J
JorgensenSteam
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I am creating a separate thread for the Dake Steam engine.
JorgensenSteam said:The Dake article I wrote as well as full CAD drawings have been uploaded to the "Downloads" section of this forum.
If it's a grey cast iron it is weldable, the trick is not the filler metal, I've successfully welded grey cast numerous times.JorgensenSteam said:Bob J. modeled the Dake from these pages of an old Audel's book that he had.
I did a full writeup and CAD drawings on the Dake a while back, and sent it to a publisher out west, he has been sitting on them ever since (quite frustrating).
Had I known about this board, I would have put it all here in the plans section.
If the publisher does not get off dead-center pretty soon, he will loose his opportunity, and I will upload it all to the plans section.
The Dake borrows heavily from a previous Roots design, but with some neat additional features added by Dake such as using the inner piston as a slide valve.
The Dake is one of those off the wall designs that does not look like it would ever work, but in this rare case, the engine actually works very well, and was manufactured up until the late 1950's. It was used in specialty applications like ship steering engines, capstan hoists on steam ships, winches, and in mines because it was dust-proof by being totally enclosed.
It is equivalent to a typical two-cylinder double-acting steam engine, but it only has three basic moving parts, which are the inner piston, the outer piston, and the crankshaft/flywheel assembly. No eccentrics, no rods, no links, but fully reversible by reversing the steam and exhaust supply using a valve that looks exactly like that used on the old locomotive air brakes.
The Dake runs with virtually no vibration, and I belive it probably produces an almost constant torque similar to a 3-phase electric motor. It can be used in any position, since it is totally enclosed (with adjustments for oiling).
Oddly enough, the Dake was one of the more commercially lasting steam engine designs ever built (manufactured up until until the 1950's), and very ahead of its time in sophistication, but virtually unheard of in the steam engine world, because it looks like something from Mars.
I started making the Dake piston when I was very green, and made it on the rotary table of the mill. It did not turn out exactly flat, but looked flat. When I put it in the mill vice to cut the edges, it rotated, sheering off a new looking 1/2" carbide bit and wasting about 4 hours of work (I was slower then too). The drawers cleaning came after I found out that a 1/2" carbide bit was $40.00 plus shipping.
And a botched Dake piston pictured below.
Almost had that sucker done, and it rotated in the mill vice.
Lost a nice carbide bit on that deal, and I would weld it up, but it is cast iron.
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