peterl95124
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- Joined
- Feb 22, 2020
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this is a WW-II vintage artificial horizon electrical gyroscope,
or more precisely just the innards, no instrument panel display
and no case, that I'm re-building, because in addition to engines
I like all things mechanical (clocks too!), and who doesn't find
gyroscopes to be mysterious and almost magical !
when I got it the rotor was so black I couldn't tell what metal it was,
and there was cosmoline everywhere (not even sure how/why it got there),
and rust in spite of the cosmoline because it wasn't where it should have been,
you're seeing it after a disassembly, clean up and oiling, and reassembly
along with not having the original housing the bearings for the outer
gimbals are missing, so making my own bearing races, and after that
some kind of bracket that will hold them and the gyro above a display base
finally I will be designing and building a 400-Hz 3-phase power supply
as that's what this one almost certainly requires (the motor is a Delta
connected 3-phase without doubt, and 400-Hz is pretty much standard
for avionics both military and civilian, but voltage is still totally unknown,
commonly used in avionics are 12, 24, 48, and 115, Argh!)
or more precisely just the innards, no instrument panel display
and no case, that I'm re-building, because in addition to engines
I like all things mechanical (clocks too!), and who doesn't find
gyroscopes to be mysterious and almost magical !
when I got it the rotor was so black I couldn't tell what metal it was,
and there was cosmoline everywhere (not even sure how/why it got there),
and rust in spite of the cosmoline because it wasn't where it should have been,
you're seeing it after a disassembly, clean up and oiling, and reassembly
along with not having the original housing the bearings for the outer
gimbals are missing, so making my own bearing races, and after that
some kind of bracket that will hold them and the gyro above a display base
finally I will be designing and building a 400-Hz 3-phase power supply
as that's what this one almost certainly requires (the motor is a Delta
connected 3-phase without doubt, and 400-Hz is pretty much standard
for avionics both military and civilian, but voltage is still totally unknown,
commonly used in avionics are 12, 24, 48, and 115, Argh!)
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