I don't know what 75 x 5 shs is, but if you want to take material off the inside of a closed object (especially one with straight walls), broaching would be a good suggestion.
So is this a one-off or production qty? There is no practical way to expand or broach the ID of a closed end square tube. Buy telescoping tube, as another poster suggested. Uni-Strut and others sell it. If you are dealing with large qty, just have a mill make what you need.
chem milling of the inside seems to be the best idea
there is vendors who specialize in this work.
do not try this your self since working with acid take special safety handling procedures & equipment.
next time it is possible to make the exact square tubing
by using sheet metal formed & welded, welds planished & draw formed (draw bar) to the exact size needed then the end cap welded by a tubing mfg.
Thanks so far for all the help. The problem is that the tube in question has already been fabricated in place and the unit has been powder coated and fully assembled. The cost of dissassembling and reassembly far out weighs the cost of the basic structure so it needs to be repaired in place. Fabricating a smaller tube(63x63) to slide inside is the easiest way to go, however the customer needs the unit to conform to the exact standards as their existing units. I am extremely interested in the process of chemical milling so if anyone has any experience or advice in regards to the type of acid and time frame etc. it would really help.
Cheers
Rotsa ruck! Structural tube just isn't made for telescoping. There are a few specialty manufacturers out there that do this. If you need to do this on a production basis, find one.
Chemical milling is probably unlikely to work on a closed-end pipe. You need to have a constant chemical environment to get uniform milling.
Some sort of electrolytic approach might be possible, i.e., a 1.3-m long electrode that can do one side at a time with electrolyte flowing in the small gap between the electrode and the tube. But that seems absurdly difficult to me; the cost of doing something like would be high.
I fail to see why you can mill the OD of the insert. That would be a 10x easier task.