raveney
Well-Known Member
Hello,
New project is a 3/4 inch per foot scale model of a Case steam traction engine that is located nearby at a fairgrounds in central Florida. I never gave much thought to these tractors until a colleague at work told me about the Case 150HP that was recreated in the Midwest by a young man named Kory Anderson. Exceptional story and inspiring video here.
CASE 150 HP
I have been watching several threads here by Mike N and 4156DF. Also purchased the well known book by Rudy Kouhoupt. Thought I would start with the front wheels...
Had a scrap of 3" OD SCH5 steel tube left over from a cheesy "Harbah Frait" grinder stand that yielded some rim material. My table top bandsaw cuts pretty square, and was able to slice two 0.75" wide and two 0.16" wide pieces. I trued them on the lathe using a piece of 3" SCH 40 pipe and some shim stock to avoid distortion. These are thinner than what Rudy prescribes as I am attempting to follow the dimensions given in a 1916 Case Catalog.
I chose 1/16 ER70S2 TIG filler wire for the spokes after modeling the wheel in Fusion. Made the hubs on the lathe and rotary table, drilling 0.100" blind holes at 30 degree intervals.
Used the rotary table setup to drill the rims and fixtured the "tire" in place with 18 gauge copper wire rivets.
I just purchased some insulated fire brick which is pretty flat and hard. Used leftover furnace cement to position a few flat washers to the brick centering the rim. The indexed the rim and drilled and set a 3/16" dowel to hold the spindle/hub. Using black flux and map gas I silver brazed it all up.
Upon inspection, the hub spokes may need a redo, but they feel solid. May just leave alone as paint will fill the gaps. The wheel spins true on the axle!
The next one should go much faster. For the rear tire I would really like to change the "grouters" to appear more realistic or 3D, but there are so many (thinking about 64) Any ideas on how to make them? I like the ones in Mike N's thread
New project is a 3/4 inch per foot scale model of a Case steam traction engine that is located nearby at a fairgrounds in central Florida. I never gave much thought to these tractors until a colleague at work told me about the Case 150HP that was recreated in the Midwest by a young man named Kory Anderson. Exceptional story and inspiring video here.
CASE 150 HP
I have been watching several threads here by Mike N and 4156DF. Also purchased the well known book by Rudy Kouhoupt. Thought I would start with the front wheels...
Had a scrap of 3" OD SCH5 steel tube left over from a cheesy "Harbah Frait" grinder stand that yielded some rim material. My table top bandsaw cuts pretty square, and was able to slice two 0.75" wide and two 0.16" wide pieces. I trued them on the lathe using a piece of 3" SCH 40 pipe and some shim stock to avoid distortion. These are thinner than what Rudy prescribes as I am attempting to follow the dimensions given in a 1916 Case Catalog.
I chose 1/16 ER70S2 TIG filler wire for the spokes after modeling the wheel in Fusion. Made the hubs on the lathe and rotary table, drilling 0.100" blind holes at 30 degree intervals.
Used the rotary table setup to drill the rims and fixtured the "tire" in place with 18 gauge copper wire rivets.
I just purchased some insulated fire brick which is pretty flat and hard. Used leftover furnace cement to position a few flat washers to the brick centering the rim. The indexed the rim and drilled and set a 3/16" dowel to hold the spindle/hub. Using black flux and map gas I silver brazed it all up.
Upon inspection, the hub spokes may need a redo, but they feel solid. May just leave alone as paint will fill the gaps. The wheel spins true on the axle!
The next one should go much faster. For the rear tire I would really like to change the "grouters" to appear more realistic or 3D, but there are so many (thinking about 64) Any ideas on how to make them? I like the ones in Mike N's thread