The full-size Knucklehead uses three caged roller bearings on the big ends of its rods (the rollers ride on the hardened crankpin) and ordinary bronze bearings on the small ends. The widths of the outer cages are narrower than the center one, and so the rods' big ends wind up with equal bearing contact areas.
The Draw-Tech version uses four identical ball bearings on its crankpin and a single caged roller bearing on the small end of each rod. (The rollers will ride on hardened wrist pins.) The widths of the ball bearings are such that the big end of each rod is supported by its own pair of bearings, but because they're not rollers their effective contact areas will be much less than what is provided by the rollers on the small ends.
The SCE-45 roller bearings that I received from McMaster-Carr measured .4395" in diameter - a full two thousandths over its recommended bore. The thin metal shell on this type of bearing can sometimes be out of round and difficult to measure until it's pressed into place, but my measurements showed these were perfectly round. In addition, gage pins showed their shaft diameter wanted to be .252" instead of .250". I couldn't see how the bearing's rolled-over steel edges were going to allow them to be compressed a full two thousandths during the pressing operation, and so I performed a test.
I drilled and reamed a .4375" test hole in a piece of 3/4" thick scrap aluminum. An equivalent of the recommended installation tool was used to install one of the bearings and it was pressed in using the recommended outer edge of its lettered rim. The bearing went in, but it required a breaker bar on my one ton arbor press. A .250" gage pin was still a loose fit in the installed bearing, but a .251" pin fit reasonably well which meant the shell had indeed been compressed some.
I was afraid that a .002" interference fit might be damaging to the small ends of the aluminum pushrods after they had accumulated a number of hours of machining time. A cock-eyed installation due to galling would be a problem. A roller bearing is probably less tolerant of rod and piston machining errors since issues with twist that would otherwise 'wear in' a bronze bearing might break a roller. Bronze bearings were certainly an option, but I decided to continue on with the rollers.
My plan for machining the rods was to cut them concurrently from a single piece of 7075. Their locations inside the workpiece would be equally distant between the top and bottom surfaces of the workpiece. The first operation was to drill and ream the four bearing holes completely through the workpiece.
I didn't have a suitable reamer for the oversize rollers, and so I used a barrel lap and Timesaver lapping compound to increase the bores from .4375" to .4390" for a .0005" interference fit which was all I was willing to chance. Since I had to lap the small end bores, I reamed the big ends a thousandth under and lapped them as well. Timesaver cuts aluminum fairly quickly, and so care had to be taken to not pass up the target. It won't embed and cause problems later, but in this application there won't be any relative motion between the fitted surfaces, anyway.
After drilling, reaming, and lapping the holes for the bearings, a trough was machined through the topside of the workpiece and down to within .100" of its bottom to define the perimeters of the rods. This allowed the rods to be completely machined except for their bottom faces which remained attached to the workpiece.
When the topside machining was completed, the troughs were filled with Devcon 5-Minute epoxy and allowed to cure overnight. This epoxy kept the rods within the troughs attached to the workpiece so it could be flipped over and the rods machined free of it. Machining the entire peripheries of the rods from the topside avoided a seam between the top and bottom side operations. The finished rods were finally removed from the workpiece by heating it to 300F and pushing them out free while still hot.
The last operation removed stock from between the tines of the fork rod in order to provide clearance for the knife rod. The bores were temporarily plugged and then the rods bead blasted to make their surfaces appear similar to those on the full-size rods. Finally, the bearings were pressed in with what felt like just the right amount of force, and the crankpins will be turned to .2515". - Terry
The Draw-Tech version uses four identical ball bearings on its crankpin and a single caged roller bearing on the small end of each rod. (The rollers will ride on hardened wrist pins.) The widths of the ball bearings are such that the big end of each rod is supported by its own pair of bearings, but because they're not rollers their effective contact areas will be much less than what is provided by the rollers on the small ends.
The SCE-45 roller bearings that I received from McMaster-Carr measured .4395" in diameter - a full two thousandths over its recommended bore. The thin metal shell on this type of bearing can sometimes be out of round and difficult to measure until it's pressed into place, but my measurements showed these were perfectly round. In addition, gage pins showed their shaft diameter wanted to be .252" instead of .250". I couldn't see how the bearing's rolled-over steel edges were going to allow them to be compressed a full two thousandths during the pressing operation, and so I performed a test.
I drilled and reamed a .4375" test hole in a piece of 3/4" thick scrap aluminum. An equivalent of the recommended installation tool was used to install one of the bearings and it was pressed in using the recommended outer edge of its lettered rim. The bearing went in, but it required a breaker bar on my one ton arbor press. A .250" gage pin was still a loose fit in the installed bearing, but a .251" pin fit reasonably well which meant the shell had indeed been compressed some.
I was afraid that a .002" interference fit might be damaging to the small ends of the aluminum pushrods after they had accumulated a number of hours of machining time. A cock-eyed installation due to galling would be a problem. A roller bearing is probably less tolerant of rod and piston machining errors since issues with twist that would otherwise 'wear in' a bronze bearing might break a roller. Bronze bearings were certainly an option, but I decided to continue on with the rollers.
My plan for machining the rods was to cut them concurrently from a single piece of 7075. Their locations inside the workpiece would be equally distant between the top and bottom surfaces of the workpiece. The first operation was to drill and ream the four bearing holes completely through the workpiece.
I didn't have a suitable reamer for the oversize rollers, and so I used a barrel lap and Timesaver lapping compound to increase the bores from .4375" to .4390" for a .0005" interference fit which was all I was willing to chance. Since I had to lap the small end bores, I reamed the big ends a thousandth under and lapped them as well. Timesaver cuts aluminum fairly quickly, and so care had to be taken to not pass up the target. It won't embed and cause problems later, but in this application there won't be any relative motion between the fitted surfaces, anyway.
After drilling, reaming, and lapping the holes for the bearings, a trough was machined through the topside of the workpiece and down to within .100" of its bottom to define the perimeters of the rods. This allowed the rods to be completely machined except for their bottom faces which remained attached to the workpiece.
When the topside machining was completed, the troughs were filled with Devcon 5-Minute epoxy and allowed to cure overnight. This epoxy kept the rods within the troughs attached to the workpiece so it could be flipped over and the rods machined free of it. Machining the entire peripheries of the rods from the topside avoided a seam between the top and bottom side operations. The finished rods were finally removed from the workpiece by heating it to 300F and pushing them out free while still hot.
The last operation removed stock from between the tines of the fork rod in order to provide clearance for the knife rod. The bores were temporarily plugged and then the rods bead blasted to make their surfaces appear similar to those on the full-size rods. Finally, the bearings were pressed in with what felt like just the right amount of force, and the crankpins will be turned to .2515". - Terry