crank parts, ground shafts on Central pin are 25mm dia.
Perhaps in the future i might bring them up to 26.
crank parts, ground shafts on Central pin are 25mm dia.
Perhaps in the future i might bring them up to 26.
It seems like better steel in the parts to allow higher press fits would be the best way to go. OEM 2T cranks don't seem to take much pressure, but something like a Ducati 750 bevel or Laverda 750 gets a 40T press groaning. I'm sure some of that is due to the size of the pins, but those two bikes use some pretty good steel that doesn't mush out of the way.
years ago i pressed apart a never-been-rebuilt honda rs125 crank just to see what honda do on their race engines. from memory (a dodgy one i'm afraid) it was something around 12 to 14 ton to push it apart and it had .09mm or so interference on a 24mm pin - quite a surprise but it wasn't anywhere near as "flexible" as a motocross crank when subjected to experiments in the press. as mentioned , to handle the fit i'm sure you need a tough steel with a hard bore ($$$) . certainly a few mm of tig welding is the economical solution. the loads from centrifugle (or centripetal if you like to call it that) force cycle 4 times per rev on the pin to webs and to a degree into the main journal so you can see why engines love to dis-assemble themselves at high revs... money keeps them contented for a while...
Ha Ha yes money keeps them contained for a while, love it.
just found in my boxes of stuff a ground pin ( with the gear machined on it, made from EN39B ), measures at 0.05 press. Bit light I think, I've made plenty more I see but not ground yet. I'll take these out to 0.08 / 0.1
Crank is nitrided 4140, so a resonable steel.
Honda used to have two charts for selective fitting big ends and bigend mains based on the crankpin and pin hole diameter the big ends were then colour coded
kind of like this yamaha had a similar system, but you had tocorrect their own slapping them together and fit them yourself after delivery of the TZ.
https://images.cmsnl.com/img/partsli...32e02_a34e.gif
I have always wondered with the RS125 as Honda never sold bits, only complete cranks maybe they believed they were not up to repeated use with tight pins.
![]()
Kinky is using a feather. Perverted is using the whole chicken
Thanks, Greg.
A different triple:
https://www.bonhams.com/auctions/24494/lot/362/
Not suggesting it as a solution for the Flettmotor, but thought this was interesting if the claims are true.
http://www.generalpolygon.com/why.htm
you see some pressed crank pins with grooves cut into the surface, say six or so generally. I'm guessing these are so some of the distorted press fit, microscopicly, distort down into these grooves helping to assist drive? I wonder this might make subsequent pressing less effective?
I don't know about less effective - but it certainly makes alignment easier on reassembly. A while back, Barry Lynch was showing me micro grooving on a late crank. That one was deliberate - but he was also talking about rough edges on the holes in crankwheels leaving grooves in shafts which he liked as it helped establish alignment when setting up to press back together.
Sadly Barry has sold up and moved to Husa's side of the hill. Another precision engineer gone.
Latest edition of Classic Racer magazine has a report on the Pukekohe classic festival. There's s a small, uncaptioned picture of a DIY Ducati Supermono (air-cooled). Think I've found it...
"This unusual Ducati single caught my eye. There was something very ‘right’ about it, even if its provenance was somewhat head-scratching. A chat with owner and builder Andy Gourlay revealed the bike is a ‘fusion’ of half a 900 top end, a 750 bottom end (with custom balanced crank), the front part of a ST2 frame with fabricated rear, a 916 tank and various other Ducati, bespoke and universal parts."
From: https://www.rideforever.co.nz/news-a...festival-2015/
Nice job!
I've just checked, and there's been nothing from Will since 28th May. Anyone know if he's OK?
Wil, you out there?
Andy's a friend of mine - and another friend rode his GS1000S up from ChCh to ride the Ducati at Pukekohe. I've never seen it in the flesh but I understand the internals are same-same as a Supermono insofar as the balancing and crank arrangements go.
He's a clever engineer - and yes, Guy another of the Yorkshire Gourlays.
There are currently 3 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 3 guests)
Bookmarks