Failed the math test (Brain Freeze?)
Today the focus remains on the frame. I had to run to the local scrap yard to purchase some steel to make a compound bending die for the lower 7/8 frame rails. At the scrap yard you get whatever they have in stock hopefully that is close to what you want.
They supplied a piece of bar-stock measuring 1.5X6X81” . I brought the bar home and put it in the band saw to cut it to length for the die set. First mistake, the bar-stock was case hardened, scrap one band saw blade. A 20 inch piece of bar was torched of at the scrap yard so the entire bar would fit in my trunk. The 20 inch section was set in the machine vise and a short mill program from last night was input to the computer. The program did not work. A couple mathematical corrections and the machine began making the full contour just as planned.
The machine work completed today is the first of two operations on one of two die-shoes. While the machine was operating as an obedient servant I had some free time to clean the work area. Tomorrow things should run better now that the process is proven.
Once the die set is making good frame rails I am sure other frames out there will require the same repairs. The first set will take many hours to make, the second set will be quick to press out. It’s all in the tooling. Photos to follow.
Joe 12-18 2009
Today the focus remains on the frame. I had to run to the local scrap yard to purchase some steel to make a compound bending die for the lower 7/8 frame rails. At the scrap yard you get whatever they have in stock hopefully that is close to what you want.
They supplied a piece of bar-stock measuring 1.5X6X81” . I brought the bar home and put it in the band saw to cut it to length for the die set. First mistake, the bar-stock was case hardened, scrap one band saw blade. A 20 inch piece of bar was torched of at the scrap yard so the entire bar would fit in my trunk. The 20 inch section was set in the machine vise and a short mill program from last night was input to the computer. The program did not work. A couple mathematical corrections and the machine began making the full contour just as planned.
The machine work completed today is the first of two operations on one of two die-shoes. While the machine was operating as an obedient servant I had some free time to clean the work area. Tomorrow things should run better now that the process is proven.
Once the die set is making good frame rails I am sure other frames out there will require the same repairs. The first set will take many hours to make, the second set will be quick to press out. It’s all in the tooling. Photos to follow.
Joe 12-18 2009
Comment