Where did you get it from?Maybe this has been put out there before, but I just discovered it for myself...
If only there was a basic (and super cheap) casting readily available to make nice flywheels with. This will work
Thank you.Take a look here: The shipping does add a bit, but still a steal (cast iron ) in my opinion. I ordered the 3", but there are 4 and 5 inch also.
https://www.mscdirect.com/product/details/06915037
What a great idea - thanks for sharing.Maybe this has been put out there before, but I just discovered it for myself...
If only there was a basic (and super cheap) casting readily available to make nice flywheels with. This will work
I purchased a 7" cast Iron from PM resesarch. Maching cast iron is such a mess so the brass. Bit off a trade off - of course tarnish. Cataill FoundyHi Harglo, I’d love to see some pictures of the flywheels!
Hope it works out for you.I have taken casting to a local casting company and had copies made price is very reasonable. There are 2 companies in town 1 does cast iron the other 1 does zinc & brass.
I had someone at an engine show recommend Martin Models.
https://www.martinmodel.com/collections/fly-wheels?page=1
I told them "I prefer to cast my own".
They said "Why cast your own when you have a wide selection available to purchase?".
I said "Because they generally don't make flywheels like I like them" ie: compound tapered elipsoidal section spokes with the correct looking taper, or custom flywheels like one to fit a hit-and-miss Galloway (that actually matches a Galloway flywheel exactly).
Flywheels that can be purchased have gotten infinitely better in my opinion than they were just a few years ago, and I think 3D modeling and 3D printing is helping with that (that is how I make the patterns for my flywheels).
PM Research also makes flywheels.
https://www.pmmodelengines.com/shop/gas/gas-accessories/flywheel-castings/
Here are two flywheels I have cast in the backyard:
Two have been in gray iron (for the green twin models), and one in aluminum as a test casting, ultimately to be cast in gray iron.
Iron flywheels can be buffed to a mirror finish.
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While casting your own iron flywheels in the backyard is not necessarily easy or cheap, you can cast an exact replica of an old flywheel, not an approximation, if you are into that sort of thing.
I really like what having one's own foundry brings to the table as far as what you can make (kits that can't be purchased anywhere).
Here is an aluminum flywheel, which is a larger sized Cretors-replica.
I hand carved one spoke in wood, and then cast six spokes, made a rim, and then cast the entire flywheel.
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Could you supply a link? I browsed their site but could only find wheels with plastic hubs.Princess Auto that sells all kinds of hardware, and they sell aluminum wheels with bonded rubber tires on them that would make perfect flywheels
TRLVN--You have to go and look in one of their stores. They don't list everything they sell on the internet. Awake---there are about 33 million people in Canada. There are over 300 million people in USA. Such a small percentage of people in Canada who mess around with model engines, it just wouldn't have a large enough domestic market to make it worthwhile.
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