PaulMakesThings
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- Jul 26, 2014
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I have a Grizzly G9972Z 11" x 26" Bench Lathe. I've mainly used it to bore pulleys and gears to fit, and for some threading.
I was thinking I'd try making some small pneumatic cylinders. These will be for low pressure. Think on the scale and pressure of Lego pneumatics. I'd like any tips on how to make it work better.
I'm pretty sure for the piston the best approach is to machine a plug with 2 (?) O rings, and thread it for a small rod. Those parts will be metal. I'm thinking for the cylinder I might use PVC, I could even just use a 3 inch or so cut of 1/2 PVC pipe and machine it to have the right surface finish and precision to make a good sliding seal. Would another material work way better, and how should I finish the inside for the best results (hone, reamer, boring bar, etc.)
What would be the best way to get the caps to seal? With a cylinder this small I can lock it on by just having threaded rod or long screws go from cap to cap. But I'm not sure how to seal around the sliding shaft. Maybe some small O-rings set into a machined opening with grease?
Or for the piston and rod seal would a slippery plastic work better than grippy rubber O-rings, such as Delrin? Really I could make the cylinder body out of Delrin too, I'm just not sure it would work enough better to be worth the cost.
I found a few tutorials, but many are emphasizing extreme realism, for now I just want to make it work, I'm not quite at the level yet to be making them look exactly like real tiny hydraulic rams.
I was thinking I'd try making some small pneumatic cylinders. These will be for low pressure. Think on the scale and pressure of Lego pneumatics. I'd like any tips on how to make it work better.
I'm pretty sure for the piston the best approach is to machine a plug with 2 (?) O rings, and thread it for a small rod. Those parts will be metal. I'm thinking for the cylinder I might use PVC, I could even just use a 3 inch or so cut of 1/2 PVC pipe and machine it to have the right surface finish and precision to make a good sliding seal. Would another material work way better, and how should I finish the inside for the best results (hone, reamer, boring bar, etc.)
What would be the best way to get the caps to seal? With a cylinder this small I can lock it on by just having threaded rod or long screws go from cap to cap. But I'm not sure how to seal around the sliding shaft. Maybe some small O-rings set into a machined opening with grease?
Or for the piston and rod seal would a slippery plastic work better than grippy rubber O-rings, such as Delrin? Really I could make the cylinder body out of Delrin too, I'm just not sure it would work enough better to be worth the cost.
I found a few tutorials, but many are emphasizing extreme realism, for now I just want to make it work, I'm not quite at the level yet to be making them look exactly like real tiny hydraulic rams.