by Greg » Sun Mar 06, 2005 6:49 am
Guys, sorry, I will take some more photos and post them up. Tony, I tried a few different things to stroke the hone but anything crank driven isn't the best unless you can disengage it easily as it gives you no oportunity to dwell in one spot, the sunnen CK series hones do use a mechanical setup but it has the facility to hit a button and dwell at the bottom of the bore for an extra turn. I still can get a straighter bore on this machine than on the CK10 that I used to use. What I will use one of these days is a hydraulic power pack & cylinder and set it up for variable speed and also the ability to dwell wherever the cylinder is tight.
At the moment, I stroke it by hand and it isn't too hard work. The basic setup is fairly simple. The box at the top has a 1hp 1400rpm or so 440v 3 phase motor which runs a v-belt to a centre idler and a belt from the idler to the spindle. Both sets of pulleys are around 3.5:1 so the spindle speed ends up at 80rpm. The belt from the idler to the spindle is tensioned by an over centre idler that locks in place once it engages the spindle. It is activated by a handle on the side of the head of the machine. The spindle bearing is an old renault wheel hub with the v-belt pulley mounted on top.
I modified the original driveshaft spline so I could bolt up a toyota diff flange and uni joint which drives down to the honing head. The honing head has a uni joint built into it which works for the bottom end. I used a friction feed head made in Melbourne, Au which uses Sunnen stones etc.. you could quite easily use any Sunned AN style hone head which you can pick up off ebay for $100 or so. The friction wheel is nice though to adjust the load without stopping the spindle.
The head pivots on a fulcrum that slides from side to side along 2 bars, it is wound from cylinder to cylinder using an SR timing chain and two gears, connected to a handwheel at the front of the machine, kind of like the steering setup on an outboard boat.
The block sits on a cradle that can tilt 30 and 45 degrees in each direction to hone 60 and 90 degree engines and the block is held down either by a bar through the main tunnels or a jig that bolts down on top of the block. There is an oil pump mounted in the back of the machine that picks up from the oil tank which is the bottom 4" of the cabinet which holds around 100 litres of honing oil.
If anyone has a question or wants a photo of any particular part just let me know.