Post
by OilyBill » Fri Sep 15, 2023 8:48 pm
One hint a VERY skilled jeweler demonstrated for me when he soldered a brass lamp I brought to him, that had age cracking:
The VERY FIRST thing he did was run a very fine saw blade down the crack, right to the bottom. He stated it would NEVER be successful to just silver solder the crack itself without first doing the saw blade maneuver. The reason he gave was that the edges all along the crack had corrosion and dirt in them, and there was NO WAY to join them successfully, and no way to clean the crack edges, no matter what you do. The blade was probably .020" thick, and slid down the crack like butter. He then applied a dot of flux to the crack, and using a very tiny flame with a jewelry torch, ran a line of silver solder right down the crack to the end. He then squared off the end, so it matched the rest of the stamping, (There was just a tiny nub sticking out at the end of the joint.) blended off the excess with a very fine sanding pad, and finally polished it. When he was done, I had to use a magnifying glass to see where the repair had been done, and even with the glass, I had a very hard time finding where the repair had been done. The gleam of the polished brass made the repair invisible. He also pointed out that now that area of brass had been annealed from the heat, it was unlikely to crack again (Probably for the next 100 years or so)
This guy DEFINITELY knew his stuff. (At one time he was the largest platinum casting jeweler in California, Arizona, and New Mexico. At that time, he was the ONLY platinum caster in Arizona, since you need special equipment, as platinum casts at 6000 degree F. and few jewelers in those 3 states, and NONE in Arizona, had the skills or the equipment to do the work.)