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#16
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Re: pic: Off-Season Drive Project
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Here's one, and there should be more if you keep clicking next https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?f...type=3&theater If there's anything in particular you want to see, just ask! Last edited by Akash Rastogi : 06-07-2014 at 02:10. |
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#17
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Re: pic: Off-Season Drive Project
Using a bolt to retain the wheels and take up all slop is a bad idea as it will preload the bearings. It's also more likely to loosen the fastener.
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#18
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Re: pic: Off-Season Drive Project
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By the way, the wheels in 11's photo are 2" wide black Colsons. I'll third the notion of not using thin polycarbonate as a structural belly pan. Polycarbonate is great for some applications but in this one the thickness you need for polycarbonate to be sufficiently rigid makes it a poor choice compared to thinner sections of other materials, such as garolite. We still use an un-lightened 1/16th aluminium belly pan though this is suboptimal. Last edited by Chris is me : 06-07-2014 at 12:33. |
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#19
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Re: pic: Off-Season Drive Project
Kind of reminds me of an old 179 drive.
http://www.chiefdelphi.com/media/img...67e7a6da_l.jpg http://www.chiefdelphi.com/media/img...87d7b504_l.jpg |
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#20
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Re: pic: Off-Season Drive Project
We have used a bolt to retain wheels for three years and have never had a single problem. We do not take up slop with them, we always leave a little slop just like you would with a retaining clip.
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#21
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Re: pic: Off-Season Drive Project
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I still prefer snap rings for reliability, fabrication time and swap out speed. They're easier to do than people think. |
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#22
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Re: pic: Off-Season Drive Project
Is there a reason that thread locking screws aren't used in that situation more commonly? We ran them this year on our wheel axles, with e-clips on the inside and we've never had to adjust them and never had any issues. We use them pretty frequently on other assemblies as well and I love them.
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#23
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Re: pic: Off-Season Drive Project
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We've used bolts, washers, and loctite in the past because drilling and tapping the hole seemed like the easier way to go, rather than machining a groove, but in the interest of maintenance, we'll definitely check out snap rings for the future. If you bother to machine the grooves and have the right tools, it seems far more convenient. |
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#24
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Re: pic: Off-Season Drive Project
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If the shaft was predilled (already had a hole in it), it'd become comparable but I still think the groove is a tad less tedious to machine than tapping once the skillset is obtained. Also, the tolerances for the groove width and depth are are like +.003/-0.0 and +/-.002 but we've been fine in situations where we've botched that by quite a bit. So it isn't as daunting as that makes it seem. The width tolerance is set by your insert too, so you don't even deal with that. |
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#25
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Re: pic: Off-Season Drive Project
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![]() Lathe and mill work is relatively new on our team, so we are still figuring out the do's and don't's and can's and cannot's on our machines. Good to hear how it can really be a "snap" ![]() |
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