Continuing on with the rods ...
The bores for the small end bearings were drilled and reamed next. The bearings themselves were turned from 932 bronze and preinstalled in the workpieces where they would later be blended into the rods during their machining. I considered it a good sign that their fits augmented with Loctite 620 set up almost immediately. After several hours at room temperature they received a final one hour cure at 190F.
The openings on the big ends were manually drilled and finished with a boring head. I expected the .675" pilot holes to be tough-going since 7075 seems to drill like steel. Rather than come up with feeds and speeds for the Tormach, I decided instead to wrestle with the quill and wrench my shoulder.
The workpieces were moved to the Tormach where the real machining took place. Since the workpieces were identical they could be fed into an end-stopped vise without the need to re-indicate each part. The roughing passes used 1/4" and 1/16" end mills and left .005" excess material around each part for finishing. An 1/8" ball mill was used in the finishing passes. Witness numbers engraved on either side of the rods' parting lines will keep the halves from being mixed up later.
The troughs (those things Charles doesn't like :>)) left around the semi-finished parts during their topside machining were filled with Devcon 5 Minute epoxy and allowed to cure overnight. Silicone plugs shielded the rod bolts from the epoxy.
The setup used to machine the bottom faces was a mirror image of the one used to machine the top faces. Flipping the workpieces over this way allowed the same corner in both setups to be used as a machining reference and minimized registration errors. The bottom face machining operations were essentially identical to those on the top face. Total machining time for each pair of rods was about three hours.
I made a last minute change to the depths of cut of the finishing passes on both faces to create a forged seam line around the periphery of the rods for a little more realism. While doing so, I wasn't paying attention to what I was doing to the final epoxy thickness. I typically design for 3/16" and was alarmed when the parts began coming out with as little as .020" and in a few places broke through entirely. Even so the the parts seemed to be rigidly attached to their frameworks and I continued on. I was lucky a couple didn't dislodge and become damaged. The final operation was to swap out the rod bolts for some with shortened heads so the temporary bolt covers could be machined away. This operation was moved to the manual mill where I could keep a close eye on things.
An oven bake at 275F released the parts from their workpieces, and then they were bead blasted. Still left to machine are the big end's split bearings and some oil passages before fitting them to the crankshaft. - Terry
The bores for the small end bearings were drilled and reamed next. The bearings themselves were turned from 932 bronze and preinstalled in the workpieces where they would later be blended into the rods during their machining. I considered it a good sign that their fits augmented with Loctite 620 set up almost immediately. After several hours at room temperature they received a final one hour cure at 190F.
The openings on the big ends were manually drilled and finished with a boring head. I expected the .675" pilot holes to be tough-going since 7075 seems to drill like steel. Rather than come up with feeds and speeds for the Tormach, I decided instead to wrestle with the quill and wrench my shoulder.
The workpieces were moved to the Tormach where the real machining took place. Since the workpieces were identical they could be fed into an end-stopped vise without the need to re-indicate each part. The roughing passes used 1/4" and 1/16" end mills and left .005" excess material around each part for finishing. An 1/8" ball mill was used in the finishing passes. Witness numbers engraved on either side of the rods' parting lines will keep the halves from being mixed up later.
The troughs (those things Charles doesn't like :>)) left around the semi-finished parts during their topside machining were filled with Devcon 5 Minute epoxy and allowed to cure overnight. Silicone plugs shielded the rod bolts from the epoxy.
The setup used to machine the bottom faces was a mirror image of the one used to machine the top faces. Flipping the workpieces over this way allowed the same corner in both setups to be used as a machining reference and minimized registration errors. The bottom face machining operations were essentially identical to those on the top face. Total machining time for each pair of rods was about three hours.
I made a last minute change to the depths of cut of the finishing passes on both faces to create a forged seam line around the periphery of the rods for a little more realism. While doing so, I wasn't paying attention to what I was doing to the final epoxy thickness. I typically design for 3/16" and was alarmed when the parts began coming out with as little as .020" and in a few places broke through entirely. Even so the the parts seemed to be rigidly attached to their frameworks and I continued on. I was lucky a couple didn't dislodge and become damaged. The final operation was to swap out the rod bolts for some with shortened heads so the temporary bolt covers could be machined away. This operation was moved to the manual mill where I could keep a close eye on things.
An oven bake at 275F released the parts from their workpieces, and then they were bead blasted. Still left to machine are the big end's split bearings and some oil passages before fitting them to the crankshaft. - Terry