[Steam-engine] Pouring Bearings
Richard Strobel
Richard_Strobel7 at msn.com
Thu Mar 9 06:22:47 PST 2006
Hi Andy;
I sure you've seen the brass screw method. If not email me. This worked
great in my opinion and was able to get a nice pour.
You might be getting the babbitt a little too hot. Read somewhere that
excessive heat changes the properties of the tin. Wish we had a more
postive way of measuring temp....possibly an IR temp gun is in the near
future.
I guess if I were to pour the tops with cs installed, I'd preheat the
exposed cs with a couple blowtorches till she looked about right. Kinda of
a trial and error thing for us...salvation being, we can't screw it up and
can re-pour.
Have you seen Curt Hollands site??
Regards
RickinMt.
----- Original Message -----
From: "Andy glines" <pioneersop96 at yahoo.com>
To: "Steam" <steam-engine at lists.stationary-engine.com>
Sent: Tuesday, March 07, 2006 9:13 AM
Subject: [Steam-engine] Pouring Bearings
> I took the plunge and tried my hand at pouring
> bearings Sunday afternoon. I started with the shaft
> that drives the wheels because alignment isn't
> critical on the Huber design. So far, I have only
> poured one half of the two bearings. I have learned a
> few things and now have a few questions. I learned
> that I can't trust Babbitrite to stay stuck to the
> shaft and shell unassisted. Dad was preheating while
> I melted babbit. When the shaft and shell got good
> and hot the Babbitrite fell off. We were able to
> secure more putty without losing preheat. This time
> the putty was secured with wire and plumper's tape.
> The bread pan I placed under the shell turned out to
> be a very good thing when a plug in an oil hole blew
> out. The pan caught the babbit and it was easily
> recovered. I am using the book "How I Pour Babbit
> Bearings" by Gingery for reference. Using the book's
> suggestions the shell was preheated until a piece of
> solder just started to melt and the shaft heated to
> about 300 deg. I am using tin-based babbit so I
> heated it until my wooden stir stick caught fire. The
> cooled product looks pretty good. The ends of the new
> bearing are nice and shiny but it is dull gray near
> the center where the cooling was a bit slower. I
> think that I may have been a little hot on my preheat
> and my babbit and plan to back off on temperature a
> little when I pour the caps. One thing in my book
> confuses me a little. The book tells us that
> tin-based babbit should be poured hotter than
> lead-based. I thought that lead has a higher melting
> point than tin??? Is the book backwards? We used a
> propane weed burner for preheat and found that it
> works very well. I'm getting ready to pour the caps.
> I will shim the caps and secure them to the top
> casting. I can preheat the shell OK but how do I
> preheat the shaft with the bearing cap in place?
>
> Andy Glines
> Evansville, IN
>
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