Be careful when heating things with oil in them. I had a customer get
severly burnt when brazing a p-trap that had oil in it. (he was unaware
of this) mind you this was a torch and copper pipe but the concept is
similar.


sean

Richard Kennedy wrote:

>
  Question???? Why don't newbee's listen to people that have been
  doing this crap for years, 22 years in my case Tom F has over 35
  years (I think).     When attempting to remove a shaft from a 975
  "PLEASE" preheat the head first.    I use boiling water (approx.
  15 minutes) Tom F. uses an old deep fryer filled with sand.
  Both do the same job, and both methods save time, money and keep
  you from pulling your hair out, which is getting a little thin on
  top anyway.      A newbee bought a puller & a drill fixture from
  me a little over a month ago, called about 2 weeks ago to tell me
  that there is something wrong with the puller that he purchased
  from me and asked if he could return it for a refund.   I asked
  him what was "IT" doing wrong.    He said that he was attempting
  to pull a shaft from a 975 "BUT" the body part that has the finger
  attached to it was forcing the body part to skew sideways and that
  the clamp pad area was all askew also.   He did state that the new
  3" clamp was holding.      I asked him if he preheated the head,
  "NO" he said, I'm just trying to pull it like I do anyother
  shaft.    I then asked him if he had any problems pulling anyother
  shafts, he said "NO" this is the first try.   I then said "You
  mean you've had the puller now for a little over 3 weeks and this
  is the very first chance to use it???"YES" he said.  I told the
  guy to preheat ????, he says, either in boiling water or a deep
  fryer and get back to me before sending anything back.    So I
  don't hear a word from him for over a week until Tuesday at which
  out of the blue UPS delivered me a package, which I had to sign
  for.   I took the puller out to the shop and open the box and
  there was the puller looking good minus the rubber clamp pad.    I
  had my worker, yes guys I'm an employer again, pull a our 975 test
  piece, 15 minutes in the boiling water, 2 minutes to get it
  clamped in the puller, 2 more minutes of the heat gun on the top
  section of the head and off it came just like it was designed to
  do.   We then ran a dry reamer by finger power just to clean out
  the hosel and mixed some epoxy up and reglued it.    Yesterday we
  set up "THE" puller again, and again off came the head in 3
  minutes, this time we had the puller in the vise before we tried
  to clamp/pull the shaft.    Using some SA 2000 we pulled the head
  twice again on Wed.       Again at quitting time on Wed, 3:30, we
  mixed up some more Cadnap Epoxy and let it set until 1;00 today.
  Off it came again, little longer getting it off this time as
  Marion put the socket wrench away and we could find it for about
  10 minutes, but there was still enough heat in the head for an
  easy pull. What I'm getting at is now the guy wants a refund.
  In the first place I gave him a discount for buying both items,
  $25.00, and there is "NOTHING" wrong with the puller, which I now
  have just over 75 minutes into pulling test shafts @
  .65/minutes..      I think that I should give him back about
  $35.00, Marion says "GIVE HIM BACK$100.00.      What do you guys
  think??? Just thought of something that may help out pulling
  975's.     Why no pour some light cooking oil down inside the
  shaft so that when your heating up the shaft the oil inside the
  shaft will also get hot and act like a "HOT ROD" like we do when
  pulling steel shafts from "WOOD" woods.    Just a thought,
  something to do tomorrow.  RK Manufacturer's of World Class Golf
  Club Repair [EMAIL PROTECTED]



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