I curved the flanks of my cam lobes so I can use non-keyed flat top followers. Sketches of the lobes, which are otherwise identical to Ron's, are in the photos. His documentation mentions the option of undercutting the cams to compensate for lost motion created by valve clearance in order to match the specs of the full-size cam. I selected the flanks' radii and centers to achieve a similar result with a slightly more aggressive valve opening.
The lobes were machined on my Tormach using a rotary machining operation. This 4-axis operation keeps the center of an end mill in contact with the tool path during coordinated moves of the x, y, z, and A axes. Unfortunately, the end mill's dished cutting face leaves grooves in the non-flat areas of the part. With the tool continuously moving up and down, the effect is similar to trying to drill flat holes with an end mill. The tool leaves excess material behind at its center which, in a four axis operation, shows up as a pair of grooves on either side of the cutter. Although they can be cleaned up with a file, they can be several thousandths deep depending upon the particular cutter.
These grooves can be nearly eliminated with a truly flat-bottom cutter. A local tool grinder reground a couple of my 1/4" end mills to use with this same operation during my Merlin build. However, the flat center-cutting edges are vulnerable to chipping and excessive wear, and the tool can quickly lose its advantage. To increase its lifetime, I roughed in the lobes with a conventional end mill and saved the fragile cutter for the finishing passes.
One of the photos shows two pairs of test lobes that I machined into a piece of scrap 1144 with this operation. One pair was machined using a conventional end mill and the other using the flat bottom cutter. The lobes machined with the flat tool are directly off the mill while the lobes machined with the conventional cutter received a few minutes of filing before I remembered to take the photo. Grooves created by the flat bottom tool are plainly visible (and felt) but easily removed with abrasive paper.
Each lobe pair was machined using a minimum amount of rotary axis stick-out. Although a tailstock was part of the setup, the long skinny shafts required additional support below the cutter. Since the stick-out had to be re-adjusted for each lobe pair, a simple degree wheel attached to the tailstock end of the shaft was used to reinitialize the starting angle for each lobe cutting operation.
I made up some sanding sticks to finish the lobes' surfaces by gluing abrasive paper to wood craft sticks. These are quick and easy to make by the handfuls, and they helped avoid altering the machined contours.
The lobes and bearings will be lubricated by oil pumped through the camshafts. Twelve #70 holes supply oil to these surfaces on each camshaft. They were manually drilled using a sensitive drill feed and a simple custom V fixture for support. A stream of compressed air kept the drill and hole free of the 1144's chips which tended to become magnetized and make an already difficult operation even more risky. Finally, the shafts' ends were threaded and plugged. The front plugs were drilled through with a #78 drill in order to supply oil to the cam gears.
Three of the four original blanks wound up as completed camshafts, and so I now have a spare intake cam. (Some late night carelessness resulted in one of the shafts being sliced in half.) Measurements were taken and recorded for each lobe on each camshaft. The diameters of both the heels and the heights of the noses vary +/_.003" around their mean values. These measurements will be needed later because the Offy doesn't use lash adjusters. In the full-size engines, the lengths of the valve stems were filed to adjust clearances. The manual mentions a .005" valve clearance which may be what results when everything in the valve train exactly matches the documentation. In my case, an assortment of followers will likely be required. - Terry