If you have an air compressor try clamping an air hose to and slowly increase the air pressure to get it to pop back into shape of course go easy and be safeView attachment 113672
I see a good many of these flasks which have acquired a fairly deep dent some time in their life but are otherwise in fairly desirable and useful condition.
Short of cracking it in half and rendering it useless, has anyone developed a reliable technique for pulling the dents from these?
Would love to save a few.
Sorry didn’t mean to step on your reply I agree with DaveyBoy’s idea of using compressed airMy first thought would be to pressurize it with air just enough to pop the dent
Second thought would be to use dry ice to shrink the dent and return it to normal
I would not drill a hole in it, nor try to beat on it from the inside out
Do a search for a dent removal video
... and then you have permanently damaged it ... probbaly not too significant with a repro, but with an ORIGINAL ??? ;-(((((I'd probably just leave it as is but you could do it like a dent in a car. Drill a hole in the center of the dent put in a metal screw and pull from the outside then solder the hole closed.
Might be worth Googling how repairers of Brass instruments do it ... ?View attachment 113672
I see a good many of these flasks which have acquired a fairly deep dent some time in their life but are otherwise in fairly desirable and useful condition.
Short of cracking it in half and rendering it useless, has anyone developed a reliable technique for pulling the dents from these?
Would love to save a few.
I used the word "patina" tongue-in-cheek. That's why I had it in quotation marks. You could say the dent is part of the CHARACTER of your flask...Air hose?
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