I spent 38 years working as a aircraft engine mecanic.Now from the first day mechanics are thought that you handle aircraft parts like they were the family juels.You did not drop them ,Let them bang together,Nick,Scratch.Or in anyway abuse them. So I was walking through the shop one night and a Forman stopped me with a problem.Seams they had a JT8D engine(re 737 power plant) that had sheared the long shaft at the number 4and1/2 bearing.The long shaft connects the front compressor to the rear turbine wheals.To take it apart you have to hold the turbine wheal with a fixture ,slide a long splined wrench down the shaft and with the ade of a SWEENY (12 x1 gearbox)unscrew the coupling.The engine was already on its nose in a vertical position with a work stand around it.So with the aid of a 8lb brass hammer and a 18in drift I proceeded to smash the turbine blades and the guide vanes out of the way.They were all junk anyway The compressor and turbine turn at 8000 R.P.M. on this engine.I then made a long welding rod with a 90 bend on the end .Lined up the two parts of the shaft and working through the 3and1/2 inch I.D of the shaft put 3 one inch welds at the break.There were about 100 people looking by this time.I took the shaft out just as the day shift arrived .The day shift bosses said the shaft could not have been sheared!So I took my hammer and hit it at the break.It fell in two but the welds looked peaty good.For the next 10 years I was known as Hammer Mac until I got a new monicer.Jim . P.S. A month latter the same thing happened and they took high speed grinders and cut a $48000 diffuser case in too.Guess they showed me what engineers could do.Fell free to forward if you like, maybe someone will get a kick. --- --- macthehammer@xxxx --- EarthLink: It's your Internet. [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]