Mike Bontoft
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Nov 22, 2002
- Messages
- 410
I did find a video of one of our Zenoah engine dyno runs. Too large to upload though. Will see what I can do to correct that. I did time the run and from 8K TO 19K it was 11.7 seconds. That was with a 19lb wheel I seem to remember. Here's a screen shot of the graph.
Just for reference and maybe to get the creative juices flowing here is a one way bearing off a Honda 750 motorcycle electric start. It never gets disengaged so is in overdrive mode whenever the engine is running. From the design it looks like (maybe) it could throw the rollers out of contact above a certain speed. Nice simple design!
That looks the same as a one-way needle bearing and might be better for the dyno.
Had a consultation with my Consigliere, lol. Gonna try another one-way ball bearing using loctite 263 on the motor collet plus a set screw to jam against the end of the crank.
If that doesn't work I might try a one-way needle bearing but I'm having a hard time finding one with a 15mm bore, might havta sleeve the shaft or something.
If that doesn't work I'll make a ratchet as Charles suggested:
I'm also mounting a 1 1/4 hp Makita router motor to pre spin the wheel.
I'll get it!
When I made the ratchet type one way clutch, and after running it, I ended making the teeth with a slight undercut....maybe 5 to 10 degrees......and never had another clutch problem.
The higher the load...the tighter it gripped.
Charles
The first one was just made from some steel out of the scrap box, no heat treat. It held up good. Never had enough wear to affect it and keep it from working.
Each side had eight teeth with a flat top and they interlocked with each other.
A case hardening would be OK.
Charles
S7 material will work just do not harden too much as to make it brittle.Great, thanks. My Consigliere figured it could be done with a dovetail cutter and rotary table on the mill, I can see that. If it comes to it I think I'll use S7 again and heat treat it, good tough material.
How did you do the sliding part? I mean it has to slide freely but still be keyed to the shaft somehow?
Enter your email address to join: