This will be sort of a build log, but hopefully with a difference.
Here is what I am hoping this thread will provide. This will not be a normal build thread with many pictures of my finished parts. This will be more of a show and tell as to how I made the parts; how they were set up in the machine and how I made them that may be different from how others did it. And most important, I’ll show the mistakes I made on some of the parts and how I repaired them without having to machine a new part.
I’ll put an introduction to myself and my shop here, so you can skip this part and get to the meat if you like.
I bought my first semi-serious piece of machine shop hardware many years ago. It is a 3-in-1. Yes, one of those machines that everyone hates, recommends you never buy, never use, and really should be replaced with a full-size mill, lathe, and drill press. This is a Busy Bee unit (me being in Canada); same thing as the Grizzly G9729. Over the years I added a DRO and recently replaced the lathe motor with one from a treadmill to give me variable speed on the fly. It was a pretty good unit before these mods and is a very good one now. I also added a windshield wiper motor with a variable speed control to the right end of the leadscrew. This way I can control the speed of the cutter independent to the speed of the spindle, and dial the speed up or down on the fly.
I bought a small CNC mill a few years ago. I think this was literally the last one Little Machine Shop sold of this type; a Sieg KX1. Great little machine.
The last addition was very recent when I decided the lathe part of the 3-in-1 was pretty nice, but swapping between the mill and lathe functions requires a bit of set up time, so a new mill it was. I bought a PM-728VT. Now that is a nice mill!
The first thing I made on the 3-in-1 years ago was a small pin ball valve engine. Looked pretty nice but of course didn’t work. I made a lot of parts for car projects and other things, and then tackled a low temperature stirling engine (the Miser). This was made almost exclusively on the 3-in-1 so it is capable of good precision. And the most surprizing thing was, the engine actually worked the first time I set it up on a cup of hot water! So with that mastered, time to move on to something more challenging….the Little Demon. This has been going on now for a few years but I’ve recently gotten more serious about working on it.
I try and do as much on the CNC as I can, and here is my reason for this. First, I don’t always feel like being in the shop, so working on the computer doing the modelling and programming is still working on the engine without being in the shop. Second, when machining something there is a decent chance of doing something wrong; at least with me there is. By modelling and programming first, I can see what is going to happen before doing the machining. This is important for parts with many holes. A bit more on this later. Also, I still get a kick out of watching the machine do the work.
Please feel free to contribute to this thread if you are making a Little Demon, or any engine with similar parts. Particularly if you have hints and tips that could be useful to others.
I’ll start it off now and give you an idea of what this will be about. Oh, first of all here are the parts I’ve made or partially made so far. Block, carb, air cleaner, distributor, bell housing and adapter, crankshaft, connecting rods, water pump, oil pan, flywheel, rocker covers. Heads are in-work.
Well, this has been a longer intro than I expected, so the more interesting stuff will start with the next posting.
Rick
Here is what I am hoping this thread will provide. This will not be a normal build thread with many pictures of my finished parts. This will be more of a show and tell as to how I made the parts; how they were set up in the machine and how I made them that may be different from how others did it. And most important, I’ll show the mistakes I made on some of the parts and how I repaired them without having to machine a new part.
I’ll put an introduction to myself and my shop here, so you can skip this part and get to the meat if you like.
I bought my first semi-serious piece of machine shop hardware many years ago. It is a 3-in-1. Yes, one of those machines that everyone hates, recommends you never buy, never use, and really should be replaced with a full-size mill, lathe, and drill press. This is a Busy Bee unit (me being in Canada); same thing as the Grizzly G9729. Over the years I added a DRO and recently replaced the lathe motor with one from a treadmill to give me variable speed on the fly. It was a pretty good unit before these mods and is a very good one now. I also added a windshield wiper motor with a variable speed control to the right end of the leadscrew. This way I can control the speed of the cutter independent to the speed of the spindle, and dial the speed up or down on the fly.
I bought a small CNC mill a few years ago. I think this was literally the last one Little Machine Shop sold of this type; a Sieg KX1. Great little machine.
The last addition was very recent when I decided the lathe part of the 3-in-1 was pretty nice, but swapping between the mill and lathe functions requires a bit of set up time, so a new mill it was. I bought a PM-728VT. Now that is a nice mill!
The first thing I made on the 3-in-1 years ago was a small pin ball valve engine. Looked pretty nice but of course didn’t work. I made a lot of parts for car projects and other things, and then tackled a low temperature stirling engine (the Miser). This was made almost exclusively on the 3-in-1 so it is capable of good precision. And the most surprizing thing was, the engine actually worked the first time I set it up on a cup of hot water! So with that mastered, time to move on to something more challenging….the Little Demon. This has been going on now for a few years but I’ve recently gotten more serious about working on it.
I try and do as much on the CNC as I can, and here is my reason for this. First, I don’t always feel like being in the shop, so working on the computer doing the modelling and programming is still working on the engine without being in the shop. Second, when machining something there is a decent chance of doing something wrong; at least with me there is. By modelling and programming first, I can see what is going to happen before doing the machining. This is important for parts with many holes. A bit more on this later. Also, I still get a kick out of watching the machine do the work.
Please feel free to contribute to this thread if you are making a Little Demon, or any engine with similar parts. Particularly if you have hints and tips that could be useful to others.
I’ll start it off now and give you an idea of what this will be about. Oh, first of all here are the parts I’ve made or partially made so far. Block, carb, air cleaner, distributor, bell housing and adapter, crankshaft, connecting rods, water pump, oil pan, flywheel, rocker covers. Heads are in-work.
Well, this has been a longer intro than I expected, so the more interesting stuff will start with the next posting.
Rick