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What exactly are Fish Plates?

General Tech Talk

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What exactly are Fish Plates?

Post by TheOtherLeft »

What are fish plates?

I've seen a lot of discussion about them but not sure what they are?

Are they simply flat reinforcing plates bolted/welded to chassis etc? Any pics would be most welcomed.

Cheers.
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Post by chimpboy »

Fish plate is the term for a plate that joins two bars together. We used to use fish plates to join (big) copper bus bar together when I worked making switchboards.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fishplate

As such there wouldn't be a single use for fish plates on a fourby. I do not know what the most common use would be.

I don't know about welding, I have never seen a fish plate that wasn't bolted but I don't know if that's technically part of the definition.
This is not legal advice.
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Post by Athol »

Fish plates, sometimes referred to as fitch plates, are plates used to attach the subframe rails of a tray or body to a truck chassis.

See pages 7 (text) and 8 (diagrams) of this:

http://www.infrastructure.gov.au/roads/ ... b_06_j.pdf
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Post by TheOtherLeft »

Athol wrote:Fish plates, sometimes referred to as fitch plates, are plates used to attach the subframe rails of a tray or body to a truck chassis.

See pages 7 (text) and 8 (diagrams) of this:

http://www.infrastructure.gov.au/roads/ ... b_06_j.pdf
Athol comes up with the goods... yet again :D
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Post by bru21 »

They are laser cut steel plates cut to the shape of a fish. Some heavy christians weld them to their chassis to help prove their faith - they are typically seen as more 'hardcore' than a fish sticker.

http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2040/236 ... 0f10dd.jpg
Last edited by bru21 on Wed Oct 14, 2009 7:03 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Post by Guy »

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fish_plate ??
A fish plate is a Greek pottery vessel used by western, Hellenistic Greeks during the Fourth Century B.C. Although invented in Fifth-Century B.C. Athens, most of the corpus of surviving fish plates originate in South Italy, where Fourth-Century B.C. Greek settlers, called "Italiotes," manufactured them
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Post by PCRman »

mmmmm Fish Plate...

Image

I find this a good read for a small vehicle perspective

http://www.infrastructure.gov.au/roads/ ... _sec_2.pdf
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Post by Struth »

chimpboy wrote:Fish plate is the term for a plate that joins two bars together. We used to use fish plates to join (big) copper bus bar together when I worked making switchboards.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fishplate

As such there wouldn't be a single use for fish plates on a fourby. I do not know what the most common use would be.

I don't know about welding, I have never seen a fish plate that wasn't bolted but I don't know if that's technically part of the definition.
Who did you make Busbars for?

Cheers
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Post by chimpboy »

Struth wrote:
chimpboy wrote:Fish plate is the term for a plate that joins two bars together. We used to use fish plates to join (big) copper bus bar together when I worked making switchboards.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fishplate

As such there wouldn't be a single use for fish plates on a fourby. I do not know what the most common use would be.

I don't know about welding, I have never seen a fish plate that wasn't bolted but I don't know if that's technically part of the definition.
Who did you make Busbars for?

Cheers
I worked for a company called Universal Motor Kontrol in Dandenong. It was a while ago now though!
This is not legal advice.
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Post by Struth »

chimpboy wrote:
Struth wrote:
chimpboy wrote:Fish plate is the term for a plate that joins two bars together. We used to use fish plates to join (big) copper bus bar together when I worked making switchboards.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fishplate

As such there wouldn't be a single use for fish plates on a fourby. I do not know what the most common use would be.

I don't know about welding, I have never seen a fish plate that wasn't bolted but I don't know if that's technically part of the definition.
Who did you make Busbars for?

Cheers
I worked for a company called Universal Motor Kontrol in Dandenong. It was a while ago now though!
I did three years with Klockner Moeller in the early 90s making their B-Bars, did Murrin Murrin and Ashanti Gold Mine boards, both with 6000 amp systems.

Had about a 1 week stint at UMK in the 95/96ish period.

Small world sometimes.

Cheers
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