This goes under the heading of "mad idea that works"
I needed a couple of rings for the flywheel on my elbow engine - I had a bronze disk - which machined would become mostly chips so I decided to "butcher" it into a series of rings using my plumbers hole saw kit.
The largest saw is 90mm diameter and the whole thing did not take too long.
Whether its worth the effort or not is moot.
Do all the rings from one side about half way through - with the pilot going all the way through. Turnover and starting with the largest, work inwards & go all the way to breakthrough.
Some sort of clamping is mandatory.
Use decent bi-metal hole saws - not those cheap and nasties that can barely cut wood.
Ken
I needed a couple of rings for the flywheel on my elbow engine - I had a bronze disk - which machined would become mostly chips so I decided to "butcher" it into a series of rings using my plumbers hole saw kit.
The largest saw is 90mm diameter and the whole thing did not take too long.
Whether its worth the effort or not is moot.
Do all the rings from one side about half way through - with the pilot going all the way through. Turnover and starting with the largest, work inwards & go all the way to breakthrough.
Some sort of clamping is mandatory.
Use decent bi-metal hole saws - not those cheap and nasties that can barely cut wood.
Ken