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Farm Machinery
Machinery
Restoring Rusty Mouldboards.
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<blockquote data-quote="MrNoo" data-source="post: 7821237" data-attributes="member: 2767"><p>Shot blast as you have, as others said flap wheels, I reckon on a full day for a bad Fergie board, then finish off by hand with 80 grit in line with soil flow, always works and we have some soil here that would stick to anything!</p><p>If really deeply pitted you can fill with weld, the weld will fuse with the harder moldboard steel, quick grind and good to go.</p><p>On one exceptionally bad board I used grinding discs to get the pits out but you have to use them flat.</p><p>It is amazing how some boards pit badly when left out and others seem to just surface rust. Most of the match ploughs I've done have all been sat outside for eons.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="MrNoo, post: 7821237, member: 2767"] Shot blast as you have, as others said flap wheels, I reckon on a full day for a bad Fergie board, then finish off by hand with 80 grit in line with soil flow, always works and we have some soil here that would stick to anything! If really deeply pitted you can fill with weld, the weld will fuse with the harder moldboard steel, quick grind and good to go. On one exceptionally bad board I used grinding discs to get the pits out but you have to use them flat. It is amazing how some boards pit badly when left out and others seem to just surface rust. Most of the match ploughs I've done have all been sat outside for eons. [/QUOTE]
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Restoring Rusty Mouldboards.
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