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Panks broadening horizons |
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mgburchard
Orange Level Joined: 14 Sep 2009 Location: Tennessee Points: 1123 |
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Posted: 30 Sep 2014 at 5:43pm |
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Gary in da UP
Orange Level Joined: 13 Sep 2009 Location: EUP of Mi. Points: 1885 |
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spam......reported.
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mgburchard
Orange Level Joined: 14 Sep 2009 Location: Tennessee Points: 1123 |
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wi50
Orange Level Joined: 24 Sep 2010 Location: weegieland Points: 1010 |
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Will you be selling rods and parts made on this machine?
Edited by wi50 - 30 Sep 2014 at 6:30pm |
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"see what happens when you have no practical experience doing something...... you end up playing with calculators and looking stupid on the internet"
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Bill_MN
Orange Level Joined: 12 Sep 2009 Location: Sioux Falls, SD Points: 1466 |
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1951 WD #78283, 1918 Case 28x50 Thresher #76738, Case Centennial B 2x16 Plow
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mgburchard
Orange Level Joined: 14 Sep 2009 Location: Tennessee Points: 1123 |
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Gary in da UP
Orange Level Joined: 13 Sep 2009 Location: EUP of Mi. Points: 1885 |
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IF mitch had the resources of NASA in his "shop" he still couldn't build a winning engine/tractor. So this topic is still spam.
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mgburchard
Orange Level Joined: 14 Sep 2009 Location: Tennessee Points: 1123 |
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wi50
Orange Level Joined: 24 Sep 2010 Location: weegieland Points: 1010 |
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So he works for free!! Or he's padding the price, using his employers resources (machinery and other employees) to make parts. Gary is correct, Mitch is no machinist. |
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"see what happens when you have no practical experience doing something...... you end up playing with calculators and looking stupid on the internet"
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mgburchard
Orange Level Joined: 14 Sep 2009 Location: Tennessee Points: 1123 |
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With those machines you don't have to be a machinist just a programmer . Marty you should appreciate that being a internet builder and all
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wi50
Orange Level Joined: 24 Sep 2010 Location: weegieland Points: 1010 |
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So there's no difference in price if a customer supplies their own parts or if they get custom made parts......you say they are free with purchase of a build. Sounds like a desperate cry for work. Myself, I'm pretty backed up and don't cut deals, I don't have to. |
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"see what happens when you have no practical experience doing something...... you end up playing with calculators and looking stupid on the internet"
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mgburchard
Orange Level Joined: 14 Sep 2009 Location: Tennessee Points: 1123 |
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I don't think Mitch is crying for work . I think he is just going to let Ashbury and ray supply parts to engine assemblers that can not machine custom parts for any reason they may have
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Butch(OH)
Orange Level Joined: 11 Sep 2009 Location: Lucerne Ohio Points: 3834 |
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Somewhat true, but you still need to be above clueless Pank, which is where you are.
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Butch(OH)
Orange Level Joined: 11 Sep 2009 Location: Lucerne Ohio Points: 3834 |
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Well Marty when the only provable track record is 5 mediocre hooks and KABOOM! people just dont flock to that don't ya know??? I guess twin wire crank welding work has all dried up eh ???
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wi50
Orange Level Joined: 24 Sep 2010 Location: weegieland Points: 1010 |
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All my machines are CnC, also known as crank'n-crank.
Butch, don't you rember pank telling us billet rods were no good, now he wants to pretend to make them. Picture of your Gleason please......... Edited by wi50 - 30 Sep 2014 at 8:08pm |
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"see what happens when you have no practical experience doing something...... you end up playing with calculators and looking stupid on the internet"
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mgburchard
Orange Level Joined: 14 Sep 2009 Location: Tennessee Points: 1123 |
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I don't think twin wire welding has dried up I think Mitch just advanced it being able to utilize another machine to make rods capable of using a readily available narrow automotive h series rod bearing instead of antique pricey over a inch wide tractor rod bearings
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Butch(OH)
Orange Level Joined: 11 Sep 2009 Location: Lucerne Ohio Points: 3834 |
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He advanced twin wire welding to be able to use another machine to make rods Eh? If you only know how STUPID that statement is, LOL You are even more clueless than I ever even thought you were Pank
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Butch(OH)
Orange Level Joined: 11 Sep 2009 Location: Lucerne Ohio Points: 3834 |
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Ya Marty, I think that was about the time Pank invented the cast iron forging also. I wonder if the TVA gives it graces to Pank taking pics at the machine shop instead of pushing the broom? |
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mgburchard
Orange Level Joined: 14 Sep 2009 Location: Tennessee Points: 1123 |
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wi50
Orange Level Joined: 24 Sep 2010 Location: weegieland Points: 1010 |
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Hey Butch, you rember me explaining to pank how a narrow crankpin would be stronger than a wide one, to throw those tractor rods away and use a nice narrow billet on max effort engines,,......he did listen after all. That is why I set my billet rods up with an H-series bearing.....but look out pank, the locating tabs are in different locations on the top and bottom bearing shells on the 2" SBC bearings.
