A couple years ago there were devastating forest fires in Eastern Washington state.
A Model T friend suffered a great loss including his shop and cars.
One specific casualty was his HCCT – it was burnt to a crisp.
The heat was so intense that it melted all of the internals of the meter, warped the meter faceplate, melted the magnet mounting spools, melted the brass magnet mounting screws, melted the babbitt shaft bearings, fried the inductor, and fried the field coil.
The only parts that could be salvaged were the frame, the hand crank, the shaft assembly, the flywheel and the inductor core.
The magnets get so hot that it must have changed the metallurgy as they would not take a charge when I tried to recharge them.
The biggest tasks were bead blasting and painting the salvaged parts and rewinding the inductor.
All of the rest of the parts were replaced.
The before and after are shown below.
Out of the Ashes – A HCCT Story
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Topic author - Posts: 628
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- First Name: BOB
- Last Name: CASCISA
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Out of the Ashes – A HCCT Story
Respectfully Submitted,
Be_Zero_Be
I drive a Model T ... Microseconds don't matter
For every Absolute Model T Fact there are at least three exceptions.
Be_Zero_Be
I drive a Model T ... Microseconds don't matter

For every Absolute Model T Fact there are at least three exceptions.
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Re: Out of the Ashes – A HCCT Story
That's amazing!
I'd guess the magnets were annealed by the heat. "Soft iron" is strongly attracted to magnetism, and it makes a good core for electromagnets, but it will not "hold" magnetism. In the 1950s, permanent magnets became commonplace for audio speakers and other uses. These were advertised as "ALNICO" magnets. The actual metal was hard but machinable.
I'd guess the magnets were annealed by the heat. "Soft iron" is strongly attracted to magnetism, and it makes a good core for electromagnets, but it will not "hold" magnetism. In the 1950s, permanent magnets became commonplace for audio speakers and other uses. These were advertised as "ALNICO" magnets. The actual metal was hard but machinable.
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Re: Out of the Ashes – A HCCT Story
Beautiful job Bob ! Name that HCCT - Phoenix 
A Fine is a Tax for Doing Something Wrong….A Tax is a Fine for Doing Something RIGHT 
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Re: Out of the Ashes – A HCCT Story
Bob simply incredible!