
Originally Posted by
seattle smitty
Ocean, even though my iron sleeve is to be shrink-fitted in place, don't you think a plating of heat-conductive material on the O.D. of the iron sleeve would help move those BTUs along? One advantage might be that if you had to press a sleeve OUT, a copper of silver plated surface would help enough that you could slightly increase the tightness of the shrink fit . . ???
I remember sleeving an alloy cylinder many years ago and deciding a taper fit was a good idea. By the time I'd worked out the maximum shrink the cylinder would take without exceeding the materials' elastic limit I needed a new cylinder. It worked OK, but on striping it much later I found the liner wasn't anywhere near as tight as it had been, presumably the many heat cycles since had some effect in relieving some of the stress in the alloy...
I'm not now in a position where I've got the sort of constraints that would require me to use an iron liner in an alloy cylinder for competition, so it's not a problem that keeps me awake at nights. If you're considering plating the outside of a liner for thermal continuity then why not just use a silver thermal paste? If it's a water cooled application and you've got room maybe make it a wet liner?
Go soothingly on the grease mud, as there lurks the skid demon
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