USS MONITOR SIDE LEVER ENGINE

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Didn't accomplished a lot of machining today. Repaired my South Bend 9 b lathe with the info supplied by HMEL.
Then after that was completed, I check the fit of previous machine parts that was finish this week.

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Part # 46-CRANK ROD BEARING END x 2 completed
Part # 47-CON-ROD x 2 completed
Part # 48-CON-ROD YOKE x 2 completed
Part # 49-CON-ROD YOKE PIN x 2 completed

Improving doing single point threading on the lathe, it's not as intimidating as when I started this project. :eek:
Not to happy the way Part # 46 turnout, may need to remachine two new ones ? :confused:

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The majority of my Labor Day weekend was spent working in the workshop, with the exception of Sunday when I spent time with my granddaughter and family.

Part # 53-ECCENTRIC STRAP x 2 completed
Part # 54-ECCENTRIC STRAP EXTENSION x 2 completed
Part # 56-ECCENTRIC ROD END x 2 completed

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To finish Part #-55-ECCENTRIC ROD and Part #61-SLIDE VALVE ROD, I need to acquire some 1/8" rod.
Thanks for taking a peak. :cool:
 
Acquire some 1/8" dia. rod over the week end so ....
Part # 55-ECCENTRIC ROD x 2 completed
Part # 61-SLIDE VALVE ROD x 2 completed
Part # 66-LH-VALVE ROCKER PLATE PIN completed
Part # 67-RH-VALVE ROCKER PLATE PIN completed
Part # 68-RH-VALVE ROCKER PLATE PIN SPACER completed
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The excitement is escalating. I am eagerly anticipating seeing this engine run for the first time.
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Yes, there were 60 Monitors built , but there were many changes .
None were identical to USS Monitor however. When the battle was over, the US Navy immediately ordered 10 more (called the Passaic Class) -They had rounded lower hulls ( Monitor was flat and straight like a dory) and were slightly longer and the engine"s valve chest was changed to make casting easier. The next group (s) after the 10 were even larger engines as were the ships as they mounted two turrets as the Navy redesigned the ships and did not consult with John Ericsson. The last ten were disasters and could not even float and support a turret. Ericsson was a master of water displacement calculations and the Navy disregarded his input and those last ones never saw service. There was only one true Monitor in size, engine configuration and cannon size. Monitor had two 11 inch Dahlgrens and the later ones had both 11 and 15 inch cannon or just 15 inch
Rich
 
Yes, there were 60 Monitors built , but there were many changes .
None were identical to USS Monitor however. When the battle was over, the US Navy immediately ordered 10 more (called the Passaic Class) -They had rounded lower hulls ( Monitor was flat and straight like a dory) and were slightly longer and the engine"s valve chest was changed to make casting easier. The next group (s) after the 10 were even larger engines as were the ships as they mounted two turrets as the Navy redesigned the ships and did not consult with John Ericsson. The last ten were disasters and could not even float and support a turret. Ericsson was a master of water displacement calculations and the Navy disregarded his input and those last ones never saw service. There was only one true Monitor in size, engine configuration and cannon size. Monitor had two 11 inch Dahlgrens and the later ones had both 11 and 15 inch cannon or just 15 inch
Rich
is tere any way to find out more about the engines?
 
I was searching for more info on these 60 ships and of course, there are subtle lies around the stuff I found. Never is there a mention of how the first ones failed--that is to be expected from people who want us all to believe we are invincible, nor other important details of how Ericsen was treated. So far in my search I have not found any of the other engines that had been improved.

I would like to see the way the navy changed from the Monitor class to a more modern shape of ship like the dreadnaughts. What really gets me is that the "monitors" are so low to the water that I would have thot they would try to get the deck further from the water. These ships apparently were part of the navy till the Spanish/American war. In the mean time, more modern ships had been developed--does anyone know when the Americans developed "more modern"?
 
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Boy, that's a problem. I have spent the past 8 years writing a book on Monitor's Engine.
During that time, I did a complete drawing book on every part and it is available free on the internet for you to down load . Go to the bottom of the page on this link and you will see the drawings
https://homeshopmachinist.net/resources/downloads/

There is a Confederate book out covering their ironclads and it's called "Engines of the Rebellion"
No one has done the Monitors that I know of, and my focus was on the USS Monitor only.
Ericsson started it all in 1843 with the engine of the USS Princeton and his "Vibrating Piston Engine."
Then he created his Vibrating Lever Engines in the 1850's and Monitor's " Half Trunk Vibrating Lever Engine " in 1861 ( It's NOT a "side lever engine" , that's a NOAA misnomer ) Monitor had a 40 " bore and 22" Stroke, which stayed with the next ten Monitor type ships. Then because the ships were built bigger, they went to a 48 inch Bore (x 24" ?) and then went to a "V" configuration . The irony of this is The Monitor drew only 10 feet of water ( to fight in southern rivers ) and was a "Shallow draft warship"
But the navy ( like all government work) expanded it's size and displacement until they did not work.
Most people do not realize that The Monitor was the first "Battleship" and was not an"ironclad" although it is called that.
It was all steel construction , armor belted , steam powered- no sails, and had a rotating turret , a revolution in ship construction.
There may be more information somewhere in the National Archives on the other ships.
Rich
 
Richard, are you ever correct about the "lies " I would say 90 % of what is written about technical details in books is in error , wrong, or just lies because the author didn't know any better.
In my research I found the US Navy just 3 months after the great battle, had The Monitor's Bore wrong in official correspondence ! SO here is the problem , author A writes a book and is wrong, and author "B" repeats the error and then "C " does the same and no one checks the true source,, That is why I say that even the term" Side Lever" is preposterous. Side lever engines drove Paddle wheel steamers and never a screw propeller. Also they are vertical and yet someone in NOAA labeled the engine wrong and did not do their homework ...off soap box
Rich
 
Last word maybe . Their was a Federal Investigation into "Shallow draft Monitors" in 1864 and Congress wanted to know why the ships were so heavy, that when the Turret was placed on the ship , it would sink.
We all know today that a cubic foot of water weighs about 62 pounds , so as you add weight to a ship, you must correspond with more displacement to handle the weight. Ericsson was a expert in this and forecasted that the "Iron" ship would have 18 inches of Freeboard when launched and it did , even though the newspapers earlier called it Ericsson's folly .. saying an all iron ship would sink . He even stood on the deck when launched to prove his calculations. But the navy had their own ideas which were not based on scientific fact
Rich
 
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