ok, back to my headers...
as I've said, my headers were built by me with schedule 10 stainless steel elbows... well one of the hardest things in doing a job like this is actually cutting all the angles to assemble the tubes... each elbow needs to be cut & then needs to be made perfectly flat to mate to the next section... this cutting is an absolute nightmare... the stainless steel is very tough to cut & even tougher to cut clean & straight... the first time I did it I was determined to do it no matter what, I did this with the tools available to me at the time which consisted of an abrasive chop saw, a 3" abrasive cut off wheel, a little air grinder, a bench grinder & even a dremel... the job was a friggin nightmare, trying to hold the small elbows with a vice grip, having blades break, many jamb ups, in short it was a nightmare job & also pretty dangerous... once the elbow cocks a little while cutting it it can break the blade, jamb up & throw a piece of stainless clear across the room, then after the cut it took a whole lot of grinding to finish the edge to something usable... many of these cuts winded up taking me 1/2 hour to 45 minutes each & to do the header tubes winds up being ~50 cuts like this... it was a nightmare & a ton of work, but, at the time my fx was in the shop, the engine was out & I had no choice, it was either do it or it just won't get done so I just did it & when it was all done I was so relieved that it was finally over....
this is part of the reason why it was so very depressing to wind up finishing the whole thing, getting it to the point of done, & then having it destroyed with a bad welding job... I just absolutely dread the thought of having to do this all over again, I mean I was lucky the first time that I didn't wind up hurting myself & there were several occasions where it came pretty close. now of course I could wind up redoing it all just the way I did it the first time, but just the thought of all this work & it's going to wind up taking me over 50 hours of labor AGAIN to just redo just all the tubes, on top of the 100 hours of labor it took the first time to completely build these... I just don't even want to do it... but, here I am & it HAS to be done... so,
I winded up looking into better ways to accomplish all the cuts that I need to do. cutting stainless steel with abrasive methods is just a tedious task, as the cuts progress the heat builds up a lot & makes the cut even harder & harder to complete, & this heating up is what makes the blades die & also makes the cuts less than good... by the time the cut gets all the way through it is burning through the metal more than cutting through. the cut edge is all burnt & jagged & less than really straight too...
one problem with cutting this pieces is holding the piece well enough to be cut, it needs to be held very strongly to avoid movement or even vibrations or it can get caught & snap the blade. I decided that now, since I have to redo this I'm going to use a little more brains & a little less brute force. I'm going to build a special jig to hold the elbows solidly & at the correct angle, a little time spent on building the right jig will go a long way towards making the cutting job much safer & easier. the elbows are hollow of course so they can't be held securely in a conventional vice without distorting them, plus the fact that there elbows means there is no real flat area that will hold them stable enough without the chance of them cocking a little & breaking the blade, plus each cut is at a different angle but I have a clamping jig in mind that I'm going to build to solve that problem...
then onto the problem of the actual cutting, abrasive cutting on stainless sucks, so I've been looking into other methods. one thing that has been suggested to me is a band saw... a band saw would work, but not a little rinkydink craftsman cheapo job, no, I tried this before on my little craftsman band saw & all it did was laugh at me & then snap the blade

I would need a pretty heavy duty band saw & I've looked into them, almost bought one, but I would need a monster one & then have no where to put it after... space is a consideration so I then looked into horizontal bandsaws, but even they are big heavy & take a lot of space. I also looked into special cut off saws that use very expensive carbide tipped blades, this could have worked & might have been the best reasonable compromise really, but I also found out about a special saw called a cold saw, these saws are specialized & made for cutting heavy metal in an industrial setting, they work at extremely low rpms (like 50 rpm) & they cut with a liquid bath of lubricating coolant, the cuts they produce are amazing & the finished cut is as good as having something milled... they do not heat the metal being cut either which is why there called cold saws...
so in an effort to redo this as easily as possible I ordered a cold saw, this one:
here they are in action, the one I got is there newest model & is smaller than the stuff shown here, mine is a 9" blade & only does up to 2 1/2" tube which is plenty, the bigger machines are many thousands of $$$ so this baby one is going to have to do
YouTube- Baileigh Cold Saws, Manual and Semi Automatic Cold Cut saw,
like the tig welder, this is also a tool that should be very useful way past just my turbo fabrication. this is the welder setup that I got, haven't even had time to plug it in & play with it yet, don't let the small size fool you, this is the newer designed inverter tig & much smaller than a conventional transformer tig, but this is def a kick ass welder:
man, I just gotta get this done, sucks so bad the screwup with the header welding, what a setback... costing me a small fortune & taking so much extra time, I still have the wiring to contend with but I can't even do anything to try & fire this thing up or even see much there at all until the headers are done & installed so I can finish all the plumbing... fx has just been sitting dead in my driveway at home for a long time now:frown: