Elmer’s #16 “baldy”

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Blacksheep

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Yesterday was a rainy day and I had a couple of hours to spend in the workshop so I decided to start my next project: the Elmer’s engine #16, called baldy because it has a sphere instead of a cilindrical piston.
This will be the hardest part to build I think because I have a sphere attachment that I built in the past but it’s all but accurate.
Anyway I will try to do my best.
 
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I started with the base.
I did it round instead of square because it’s easier to make it in the lathe.
I made it from a chunk of mild steel that I had in the shop.
 
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It’s time to use the milling machine to build the frame.
It’s made of aluminium, squared up and drilled for the cilinder screws, the bushing and the air/steam passage.
Then I flipped upside down, drilled and threaded the 2 holes for the bolts that hold it on the base.
The final pic it’s the resume of today’s work.
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Another part done: The crankshaft.
I took a stainless steel 6mm bar and I center drilled it to make the air/steam passage and turned the sides.
Then I moved to the mill and machined the outside passages
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I made the other part too from a bar of ss.
Turned OD, center drilled and set up on the mill to get the required shape.
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My set up is not so good but it worked, this is the final result:
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The only thing that’s missing is the hole for the pin. I will do it later.
 
Another part done: the bushing.
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Next part will be the steam inlet that will be joined to the bushing but I have to decide between soldering or threading it.
 
Today I found my old homemade ball turner.
Ok ok I know...its a piece of rust but it worked.
I’m thinking on some improvements for it but it needs a little polishing before.
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I chucked the piston rod and I tapered it.
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Almost done. Only the cylinder has to be machined but I’m thinking to add a part to support the air/steam inlet because the bushing has a nice fit without any play but the weight of the inlet tends to rotate it.
 
I made very little progress in this past two days, I just found the time to make the little extra support.
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It’s alive!
After making some machining on a set of brass bolts, that I recently bought, to make them fit I reamed to 10 mm and lapped the bore of the cylinder.
The piston sphere went out to be 10,02 mm so I sanded and polished it to fit exactly the required size.
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All the parts are made now and that’s the result.
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I tested it and it runs smoothly even at low pressure.
I noticed that if I put the piston in the right position it starts to run even without manually spinning the flywheel.
Next steps will be the polish work and a wooden base.
 

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