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Does anyone remember an article way back when, where someone was forming locomotive stanchions out of .002-.003" brass sheet stock? Supposedly they were fairly sturdy once formed, and was something I always wanted to try. For what you are doing, and the thin materials involved, I think all you need is a stamping form... not a roller or bender. Just smash the sheet between two forms.
In the 1931 Car Builders Cyc, p120, shows fig 24 for a Bx-3. This drawing has dimension of the hat channels; cross section as 7.5" wide, 3" depth, hat width (w/o brim) of 5", and using 1/4" stock. So each brim width would be 1.5".1/4" stock scaled to N would be 0.0015". Flimsy even with added rigidity of the shape and solder. So I suspect I will want to double that to 0.003" brass stock.Such would allow me to use the following dimensions:Nominal in mm:width: 1.2 mmdepth: ~0.5width of hat w/o brim: ~.75 mmwidth of brim: .25 mmSure, small, but definitely a noticeable feature.
25mm "brim" flange, formed at 90 degree angles (see drawing below) will be tough if not impossible
Sorry, what I meant was a single .0015" used as is rather than two pieces soldered together. I get it in rolls. The type of die Lemosteam posted is what I usually use, either in a vise or in an arbor press.PS it was Robert Culver who wrote the stanchion stamping article. Andrew Hutchinson