I know this has been discussed in the past on some other threads, but I had to hone another block this past weekend by hand and gave some more thought to building a small engine hone based on the larger commercial hones. My need is for small engines so I don't need anything large.
I have most of it designed in my head but still have a few questions . . . one would be what spindle speed would I need? I have a motor (1725 rpm) attached to a gear reduction unit that outputs 48 rpm's. I can speed up or slow this down thru a variable speed pulley setup I have.
I plan on having a footprint of no more than 24" deep x 18-24" wide, again keep in mind small engines not V8's. For right now my plan is for it to be manually operated with the motor/gearbox counter balancing the head/spindle. Sometime down the road adding air stroke to it maybe, probably have all the parts needed to do this laying around in the shop (I don't do alot of engine work, thats why this is a later project).
I currently have an Ammco 500 style hone which I plan on making an adaptor to use in the spindle. Since I will only be doing single cylinder engines I don't need the head to slide sideways. The spindle will be adjustable up and down to set my hone height relative to the block. This will probably be slip-fit mechanical tubing of some sorts or rectangular drive shaft material avaliable at the local farm/hardware store which would then be drilled for height adjustment holes/pin
With that being said, any thoughts?
Keep in mind my desire to keep it simple and as compact as possible. I'm not machining anything larger than a small tractor engine.