gondolier88
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- Jun 9, 2010
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Hi,
I'm a regular reader on here, but not a regular contributor.
I'm currently machining a D10 as the power source for a 1:12 scale Royal Navy 50ft steam picket boat, along with a 3 drum Yarrow boiler.
I have found that the casting set I have bought is predominantly of mediocre quality with obvious chilling occuring to most of the castings- the cylinders were bad enough, but the bedplate is proving almost impossible.
First- I dislike some of the features of the D10- the main bearing designs being one such. I decided to file ( I don't own a milling machine or a lathe with T-slotted crosslide) the keeps square as per full size, make up some proper split bearings and hey presto. However upon filing the keeps I have found that the centre and one end keep have superhard skin to a depth of around .120"! You can imagine what trying to file that was like- it just became a mirror finish and impossible to remove. I decided to think out of the box and using half of a Keats angle plate, some Oak shim, badly misused faceplate clamps and a massive amount of luck I mounted the bedplate onto the toolpost mount on my 7x12 SIEG and centred a 5/16" milling cutter in the chuck. It coped with the centre keep admirably, but the end keep removed material from the cutter! It did mill enough out of it to make a decent bearing, but it would be out of size in comparison with the other two, and wouldn't feel to me anything more than being a bodge.
So, to those who have been there and done it all, what on earth can I do? My last resort is to visit my local freindly machine shop, but that's kind of missing the point isn't it?
Any help would be very gratefully recieved, thanks.
Greg
I'm a regular reader on here, but not a regular contributor.
I'm currently machining a D10 as the power source for a 1:12 scale Royal Navy 50ft steam picket boat, along with a 3 drum Yarrow boiler.
I have found that the casting set I have bought is predominantly of mediocre quality with obvious chilling occuring to most of the castings- the cylinders were bad enough, but the bedplate is proving almost impossible.
First- I dislike some of the features of the D10- the main bearing designs being one such. I decided to file ( I don't own a milling machine or a lathe with T-slotted crosslide) the keeps square as per full size, make up some proper split bearings and hey presto. However upon filing the keeps I have found that the centre and one end keep have superhard skin to a depth of around .120"! You can imagine what trying to file that was like- it just became a mirror finish and impossible to remove. I decided to think out of the box and using half of a Keats angle plate, some Oak shim, badly misused faceplate clamps and a massive amount of luck I mounted the bedplate onto the toolpost mount on my 7x12 SIEG and centred a 5/16" milling cutter in the chuck. It coped with the centre keep admirably, but the end keep removed material from the cutter! It did mill enough out of it to make a decent bearing, but it would be out of size in comparison with the other two, and wouldn't feel to me anything more than being a bodge.
So, to those who have been there and done it all, what on earth can I do? My last resort is to visit my local freindly machine shop, but that's kind of missing the point isn't it?
Any help would be very gratefully recieved, thanks.
Greg