raveney
Well-Known Member
Hello All,
I am attempting to build a 1/8 scale replica of an 1898 Nash two cylinder four stroke engine using a beautiful book by Doug Kelley. Doug uses the silver brazed method of fabrication and I needed to improve my skills in that regard.
![Doug Kelley Book.png Doug Kelley Book.png](https://cdn.imagearchive.com/homemodelenginemachinist/data/attachments/104/104394-6d0767e51eb9bc1f7198ee463972a2b7.jpg)
A very well executed 2021 build is logged by Sprocket on this website, and I followed the material choice of cold rolled steel rather than brass after pricing it out for the crankcase assembly ($50 versus $200+).
![cold rolled steel plate.jpg cold rolled steel plate.jpg](https://cdn.imagearchive.com/homemodelenginemachinist/data/attachments/104/104395-ceb8d74add5898537dad00b9abc664c4.jpg)
I started with the lower crankcase baseplate, and milled the locating channels and fixturing holes in one setup.
![baseplate.jpg baseplate.jpg](https://cdn.imagearchive.com/homemodelenginemachinist/data/attachments/104/104396-a5a6e42bb2cd502ebbd7f8c1dd24a1a5.jpg)
Perhaps overkill, but I milled the angled edges of the block webs (center plates) using my shop built angle plate and 11 degrees worth of precision angle blocks. I was tempted to "tack" weld the parts using TIG, but stayed the course and drilled and tapped the 2-56 fixturing screws as Doug outlined in the drawings.
![angle cut bulkheads.jpg angle cut bulkheads.jpg](https://cdn.imagearchive.com/homemodelenginemachinist/data/attachments/104/104397-0e1f718da078b0a653744b4388eae81d.jpg)
lastly, I screwed it together snugly and tapped it about in the mill vice to ensure squareness and parallelism. I added 3 screws from the baseplate into the webs as it seemed the 0.020" depth locating channels weren't sufficient. I still need to fabricate the flanges and secure them somehow before attempting the brazing.![🤨 🤨](https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/joypixels/assets/8.0/png/unicode/64/1f928.png)
![alignment.jpg alignment.jpg](https://cdn.imagearchive.com/homemodelenginemachinist/data/attachments/104/104398-ea81b5fe743d6213514957f1d4516cc1.jpg)
I am attempting to build a 1/8 scale replica of an 1898 Nash two cylinder four stroke engine using a beautiful book by Doug Kelley. Doug uses the silver brazed method of fabrication and I needed to improve my skills in that regard.
![Doug Kelley Book.png Doug Kelley Book.png](https://cdn.imagearchive.com/homemodelenginemachinist/data/attachments/104/104394-6d0767e51eb9bc1f7198ee463972a2b7.jpg)
A very well executed 2021 build is logged by Sprocket on this website, and I followed the material choice of cold rolled steel rather than brass after pricing it out for the crankcase assembly ($50 versus $200+).
![cold rolled steel plate.jpg cold rolled steel plate.jpg](https://cdn.imagearchive.com/homemodelenginemachinist/data/attachments/104/104395-ceb8d74add5898537dad00b9abc664c4.jpg)
I started with the lower crankcase baseplate, and milled the locating channels and fixturing holes in one setup.
![baseplate.jpg baseplate.jpg](https://cdn.imagearchive.com/homemodelenginemachinist/data/attachments/104/104396-a5a6e42bb2cd502ebbd7f8c1dd24a1a5.jpg)
Perhaps overkill, but I milled the angled edges of the block webs (center plates) using my shop built angle plate and 11 degrees worth of precision angle blocks. I was tempted to "tack" weld the parts using TIG, but stayed the course and drilled and tapped the 2-56 fixturing screws as Doug outlined in the drawings.
![angle cut bulkheads.jpg angle cut bulkheads.jpg](https://cdn.imagearchive.com/homemodelenginemachinist/data/attachments/104/104397-0e1f718da078b0a653744b4388eae81d.jpg)
lastly, I screwed it together snugly and tapped it about in the mill vice to ensure squareness and parallelism. I added 3 screws from the baseplate into the webs as it seemed the 0.020" depth locating channels weren't sufficient. I still need to fabricate the flanges and secure them somehow before attempting the brazing.
![🤨 🤨](https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/joypixels/assets/8.0/png/unicode/64/1f928.png)
![alignment.jpg alignment.jpg](https://cdn.imagearchive.com/homemodelenginemachinist/data/attachments/104/104398-ea81b5fe743d6213514957f1d4516cc1.jpg)