You will have to clean all the galvanizing off the area, to weld, solder, or braze it. .
sorry.. that's pure proccessed male cow food.
I ROUTINELY solder galzinized animal troughs using a regular plumbers propane torch, silver solder and paste flux.. all from those lil 15$ walmart kits.
find the hole, lightly sand around it with some fine emory paper to clean any grime from it. Use a tin tab ( roofing ). flux up the tab with it laying on the ground.. heat it.. tin it with the silver solder. do the same with the area around the hole. flux is your friend.. the more the better.. tin that area up. the silver solder EASILLY wets to galvanized metal.. in fact I find it way easier to tin galvanized metal than plain steel or cast iron.
once both parts are tinned, use needle nose to hold the tab up and work it like sweating a pipe...
3x easier than brazing..
propane torch ain't atomizing the zin like a welder is.. plus zinc would be a contaminate in a weld..
strips of galvanized roofing tin work as good patches to get around those seams.
I always have horses or cows kicking or goring a tank.. have hit a couple with the batwing too
soundguy
water based paste flux like most plumbers use does the trick just fine.. common.. easy to get.. and works. I've yet to have a cold solder or a joint fail on a solder to galvanized metal patch.. including galvanized roof tin. Have had plenty of luck even on aluminum.. though that one is tricky..went to a different alloy type of solder on that..
undguy
If your concerned about extra work, it's interesting your making repairs to galvanized metal with solder, in the first place. .
I now know all those who use hydrochloric acid, nitric acid, sulfuric acid, muratic acid, etc, to eat the galvanize up, (read the thousands of hits you will get in a google search of this topic), are all wrong, (my self included), and it is all unnecessary, if we just use Wal Mart flux.
Thanks for the help.
I too questioned the strength of silver solder, given the stresses a rad endures installed in a vehicle. He silver soldered two pieces of brass together and offered me the opportunity to pull them apart, with a hammer and a chisel. Needless to say I became a believer pretty quick.:laughing:
Yep- 35 years ago I was on a maintenance crew at a college. We routinely soldered end caps and downspouts on galvanized gutters. Old school technique..we had big 5 lb copper slug soldering irons that were heated on a burner then applied to the gutter with regular old paste plumbers flux and a big ole bar of solder. In fact you didn't want the galvanizing off...plain steel is a lot harder to solder:thumbsup:
My point was directed to those who were concerned about the fumes generated using a torch on galvanized steel.
I now know all those who use hydrochloric acid, nitric acid, sulfuric acid, muratic acid, etc, to eat the galvanize up, (read the thousands of hits you will get in a google search of this topic), are all wrong, (my self included), and it is all unnecessary, if we just use Wal Mart flux.