Originally Posted by
jclay
At the risk of being repetitive:
The instant the flame hits the tubes everything changes and will never go back exactly to pre-braze perfection.
Solidifying filler pulls acute angled pairs together more than obtuse angles; each tube has one of each and the main "triangle" (it obviously isn't one) has four sets; adjust tacking/brazing procedures accordingly.
Sweat joint structural competency, not slight dimensional changes.
If you build lotsa frames you might figure out a recipe that reduces dimensional changes; reduces, as in not eliminates.
Or don’t worry about it (recommended!), pretzel avoidance assumed.
Being a person who aspired to perfection in certain endeavors (including this one), I now fully subscribe to what Richie said...but safe money says I’ll never need to cross that bridge: If you ever build a perfect frame, stop. You’ll never repeat it.
When I built our house I figured I could frame it to 1/8". The framers who helped me said, more than once, "it ain't a piano". They were right. And a piano ain't perfect either.
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