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How can I check my frame is straight
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This topic is a favorite of mine, and I've straightened (by my own definition) about a half dozen Chief frames and several Sport Scout frames. A few concepts can guide you through the inspection, and help explain the end result your after.
First concept, by my reasoning, is that the center planes of the wheels and the neck should all lie in a common plane. This apparently speaks for the parting lines of the engines too, although they are less critical to the handling of the bike. When working with a bare frame, of course, you have to know axle dimensions so you can transfer the center lines to the appropriate frame parts or references, i.e. the slippers in the rear, or the centers of the forks. The forks should be managed separately anyway so you can work with the neck.
Concept #2 is left-to-right symmetry. If you have a common center plane the slippers should be the same distance from that plane, and the centers top and bottom should show this. The neck can be referenced with a framing square if you have a table and a center-line, and the lower portion of the frame is in a fixture that centers it on the center-line. Finally, a shaft that projects through the neck's bearing centers should also project through the centerline on the table.
If the language of the involved geometry is confusing try to find a book with some diagrams. We are relying on definition of the plane, and the line, and symmetry. My work all happens on a 4' x 12' x 3/8" table slab, and I've used a variety of large "persuaders" to move things to where they belong. My fixtures secure the frame in the front motor mounts and the base of the lower casting on the seat post. ... and I've used 10' long steel tubing to move the slippers, so that requires some pretty firm fixtures. Slippers are easier than the neck, imo,.. I've only used heat when straightening collision bends, or to relieve stress to limit that "memory".
Wish I had pix.
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Originally posted by T. Cotten View PostSo.... ..
Did you fix them?
....CottenEric Smith
AMCA #886
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Big Twin H-D frames were almost fun, Eric!
Until the steel turned to mud by '84 or so.
But I never attempted a single-down-tube model, and I don't know how I would hold onto one. (Never a sportster either of course.)
My Chief frame experience, beyond weld repairs (couldn't find a pro..), was only to straighten bowed sections of frame members using the grate at the bottom of my framing tools photo.
As with Milwaukee machines, straightening individual members in the best, often intuitive, order brings the entire assembly back to harmony.
Missed my chance at a REAL table once, for a song.
But it would have been impossible for me to transport or handle, and no place to put it.. ... . *sigh*
.....CottenLast edited by T. Cotten; 07-19-2017, 01:19 PM.AMCA #776
Dumpster Diver's Motto: Seek,... and Ye Shall Find!
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DSC01886.jpgDSC01889.jpg
Here's a Four frame at John's shop in LA, taken some time ago on a vist out west.AMCA # 3233
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Good pics, Green Indian!
I recognize the headstock rod straightedge, and a vertical reference rod within the left "plunger".
The rest is the necessary "immovable object".
Its awesome, but I would roll it outside, where you can back off far enough to actually 'eyeball'.
I had to stand in the alley.
....CottenLast edited by T. Cotten; 07-19-2017, 07:49 PM.AMCA #776
Dumpster Diver's Motto: Seek,... and Ye Shall Find!
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I wish I had video of him straighten the frame. I was there once, sans camera, when he was straightening a Chief frame and it was quite a bit of work, some are more tweaked than others. A lot of heat, applied a crucial points, helps the frame "remember" its correct settings but some do require more radical surgery to fix.AMCA # 3233
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Originally posted by Green Indian View PostI wish I had video of him straighten the frame. I was there once, sans camera, when he was straightening a Chief frame and it was quite a bit of work, some are more tweaked than others. A lot of heat, applied a crucial points, helps the frame "remember" its correct settings but some do require more radical surgery to fix.
....CottenAMCA #776
Dumpster Diver's Motto: Seek,... and Ye Shall Find!
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Just what I was taught, Green Indian!
If it was bent cold, it is straightened cold.
Most 'speltered' or brazed frames were straightened after assembly, then treated in an oven to give them springy-ness, and its 'memory'.
Excessive heat turns that to mud. (But ya gotta do what ya gotta do, sometimes!)
I wish I could learn how Schwinn 'tempered' his frames.
(Not that I am entertaining any more through my shop... Retirement sounds like a dream.)
....CottenLast edited by T. Cotten; 07-20-2017, 09:59 AM.AMCA #776
Dumpster Diver's Motto: Seek,... and Ye Shall Find!
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Thanks, Cotton. That does clarify things a bit. I'm just an observer in John's shop and I can not argue with his success at these things he's done hundreds of frames, I'd wager, and I'm sure there are other methods employed to bring errant frames back into correct alignment other than heat. It's just that particular day and that frame had heat applied to select sections which worked wonders for the one that was on the table to be straighten that particular day.AMCA # 3233
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Originally posted by T. Cotten View PostJust what I was taught, Green Indian!
If it was bent cold, it is straightened cold.
Most 'speltered' or brazed frames were straightened after assembly, then treated in an oven to give them springy-ness, and its 'memory'.
Excessive heat turns that to mud. (But ya gotta do what ya gotta do, sometimes!)
I wish I could learn how Schwinn 'tempered' his frames.
(Not that I am entertaining any more through my shop... Retirement sounds like a dream.)
....Cotten
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Are you 'channelling' Ignaz, Ryan?
If so, set me up for a séance!... thanks.
....Cotten
PS: I guess "memory" should not only apply to making a frame straight again, but also to staying straight.Last edited by T. Cotten; 07-20-2017, 12:35 PM.AMCA #776
Dumpster Diver's Motto: Seek,... and Ye Shall Find!
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