You had me there Den - how the hell did he know that then I realised it's at the bottom of the page
Yep a young 68 as of Friday - it was this time last year I was gearing up for a visit to the sawbones - that seems a long time ago now
I have made several crankshafts now not just for the 5cc versions but quite a few for worn commercial engines too. All have been made using En24T (4340) and none have proved difficult to machine - tough?
Yes, cuts have to be much lighter and speeds much slower but the real benefit of using this is it is prehardened and in a tempered state which is machinable at home without recourse to grinding. Definitely - in an ideal world - the later would be preferable but like most of us that facility is unfortunately not available.
Personally I dislike using carbides and have found that using HSS shallow 10 thou cuts at a fair feed rate (applied by hand) with the speed a tad faster than usual soon reduces a piece down to shaft size. I was given a tipped tool to try on the last engines and this helped reduce the roughing time but I would never use it for finishing to such tolerances as are required here.
Why I particularly like using En24T is because of the weak spot - the crankpin - but I agree that a slightly less tensile material could be used for smaller engines or pressing in a crankpin of suitable material though I have as yet to try that method. I have a good friend who makes some exceptional diesels in the 2.5/3.2 class the latter used at top competitive level for 'combat' C/L flying. His crankpins are made from the rollers for needle roller bearings - very hard skin but tough core. Incidentally he uses En24t for the shafts and - despite having a small Myford cylindrical grinder - actually prefers to turn and hone his shafts to finish size.
The one thing I would say to anyone machining this or most tough materials for the first time using HSS is that the tool has to be really sharp for those final finishing cuts. Certainly En24T exhibits a property of the skin glazing/work hardening on very fine cuts if the tool is rubbing in the slightest. This usually leads to nothing coming off so another thou or so is put on - same thing, another thou on the dial and whoops too late you're undersize. I always have a freshly sharped tool set up ready for that last five/ten thou leaving a thou or so up on dia for polishing with 4/600 wet and dry stuck to a parallel with double sided sticky tape.
My work experience involved a high degree of heat treatment - despite that I'm reluctant to go down that route if avoidable because of the potential for distortion which only grinding will take care of. There are parts that get HT'd but that worry is always present.
In the end 'yer pays yer money' etc
Regards - Ramon