Frankly your are in the wrong forum. I would suggest a forum dealing with machining/fabrication or model making.
Knowing where to look is just as important as knowing what to ask.
Brian
about that you are totally right Brian thank youhardingfv32 wrote:Frankly your are in the wrong forum. I would suggest a forum dealing with machining/fabrication or model making.
Knowing where to look is just as important as knowing what to ask.
Brian
marcush. wrote: One last hint: When I was Young and unixperienced one of my buddies was into RC -car Racing .I was rather gobsmacked when i learned how he repaired his worn racing engines..I Refrain from telling the Details but rest assured a hammer was in use to adjust bearing fit... If you know what to look for ,the tools do not matter much - we race to win - nobody races CNC lathes or windtunnels or dynos or CFD as far as I know. ..
marcush. wrote:I wanted to share my surprise when i learned it was not precision that wa sneeded on the small engine to make it work ! The Forces involved with the tiny conrod at few Millimeters of stroke would not generate the Level of loads which would create a nervous tick on your eyebrow ..you are talking about a quartersize model here so I gues bearing fit is not really that important
thank you riff_raff, yes but when i started this thread i had no idea about bearings like real idea but now it's different, i know about the numbering system and other but the only thing i can't tell yet is that a pdf manual for a specific type of bearing that i have doesn't say anything about the interferenceriff_raff wrote:The tooling for a casting or molded plastic part will have some draft on the bearing bore surface. So it will need to be finish machined. You can finish machine the bearing bore very accurately using any manual mill and boring head. So all you need to determine is what RT fit you need between the housing bore and bearing OD. Not that difficult.
thank you PlatinumZealot, your suggestions are perfect, will take it into consideration especially for the future,PlatinumZealot wrote:Use the bearings tolerance tables on the SKF website.
Also i suggest you machine the uprights since they are so small. Make sure to simplify the design to make machining easier.
Also this is a bit clunky, but you can use a face mounted bearing and just screw it on to the upright.