I'm not sure why but Murphy's rods use a different bearing insert, Buick I think, maybe the locating tabs are symmetrical on those. |
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"see what happens when you have no practical experience doing something...... you end up playing with calculators and looking stupid on the internet"
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mgburchard
Orange Level Joined: 14 Sep 2009 Location: Tennessee Points: 1123 |
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wi50
Orange Level Joined: 24 Sep 2010 Location: weegieland Points: 1010 |
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You're dead wrong, the welder has the same or less work to do....you weld the whole journal and grind into it. Weather you grind a .960" wide crankpin or a 1.5" wide crankpin the welding is the same, not more. The narrow crankpin is also easier to grind, less material to remove than a wide pin. The welding work could in a sense be less for the narrow crankpin, as the area built up can be tapered down to a lesser width. Thus giving less mass to the outermost part of the crank and in theory strengths it. Added strength from added material under the crankpin allowing it to be blended into the throw. Any crank grinder knows this, though the imaginary crank experts on the internet like you lank are, well,......clueless. |
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"see what happens when you have no practical experience doing something...... you end up playing with calculators and looking stupid on the internet"
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Butch(OH)
Orange Level Joined: 11 Sep 2009 Location: Lucerne Ohio Points: 3834 |
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Ya Marty but the famed Tenn Internet poster thinks that has been long enough in the past that everyone has forgot. and those tangs are there to keep the bearing inserts from spinning in the rod right Pank?? |
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wi50
Orange Level Joined: 24 Sep 2010 Location: weegieland Points: 1010 |
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No I don't rember, but I do rember pankey buying the engine and then whining that it was junk and selling the parts. It did have wide rods though. |
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"see what happens when you have no practical experience doing something...... you end up playing with calculators and looking stupid on the internet"
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Butch(OH)
Orange Level Joined: 11 Sep 2009 Location: Lucerne Ohio Points: 3834 |
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You didn't build that motor when it was winning Pank, everybody knows that. True story line is you bought a winning engine took it apart, modified a few things and on hook #5 KERRR---BAAAAM!!!! So much for twist,,, |
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mgburchard
Orange Level Joined: 14 Sep 2009 Location: Tennessee Points: 1123 |
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wi50
Orange Level Joined: 24 Sep 2010 Location: weegieland Points: 1010 |
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Not to wreck the party, but you're dead wrong here pank. The narrower rod requires LESS welding. Please read my other post on this and explain why you say it needs more welding. I suppose if you welded the wrong side of the crank and de-stroked it, there would be more welding. But adding stroke means building material on the "top" side and cutting into the bottom side. With a narrower rod, the weld doesn't have to be as wide and can taper down leaving less welded material on the top side of the crankpin. Less material there means less mass and less negative impact on the overall strength of the crankshaft. The narrower rod allows a wider radius under the crankpin and more material of the original crankpin is allowed to blend into the throw, this strengthening the crankshaft even more. Your statement is dead wrong. You are clueless about crankshaft work. |
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"see what happens when you have no practical experience doing something...... you end up playing with calculators and looking stupid on the internet"
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mgburchard
Orange Level Joined: 14 Sep 2009 Location: Tennessee Points: 1123 |
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You got to narrow journal up if you use a narrower rod if you plan on having any oil pressure . Pankey went over this when your pal Andy was recommending just turning allis crank down to farmal h rod diameter but the h rod is narrower. Butch sometimes Pankey says going forward is backing up tarbills motor did teach him a thing or three . one thing it had a large duration relative small lift cam from comp cams . didn't lug well at end of pu all but ran strong enough in the middle to get past everyone to be a points champ . so Pankey goes with more duration now and even though Marty says its all wrong well it got past two of his this year
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wi50
Orange Level Joined: 24 Sep 2010 Location: weegieland Points: 1010 |
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That's a pretty fugly crank in the picture there. There could be strength added by grinding a large diameter grind at a different stroke, thus grinding a large radius to blend the crankpin to the throw.
Think of it like this, grind a 2" crankpin on a 6" stroke that's .960"/wide. Now grind a 3" diameter, or close to it depending on the material, with a huge radius on a 4.5" stroke or so and grind a little wider than the .960" crankpin journal. The grinding wheel won't hit the crankpin but will clean up the under side of the crankpin blending into the throw. I see work like in the picture from shops that cut corners. Sure its one more setup on the grinder to do the second grind, but its a way to add strength. When I end up with a crank like the one in the pictures, I tig weld up the "cheeks" under the journal and then have a friend re-grind it like I explained above. If I've got time tomorrow, I have a crank in the shop that I need to do this to, I'll take a picture and post, and I have one that's done right to compare that I can show. |
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"see what happens when you have no practical experience doing something...... you end up playing with calculators and looking stupid on the internet"
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wi50
Orange Level Joined: 24 Sep 2010 Location: weegieland Points: 1010 |
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That's a pretty fugly crank in the picture there. There could be strength added by grinding a large diameter grind, wider at a different stroke, thus grinding a large radius to blend the crankpin to the throw.
Think of it like this, grind a 2" crankpin on a 6" stroke that's .960"/wide. Now grind a 3" diameter, or close to it depending on the material, with a huge radius on a 4.5" stroke or so and grind a little wider than the .960" crankpin journal. The grinding wheel won't hit the crankpin but will clean up the under side of the crankpin blending into the throw. I see work like in the picture from shops that cut corners. Sure its one more setup on the grinder to do the second grind, but its a way to add strength. When I end up with a crank like the one in the pictures, I tig weld up the "cheeks" under the journal and then have a friend re-grind it like I explained above. If I've got time tomorrow, I have a crank in the shop that I need to do this to, I'll take a picture and post, and I have one that's done right to compare that I can show. |
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"see what happens when you have no practical experience doing something...... you end up playing with calculators and looking stupid on the internet"
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