I'd say it's so you can access the inner surface of the bearing outer race in order to extract the bearings.Sloy wrote:Has someone an idea why there are 3 grooves on the flange where the bearings with their outer race mate to?
I'd say it's so you can access the inner surface of the bearing outer race in order to extract the bearings.Sloy wrote:Has someone an idea why there are 3 grooves on the flange where the bearings with their outer race mate to?
Unfortunately I got the part without any documentation, no race or pilot information, could have been used for testing runs only. The seller has a bunch of other parts from the 2008 dumbo wing Honda which he might have more information about.Per wrote:Very cool stuff. Did you get documentation or a certificate with that part? Specifically, do you know when and where it raced? I'm wondering what the lifetime of such components is in F1 because they will not be designed for very long fatigue lives.
Titanium is on the list of permitted materials by the way, so I would consider titanium as a very good candidate for this part. Maybe you can weigh the part and measure its volume by using a full bowl of water and measuring the weight difference after putting the upright into the bowl. This way we will know the density of the material.
Material wise, we machine a bunch of Ti6Al4V at work and it's a darker silver than the upright, I'll snap a picture side by side. The tool marks are still visible under the glass beading although it's almost impossible to see on the pictures so probably a billet part instead of a casting.Sloy wrote:Hey Quebec,
3D scanning would absolutely awesome!
Regarding the material: From the coloration I would say it is titanium. Perhaps we can compare it to a known piece of aluminium?
Has someone an idea why there are 3 grooves on the flange where the bearings with their outer race mate to?
The surface could also be a result of a casting process:
http://www.deskeng.com/de/epsilon-euska ... ht-design/
Regards
Hey, its pretty hectic at work with race season getting in gear so no CMM stuff but I did get some rough measures.Sloy wrote:Hey Quebec,
did u already find time to measure the upright?
Has someone a picture of such a tool? I can imagine how it would look like, but perhaps someone has an interesting picture.
Regards
Good thought but I doubt it, the whole thing is metric plus these aren't threaded bolts, you have to insert a second pin on the bottom that holds the bolt captive. Not a clue if they are sourced from aeronautic equipment or custom.Facts Only wrote:Perhaps the lower arm is a 3\8 unf bolt (9.525mm)
Thank you so much for the measurements! Really interesting. Can't wait to see the 3D scan, but no hurryQuebec wrote:Hey, its pretty hectic at work with race season getting in gear so no CMM stuff but I did get some rough measures.Sloy wrote:Hey Quebec,
did u already find time to measure the upright?
Has someone a picture of such a tool? I can imagine how it would look like, but perhaps someone has an interesting picture.
Regards
It should give you a good idea of the dimensions, I still want to 3d Scan it but I have to wait for the next batch of stuff to scan at work and that might take a month or two, I have to design a whole Viper suspension system for like friday.
- Weight: 1843g (4.06lbs)
- Front Bearing: 120x12mm
- Rear Bearing:107x12mm
- Distance between bearing flanges:61mm
- Pushrod uses an m8 bolt
- Lower arm uses 9.5mm bolt (wtf)
- Caliper mounting bolts are 202mm CtC
- Distance from center to upper arm mount: 138mm
- Distance from center to Lower arm mount: 112mm
- Distance from center to Toe arm mount: 135mm
- Distance from Upper to Lower arm mount: 185mm
- Distance from Toe arm to Lower arm mount: 250mm
- Distance from Toe arm to Upper arm mount: 225mm
Well the 3D printer is working again and things have slowed down at least a bit for me (still have a metric ton of stuff to do but that's the norm) so the 3D scans should be coming up, I have a subaru rear subframe to scan pretty soon so I will do the scan at the same time.Sloy wrote:Hey Quebec,
are there any news about the laser scanning?
Regards