I should mention that the tubes are all perfectly mitered at this point, and all the lugs have been reamed and gone over with a Swiss file. The lug points are pointy and there are no little bits of flashing that might get in the way.
There is a sequence for proper brazing, and it goes:
1. Down tube to head tube
2. Top tube to head tube
3. Down tube to bottom bracket
4. Seat tube to top tube
Between each braze we checked alignment with the surface gauge. Most of the serious brazes are done with the tubes clamped into the vise, not in the jig, because it's easier to move things around in the vise and the extra flux can drip onto the floor instead of on the expensive metal jig or smooth work table.
![]() |
| This exhaust hole is drilled into the head tube where it meets the top tube so that gasses have a way to escape while brazing. |
![]() |
| Here is my frame, ready to be tacked so that the tubes don't move around during the final brazing. |
![]() |
| Here's my classmate showing good brazing form while tacking his tubes in place. That's Doug keeping an eye on things. |
![]() |
| Here's the front, covered with flux, ready for brazing |
![]() |
| Here's what the braze looks like immediately after applying heat. This is my custom lug, and you can see the flux is still dripping. I'll wash that off with warm water. |
![]() |
| Here I am thinning my lugs out and polishing with my Swiss file. |
![]() |
| The frame gets a nice rusty patina after we washed off all the flux with warm water. The rust will be sandblasted away by Doug before we do anything else. |










I wish you give this type of information Rajshahi best it to us and give us vast knowledge.
ReplyDelete