I'm building a Bill Harris Steam Roller based on the drawings in Live Steam Magazine. This started as a class CNC project at the local JC. As I spent my days engineering and doing CAD at work, I let the others do the CAD/CAM in class and I did most of the machine set up (Haas VF3) and button pushing. We made just about all the parts for a dozen rollers before the instructor retired and moved. The instructor and I hold most of the parts, plus we still have two other members interested. After about 15 years of inactivity, I decided I needed to get one running.
Getting down to the final details I needed to finish the water tank which has a water hatch. The Harris design has a plain tank lid with the hatch body soft soldered to top. I thought that was too plain so I drew up a flange to mount the hatch to. How to hold this 0.045" (1.1mm) thick by 1.75" (44mm) diameter flange? I knew I was using a Greenlee conduit punch to pop the hole in it. What If I used the punch to hold the flange for turning on the lathe and for holding in a vice for drilling the rivet holes? Well, it worked great.
Here's the punch body in a 5C collet for turning the sheared out blank.
On the mill to drill the holes. The body of the punch was centered using an indicator held on the spindle. My old Mitutoyo DRO doesn't do bolt circles, so I just used the offsets from a quicky CAD drawing.
After cleanup and soft soldering, I rivetted the flanged assembly to the water tank top. The top rivets are dummies, the top is held on by four round head 2-56 machine screws.
Last photo shows the tank top mounted to the tank body and sitting on the steam roller frame.
Now to schedule the boiler test at the local club (Los Angeles Live Steamers) and wrap up the final plumbing!
John
Getting down to the final details I needed to finish the water tank which has a water hatch. The Harris design has a plain tank lid with the hatch body soft soldered to top. I thought that was too plain so I drew up a flange to mount the hatch to. How to hold this 0.045" (1.1mm) thick by 1.75" (44mm) diameter flange? I knew I was using a Greenlee conduit punch to pop the hole in it. What If I used the punch to hold the flange for turning on the lathe and for holding in a vice for drilling the rivet holes? Well, it worked great.
Here's the punch body in a 5C collet for turning the sheared out blank.
On the mill to drill the holes. The body of the punch was centered using an indicator held on the spindle. My old Mitutoyo DRO doesn't do bolt circles, so I just used the offsets from a quicky CAD drawing.
After cleanup and soft soldering, I rivetted the flanged assembly to the water tank top. The top rivets are dummies, the top is held on by four round head 2-56 machine screws.
Last photo shows the tank top mounted to the tank body and sitting on the steam roller frame.
Now to schedule the boiler test at the local club (Los Angeles Live Steamers) and wrap up the final plumbing!
John