Not done much for a few weeks so it's therapeutic to get back to some modelling over the Xmas break. Thought I'd tackle one of the 'bogey jobs' . Not a set of weight relieving and guidance wheels, but one of those difficult jobs that you put off doing until inspiration strikes or you have no choice. This is the making of a crosshead drop link, a brass cast part that was missing from the kit. Sure I didn't lose it and it looks very much as if it didn't cast on the sprue, small feeder and possibly blocked by debris during casting. Either way, with no spares forthcoming making one from scratch was necessary.
For a long time I couldn't work out how I'd make one. It's quite a complicated shape, requires a degree of precision and I couldn't see myself filing it out of a solid lump. The eventual method and notes below...
1 & 2 - I find it helps to model problem parts on CAD. Gives you a good understanding of the part and the key dimensions and often suggests possible methods of manufacture. There's enough information in the Wild Swan book on the motion drawing on page 54 to construct the part. When you break it down to basic geometry it's not as bad as it first looks.
3 - It looked like a possible way of making the part was to mill a brass section corresponding to the end view cross section. A length of 1/2" brass bar was big enough to make the section. Flat milled on top of bar in the vice, turned over and dropped onto parallels and flat milled parallel on opposite side. The reason for using round bar and not making the initial flats too big is that the bar can be rotated in the vice to mill the angled faces of the section. It's a whole bunch easier than angling the milling head over and re-setting it afterwards.
The sketch shows how the basic section is cut from the round bar. Most of the bar is held in the vice, either on parallels between jaws or in the locating groove in the sliding jaw. The milling is done on the overhanging section. Mill the top flat (section 1) and mill the vertical datum face (on the left). Mill out sections 2 and 3. Turn it over and mill off section 4 to give the required overall thickness of the part. Mill section 5. Then hold the bar in the jaws using the remaining cylindrical faces and rotate it to the angle required to mill the angled sections 6 and 7. Easy enough except for the small angled section 7. That's just over 1mm in width and sits between two other faces. I had a go with a 1mm milling cutter, and in spite of running at maximum spindle speed and feeding ever so slowly I managed to break it before the job was done, so that face was finished with a needle file after it was removed from the mill. Finish the milling by taking the other vertical face back to give the correct overall height to the section.
4 - There's the basic section before cutting the angled faces. Hope it all makes sense.
5 - With the work back horizontal the end is milled square and used as a datum for drilling holes. The three bolt holes for fixing to the cross head are 0.5 mm diameter and the union link pin hole is 0.8mm diameter. I made the section long enough to drill two hole patterns on the basis that I'd either mess one up, or lose one, or if not, then I could choose the best of the two.
6 - Turned to vertical to drill the holes for the oil reservoir bungs.
7 - The milled and drilled blanks are removed from the bar and cleaned up. At this point you get the feeling it might just work.
8 - Blanks again, showing the cross section.
9 - Marking out, piercing saw and about an hour of patient filing to make the finished part. Seen from the front - the kit casting is on the left, finished part in the middle, marked blank on the right. First time lucky and didn't need the spare blank!
10 - Seen from the rear.
That's the drop link job crossed off the difficult list.
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Anyway - I hope all you WT types had a good xmas and I wish you a peaceful and productive 2018.