little wobble. I mean once it is all put together and you tighten down on the drag all that play will be eliminated wouldn't it?
I replaced it, I would just like to know exactly why I guess :)
Thanks in advance.
Tight lines!
Harry
Sometimes you can tighten the shaft by supporting the bridge and punching the backside several times with a center punch. It will loosen up again and I usually replace the bridge.
find some washers that fit over the post and slide them over the top, then put the post in a vise, upside down and clamp down over the post. tap it down with a hammer and the clamp down on the vise. now wail away with the hammer a couple of times to tighten up the post. a couple of whacks should do it. quick and easy. it doesn't take much. the stainless steel of the post is pretty soft.
Thank you guys!
I'm going against the Master on this one ;D. My advice to you is not to waste your time and effort and get yourself a new bridge.
You might be able to make the loose post tight, but it won't last long.
Sal
I've done it both ways. The vise technique works fine. If you're concerned about excess movement after install, you could always take a small punch and snug it up even more. The replace it with a new one works also. One costs about the price of a replacement bridge assembly (used or new) + shipping/etc. and the other takes less than 2 minutes.
It takes less than two minutes if you have done it before, have access to everything you need at your fingertips and have mastered the skill sets to perform it. I have everything available, although I would have to figure out what exactly I need and how to rig it up, but I lack mastery of the specific skill sets so it may very well take me a half hour to destroy a bridge. I won't come across this enough to make it worth my while to master the skill sets so I'll replace the bridge.
Ron
If you have access to a propane torch, I braze bridge shafts to the bridge plates. I first soak the bridge in a degreaser then clean with a de-oiler (DAWN, Simple green,...), then heat slowly to evaporate the cleaners by heating the bridge plate. Once dry and the remaining oils vaporize off, I braze the shaft from the outward facing side. The braze fills in the gaps and the I have not one come back as of yet.
Quote from: Alto Mare on July 16, 2013, 01:28:13 AM
I'm going against the Master on this one ;D. My advice to you is not to waste your time and effort and get yourself a new bridge.
You might be able to make the loose post tight, but it won't last long.
Sal
waste not, want not..... ;D
Until Sal sent me some NEW ones I was repairing 349 bridges, now I don't have to....thanks again Sal.
I'll break out my silver solder and see how well it works on a bridge out of my scrap tub.
I must agree with Sal here especially if it's for your buddy. Fit him a new bridge and be 100% sure the job is right.
the next time you get one of these, try it out. it works great!!!!!!