Ultimatly they are all air cooled. What cools the radiator? The liquid is only a heat transfer system.
Ultimatly they are all air cooled. What cools the radiator? The liquid is only a heat transfer system.
What if air is cold enough to be liquid?
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Kinky is using a feather. Perverted is using the whole chicken
The head is easy, all my 350 heads have been cast at Thames. The cylinder? I've never cast an air cooled one, I've got the beginnings of patterns here to cast a 350 cylinder ( air cooled ) with modern porting inside but have never gone any further. Too busy dicking around with sleeves etc. I'm sure it would be not a big deal. The mould to make the sand mould ( outside ) would need to be steel I think and the core baked in shell sand. Or in this case lost wax system, maybe? A die is still needed to make the wax original anyway.
Surely a proper ( modern ) constructed 100 cc water cooled would be the go? Perhaps making it a two cylinder with vairable rotary valves.
If E85 were legal, then air cooled would be less of a problem. Internal liquid / vapor cooling.
Having the original core boxes for that cylinder ( you show in the picture ) would be a big help.
the foundery here have a rotating platform when poring air cooled cylinders to fling out the aluminum, seems to work a treat
Nah, just print it. There's even a dirt cheap kit to make one... :http://www.theshedmag.co.nz/online/c...&category_id=1
Go soothingly on the grease mud, as there lurks the skid demon
My mistake, I afraid I'm still a little old school. I hate those 3D printers but perhaps there is a use for them in printing wax? Can they print wax? Perhaps I could CNC 3D machine a pattern direct, out of wax? No, just better off machining a steel die for shell sand. No, perhaps better off machining a male in carbon and spark eroding into steel. Cover the steel mould in ceramic paint and you have a die cast setup, pour straight in the steel die with hard sand cores locked inside, that way we could make lots and lots of them real quick!
In reality I'm sure it could be done with a wood mould making CO2 sand outer. Split the fins and make each one separate and glue together, layer ( fin ) after layer ( to make the wood mould ) paying great attention to surface finish and enough taper to make the mould slide appart with out sticking.
Actualy just get one of those 3D metal printers Frits has.
My school's older than yours.
And yeah, you can print wax, jewellery industry has been doing it for a while. Amazing resolution too.
Don't know what toys Frits has. But quite a while ago I got involved on the outskirts of the development of printing metal powders. It was just market-ready then, with a limited range of tool steels and Ti. The one major advantage, of course is the ability to make hollow shapes impossible for any other process. I believe Volvo make pump impellors using the system, but I'd be surprised if they've ironed the wrinkles so far yet as to allow printing 7000 series aluminium.
Hideously expensive, of course. But then, so was printing ink when I were a nipper...
Go soothingly on the grease mud, as there lurks the skid demon
I have only seen a couple of pics of aircooled cylinder males one for a Devimead A65 jumbo and another for a Older excelsior V twin.
My little musing was to cut open an old MX cylinder and use that to make one and add filler where necessary. using the Sprilia like sand core.
this thread i was following on Pit lane was impressive on its use of technology.
http://www.pit-lane.biz/t3187-50cc-s...light=50cc+ktm
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Kinky is using a feather. Perverted is using the whole chicken
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