I just bought a 1950 mercury which I am super excited about but after doing some thorough examination I realized it has had a ton of things brazed on. The rocker panels being one of them and it concerns me. Is that strong enough? Should I grind all of it off and weld the panels in? The car was primered and blocked 6 years ago but never got paint and I will need to re-prime and do some more body work. Any advice with what I should do? I was told body filler doesn't stick to braze long.
It should be plenty strong. What you might want to consider is how well the brazed joints were cleaned and prepped after they were brazed. If all the flux was removed, and the brass was sanded/ground to give it some "bite", then it will probably be fine. Is there any evidence of cracking or bubbling in the filler or primer? It's been on there six years....
When I first learned to do customizing, I learned with brass (1979) Did it for quite a few years, before I bought a MIG. I built my whole chopped Olds with brazing, except for the lake pipes., and it still looks good after almost 40 years. the secret is cleanliness. With today's materials, you could even separate the brazing from the filler work, with a couple coats of epoxy. Strength is not an issue. I've had to cut out brazing on my current project, a 56 Olds converted to Nomad style wagon, that was actually done by the guy who taught me. But the reason was that he must have been getting older, or lazier, and he did a lot of it by overlapping new metal over the old, whether rusted out parts, or trim holes. The overlapped pieces were the trouble one. Dirt/water gets trapped between them and prematurely rust the panels out. Look for this on your car. Much more problematic than just brazing. Oh, other ways to get around it...either use lead filler instead of plastic, or just do a "tinning coat" of solder to cover the brass, before doing epoxy or plastic filler. But if you just clean it thoroughly, you shouldn't have a problem.
From what I can see there is no cracking or bubbling but I will have to look closer. I drove 7 hours to get it and 7 hours back. When I was there I looked it over quick and that is when I noticed the brazed parts, the seller didn't tell me about that part obviously. But after the drive and the fact I have been wanting a merc since childhood I picked it up for 1500 bucks. I'll have to go over it with a fine tooth comb but so far I don't see anything too alarming. There are a couple spots where the guy ground some off and put a hole in the metal. He said he got it that way too and was a old body mans car back in the day. So my guess is that some of these repairs are many many years old. The rocker panels look pretty recent and done well, but still with braze.
I am afraid of the rust but also was told that filler doesn't like to stick to it so I am a little afraid of it. I have no idea how to lead or tin anything LOL.
Read any of the old little car magazines and they are filled with 'how to' articles that feature brazing. MIGS and TIGS were years away from being the norm. I wouldn't worry about it.
On old time brazing flux left behind is the problem.It flows in to cracks,and looks like glass.First time it gets moist it turns to a white powder that lifts the primer. You could blast the braze area with a medium like walnut shell to clean it.Replacing with welding is a problem since any brass left will contaminate the steel making it impossible to weld. Watch a utube video on leading/ tinning. Gene Winfield himself has one on there.You just need a thin plating of lead to turn it silver.Being very clean is the ticket to good flow.Eastwood compamy makes a tinning compound that makes it much easier.Use clean fine steel wool to move the tinning while hot. Now a days MIG brazing is used a lot on thinner modern car steel.No flux left behind.
Nothing wrong with brazing,,,,,it’s how things were done at one time,,,,and,,,it’s very strong . Tommy
I agree with the above. Years ago the mig was not available so just about any car, hot rod, custom or stock that had any kind of panel repair would have been done with brazing. I know a couple old timers that still prefer doing it. Also like said above, the only problem is cleaning. I would guess that if its been a minimum of 6 yrs since the brazing on the car and your finding zero problems that who ever did the work knew what they were doing.
I would remove it all and weld everything in if I ever planed on having a quality paint job done and wanted to keep it for the long term. braze and bodywork can do strange things after time. did a bunch of rust repair on a 64 Impala that had been customized in the 80's. all the trim holes were brazed and all the trim holes were now visible in the paint. door handles, key hole, everything done had failed.
Nothing wrong with brazing. Millions of cars were repaired that way, and believe it or not the factory brazed some seams. As long as there are no pin holes to let moisture through from behind, and as long as you get all the flux off . Get a good trouble light and get your nose down a few inches from the seam and inspect it carefully. Any gaps can be brazed or plugged with seam sealer. Flux can be ground off or cleaned off with a wire wheel or wire brush in a drill or by sandblasting. If the seam is clean and solid apply filler in the usual way and it will last. As an aside, WW2 era airplanes had engine bearers and other parts made of chrome moly tubing butted and brazed together. Schwinn's best and most expensive bicycles were hand made the same way, of chrome moly butted and brazed. That is their racing bikes, Super Sports and Paramount models. Brazing does not cause brittleness the way welding does on chrome moly. If brazed joints held a 2000HP engine in a fighter plane they will hold the rocker panel on a Mercury.
You can't weld over braze and it is practically impossible to get all the braze off. If you really have a bug up your ass about brazed joints you will have to cut out all the brazed parts and start over from scratch. I strongly recommend you NOT do this, clean up the joints, make sure they are sound and free of flux and you are good.
High end steel road and mountain bicycles are still brazed. They get finished and painted just like our hotrods and customs. No issue with the brass and paint. Plenty strong. Listen to Chopolds
Years ago I bought used quarter panels for the 57 One side had a brazed panel put in and the other side needed a patch which I fabbed up and MIG welded it in. I thoroughly sanded and cleaned the brazed side. I then did body work over the whole car. Guess which patch bubbled up after 9 years. . . . ? Welded side
Nice picture of well done brazing, Tman. Maybe we need a thread titled "Show us your beautiful brazing"!
I have some brazed on patch panels we did in the late 70’s which have held up well. Cleaned the braze well and then sandblasted them. I wouldn’t braze something now. If cleaned well and epoxy primed prior to filler they should be fine. Sent from my iPhone using The H.A.M.B. mobile app
Lately, I have started watching "Brittania Motorcycles" on YouTube and Michael Waller explained about the joints on motorcycle frames and now I'm back to brazing some things I'm working on. Sent from my SM-T350 using The H.A.M.B. mobile app
Have you ever seen an original Model T oil pan, without it's paint? This is what they look like. The brazing sealed the rivets, and strengthened the mounting points.
One thing that is often overlooked: Most brazing fluxes are water soluble. So, lots of water, hot if possible and a scrub with a brush ( I like the little brass or stainless ones that look like a toothbrush) will remove the residue very easily. One caution though, do not overheat the flux as it will become black, hard and won't wash off. As others said, the only issue with brazing is not cleaning the flux off well. Primers, fillers and paint will adhere to clean brass just fine. And it is more than strong enough for body work.
I had noticed the brazing on a model T oil pan in the junk pile at the old homestead, but assumed it was later repair. But a model T oil pan way back then would never get a chance to see water with its thick coating of oil and dirt.
Think of brazing this way...................... it is still to this day the method used by ROLLS ROYCE to attach the sail plain quarter panel section to the roof. Well if it's good enough for ROLLS ROYCE I would think it's ok on your car.
The old body men used to tell me that paint would not stick to brass very well and you need to sandblast it before you prime it. So I have always welded, sure would have been easier to braze some of them.
It's the flux not the bronze. Get the bronze clean and paint, lead or body filler sticks to it just fine.
my 57 had bronzed on repairs, and 3/4 to 1 1/2 inches of bondo over some. They had to do something before MIG came out. as said by many, if its a solid repair clean it up and go with it