The individual bearings were parted from the workpiece and another sanity check made with each resting in the block and the test shaft running through them. Witness numbers was engraved on either side of each bearing's parting line to prevent mixing up the halves. The crescents were machined in the same setup. The bearings were returned to the lathe, and the oil grooves were cut. The grooves ended up deeper than intended (.070" rather than the .035") due to a radius/diameter brain fart. The temporary support fasteners were removed and the threaded holes reamed out for minimal clearances around the 6-32 cap bolts.
The super glue worked much better than expected, and the back-up threaded fasteners might not have been needed. Just two drops of glue were used to join the pair of six square inch surfaces of the workpiece. In the past I've had mixed successes with super glues and usually end up attaching myself to the parts as well as the parts to themselves. This may have been the first time I've used it as it was intended to be used.
I expected the parts to fall apart after a one hour 250F oven bake. But, after an additional hour at 300F the glue bonds had to be forced apart with a pair of wooden sticks cross wedged in the bores. After separation there were no obvious traces of CA on the mating surfaces, but the parts were allowed to soak in acetone for an hour anyway. Machining was wrapped up after drilling the oil passages connecting the crescents with the oil grooves
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I had intended to nickel plate the lower halves of the bearings that will be in direct contact with the block. Bright freshly machined bronze and aluminum surfaces bolted together under oil saturated with combustion products sounded like a science fair project to demonstrate galvanic corrosion. However, when the bearings came out of the 300F oven with their chocolate oxide'd surfaces, I was less concerned and skipped the plating.
Fitting the crankshaft was less work than expected. With just the number two and three bearings installed, the crank turned freely with just the hint of a pair of snug spots that could have legitimately been overlooked. The number one bearing had a significantly tighter spot due to the greater runout of the number one journal. After an hour with bluing and 600g paper wrapped around various mandrels, the crank eventually spun freely with all bearings installed.
Plastigauge was used to measure the final results. I've used this calibrated wax thread to check clearances on full-size cranks where roundness and runout aren't issues, and crank angle isn't a consideration. With the model's less than perfect journals however, I can assume the clearance of each bearing approaches zero at a particular crank angle, and so what I'd like to know is each bearing's worst-case clearance. The Plastigauge helped me find these, and as the photos show they ranged from .002" to .003". - Terry