- Joined
- Aug 7, 2014
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Hi,
I am a bit late in posting this engine - a twin cylinder in-line 62cc engine design from WWW.cad-modelltechnik-jung.de
The plans are quite easy to follow and I have made just about all of the parts as can be seen from the picture. I had not taken pictures of the various stages of machining as I had not intended to post this one but as I had some cam questions on the tea break section, I thought I would put it in should others be making a similar engine from modelltechnik.
Although it was an easy-ish engine to make, the heads required some thought to make as there is no instructional text that comes with the plans. Another point was perhaps the rather technical crankshaft which sports no less than 5 rather large bearings so it looks like a tough beast.
Anyhow, I have just the camshaft to complete, once I complete my cam grinding jig, and have some confirmation from the designer that the cam drawing is correct (see the Tea Break thread cam profiles). The crankshaft is made up from 7 sections and these are pressed and bolted together to make one rotating assembly.
It is a rather square looking engine with a belt driven cam shaft and has a few quirks to overcome during machining but otherwise it seems to be taking shape. It is a glow plug type ignition so that has eliminated making a timed spark system and saves construction time. The downside is it will require that nitro type of fuel that model flyers are familiar with. Anyhow, the next installment should be completing the cams on a cam grinding jig that's taking forever to build but will be useful for other projects.
Till then, thanks for reading.
Steve
I am a bit late in posting this engine - a twin cylinder in-line 62cc engine design from WWW.cad-modelltechnik-jung.de
The plans are quite easy to follow and I have made just about all of the parts as can be seen from the picture. I had not taken pictures of the various stages of machining as I had not intended to post this one but as I had some cam questions on the tea break section, I thought I would put it in should others be making a similar engine from modelltechnik.
Although it was an easy-ish engine to make, the heads required some thought to make as there is no instructional text that comes with the plans. Another point was perhaps the rather technical crankshaft which sports no less than 5 rather large bearings so it looks like a tough beast.
Anyhow, I have just the camshaft to complete, once I complete my cam grinding jig, and have some confirmation from the designer that the cam drawing is correct (see the Tea Break thread cam profiles). The crankshaft is made up from 7 sections and these are pressed and bolted together to make one rotating assembly.
It is a rather square looking engine with a belt driven cam shaft and has a few quirks to overcome during machining but otherwise it seems to be taking shape. It is a glow plug type ignition so that has eliminated making a timed spark system and saves construction time. The downside is it will require that nitro type of fuel that model flyers are familiar with. Anyhow, the next installment should be completing the cams on a cam grinding jig that's taking forever to build but will be useful for other projects.
Till then, thanks for reading.
Steve
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