โSep-28-2020 02:30 PM
โOct-08-2020 11:32 AM
โSep-30-2020 04:59 AM
profdant139 wrote:
trailmanor, I like your idea of cutting little slots all around and then bending the uncut pieces to enlarge the hole. It's not elegant, but it gets the job done. When you are done, you can clean up the little spikes and shards with a round metal rasp.
And then if the raggedy edges of the hole are still visible after you install the new jack, slap on some caulking around the perimeter to hide the mess. ๐
โSep-29-2020 05:49 PM
โSep-29-2020 05:37 PM
โSep-29-2020 04:36 PM
ajriding wrote:
You can only use a hole saw if there is a center. The hole saw has a small drill bit in the center, maybe 1/4 in or so in size. That 1/4 bit is the guide that keeps the big circle saw blades in place. Without that center bit, or without a center to the hole, there is no way to use a hole saw, it will just scramble all over your work space.
You can weld a plate, then drill through the plate and the part you want to enlarge (but lets face it, a guy who can weld is not asking an RV forum how to drill a hole in metal), or
maybe attach a piece of wood there to act as a center point for the saw, wood will be easier to drill through than another layer of metal too.
The easiest is to just grind away. This sounds like a lot of work, but really should be the easiest. I personally do not have a grinder that small that would fit inside a 2 inch hole. The link given for HD's grinder will not work either - too big.
I have used a file to make this kind of hole bigger, but 1/8 inch all the way around (makes it 1/4 bigger) will be a lot of hand work on steel.
Cutting slots and bending will make a mess. This would work on thin metal, but trailer frame metal is too thick.
Consider that a jack is not a precision instrument. Maybe you dont need to make a perfectly symmetrical circle in the center-line of the trailer. Make your cut/grinding off-set, to the front, to the rear or even to the side, so just grind away half and when the new jack fits then slide it in. Hand grinding will not result in perfection. Make a circle mark with a sharpie before you begin so you have reference as when you grind you lose the original circle that was your starting guide.
โSep-29-2020 03:44 PM
mobeewan wrote:
No need to weld a plate on to use to center the hole saw. Do like Cummins12V98 says. Clamps will work, but you can also add bolt holes to so it can be bolted down using the bolt holes for the existing Jack.
โSep-29-2020 11:13 AM
Cummins12V98 wrote:
Drill a 2-1/4" hole in plywood or steel and clamp over existing hole centering the template over existing hole. Drill away, ez-p-ze.
โSep-29-2020 08:33 AM
โSep-29-2020 08:32 AM
โSep-29-2020 08:22 AM
โSep-29-2020 07:43 AM
โSep-29-2020 07:43 AM
okhmbldr wrote:
Use a grinder bit in your drill....just keep going round and round until the hole is the size you need.
โSep-29-2020 06:08 AM
Trailmanor13 wrote:
I was thinking of using my sawzall with a diablo metal blade and cutting 8 cuts about 1/4 of a inch in and using a vicegrip to bend them out some and then tapping the jack into the hole. The top hole in the A frame is big enough, just the bottom hole is too small. The metal is less than 1/8"
โSep-29-2020 05:48 AM
agesilaus wrote:K Charles wrote:
2 1/4 hole saw is about $15 at any hardware store
The original hole will still have to be enlarged since the new jack will pass thru that. And I find enlarging an existing hole, with a hole saw, to be a tough job tho I'm sure there are tricks I don't know.
A good 2 1/4 in bimetallic saw blade runs about $18 plus a mandrel at $15 if you don't have one. A grinding stone is probably less than $5