I made this little machine, about 20mm high excluding the inlet pipe, because I needed to see how a very small motor could work.
I made a couple about 10mm high, but they did not run as well as this one did.
So I decided that this size has the most chance of success.
Thing is, making a machine out of gem stone material is far more dicey than metal.
Like, no give or bending that metal has.
Just crack and start again.
So once I got a handle on metal miniatures, I felt I could go for a stone machine and have a reasonable chance of success.
Cubic Zirconia, in the gemological world is regarded as completed junk, worthy only of setting into cheap jewellery and as cheap diamond simulant.
It is the cubic form of zirconium dioxide and has a melting point of 2750°C (4976°F) .
It has a hardness of 8 on the Mohs scale. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mohs_scale_of_mineral_hardness
This might be true for the clear material that imitates diamond, but the coloured material is far more interesting and when I have cut it into a nice faceted stone, it does not half do badly for itself.
So, using the rough material pictured, I am going to attempt to make a steam machine as small as my brass model, along the same vein as the gem steam machine.
My delicate hands cutting a slab of CZ for the upright post.
I made the cylinder out of a laminated CZ that was earmarked for faceting a multi colour stone like the third picture above, but instead the rough will be used for the cylinder.
So then I drilled a pilot hole with a 2mm core drill down the center.
The center hole was enlarged to 2.5mm and the polished and then two holes were drilled for the pivot shaft and the inlet port.
The pivot hole does not go through to the cylinder, but stops just short at about .5mm .
Then I drilled the pivot hole through the yellow upright and temporally glued the gold pivot into the rough green and clear cylinder. I temporally glue every thing with two component epoxy, and then when I want to separate it I put the piece under a 200 watt incandescent light bulb. The heat weakens the epoxy and it ( generally) separates .
Sometimes it doesnt and the piece breaks, and then I wet my pants and freak out and curse and stuff.
OK, the pants part I made up.
I also started the piston in 14ct gold for the metal work, because it is quite hard and it is after all gold, so it gives a bit of gravitas to CZ.
One wouldnt want to allow the CZ to lower the tone of the neighborhood too much, right?
Here the conrod has the ( big end ) bottom part affixed.
The red CZ in the photo is actually colour change material. So in fluorescent light, it is a golden brown and in incandescent light it is blood red- seriously cool stuff.
Its the same material that I cut the stone out of in the first faceted stone picture.
The basic plan is to glue the thing together, get it running, and then separate everything so that each individual piece of CZ can be faceted.
Once every thing is polished, then the components are re fitted and glued with Hxtal.
Once that is done, it is not possible to separate anything again.
A Hxtal joint is stronger than the material itself.
End of part one( he says in a serious voice)