Polinzei, cool looking stuff!
Below is my first part on the PLA made cylinder and casting it;
At first I wanted to buy a cylinder kit made by Stage6 or a Malossi speed 7T which all perform reasonably well.
However, in december 2014 I stumbled upon a guy on google who was casting an aluminium piece directly from his PLA printed 3D model (
http://3dtopo.com/lostPLA/).
This made me interested in the subject and together with a metal foundry nearby where I live, we tried a sample ourselfs. It turned out that PLA will melt away 100%
without residues, so the method was indeed quite good to cast cylinders!
Together with a good friend we then formed the idea to start designing a cylinder ourself where we could work around the following:
- The original stud size is 56x56 with 7mm studs, this pattern is too small for a 47.6 bore cylinder to shape it correctly at the exhaust and b-port.
- Most aftermarket cylinders have the exhaust channel at a straight angle whereas we have tried to obtain the desired 20-25 degrees (if I recall it correctly).
- Cooling of most cylinders for a Derbi engine is asymmetric on one side of the exhaust channel.
First, I started making silicone molds of all sorts of cylinders I could get my hands on, a friend's 22 hp 50cc, an Aprilia RSA, a Honda 2007 a-kit, a KTM 125, etc..
(in the picture below are only a few of the silicones, I have enough to fill my desk

)
Attachment 316263
With these molds, I went to a Fablab where they had a reasonable 3D scanner and I scanned the molds with an accuracy of (If I recall it correctly..) 0.1 mm.
Next, I sat together with my friend and given our appetite and enthusiasm to discover things ourselfs (in some people's eyes stubbornness), we decided to go with the Honda port lay-out as shown in the images.
Attachment 316260Attachment 316261Attachment 316262
The Honda cylinder had the A-port its edge nearest to the B-port almost perpendicular to the bore and aimed at the other side. We decided to go with a more common direction of aiming the A-port further towards the C.
The axial angles are set to about 22 deg. for the A-port, 8 deg. for the B port and 50 deg. for the C-port.
After designing the cylinder in CAD, it was time to print it in PLA. As we had to remove / clean the white shell after casting, we decided to remove the "roof" above the exhaust port such that we could thoroughly clean the cylinder.
Attachment 316265
Inherent to the FDM process used by our Ultimaker 2, overhangs and roofs larger than 50 or 60 degrees require support material to deposite the material during printing. Therefore, we had to design the cylinder in such a way that it was printable and all the support material was removable.
I'll elaborate on making the design printable and the actual casting next time, hopefully you guys like it!
cheers,
Peter
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