Gallery, Projects and General > Mod-Ups!

Pipe and Bolt Engine Mod-Up

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Manxmodder:
Oh,I see it's one of those 'We'll just machine some bits of metal and decide what it's gonna be later on'

If you want a good laugh you want to see the sizes of the cast pipe fittings my mate gave me a couple of weeks back.  They came out of an old commercial laundry business and there is nothing smaller than
1.5 inches dia  :jaw: and a few are  2.5 inch dia.

I think we may be stretching the definition of 'Model engine' if I use them  :lol:  Maybe I could hook it up to the 1 kilowatt Markon alternator that I have kicking round to provide a back up gen set for those power cut eventualities :lol: ......OZ.

vtsteam:

--- Quote from: Manxmodder on January 05, 2015, 02:59:55 PM ---Oh,I see it's one of those 'We'll just machine some bits of metal and decide what it's gonna be later on' ......OZ.

--- End quote ---

That's what I call planning ahead.
All the planning is ahead of me!  :beer:

Hey, 1.5 inch bore ain't exactly a mill engine. Get crackin' ! :poke:

Uh, happened to discover a 3/8" mark on my cylinder, so I guess it was a 3/8" pipe union, not a 1/2" as I originally said.    Now it's 3/4" bore, though. :dremel:

So today I dug out a (I think) 1" galvanized pipe cap with a hole in it from an earlier experiment with pulse jets. The hole was off center, but I planned to drill it out big enough to get a boring bar in it, and then true it up to center. Unfortunately that didn't go well. I chewed up the end of my 5/8" drill pretty bad before realizing there ws a hard spot in the cast iron.  :doh:




vtsteam:
Well I don't have any carbide drills, so after thinking about for a bit I figured I might try to see if I could anneal the darn thing in the woodstove in the house. It had a big pile of hot embers in it (it's been super windy last night and today and we're headed down to the negative numbers Fahrenheit for the next week) -- being well stoked. So I buried the fitting in the embers and opened the draft up, and let her cook. I figured it would also deal with the zinc coating -- right up the chimney.

When I pulled it out cherry red, I buried it in some wood ashes in a bucket. A half hour later this is what it looked like cooked. The area where the "C" is was the hard spot -- you can see the crap job I did with the drill!

vtsteam:
Slapped it onto the Gingery lathe, and it drilled, and bored, and turned, nice as you please......cut like buddah!  :ddb:



vtsteam:
So I'm kinda thinking along these lines:

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