One of the things that we get faced with from time to time is the repair of crankcases. While the ideal solution would be to weld them, at times castings are either too thin or too oil-soaked (and therefore too full of impurities) to weld. Then they have to be cold-repaired.
This week, we were faced with such a problem on a flange for a 1920 Silver Ghost crankcase which had, about 50 years ago, thrown a rod. It was repaired in one area, but the flange, which is critical to keeping the seven main bearings in alignment, had a major crack in it. The crack had been stabilized by the addition of an aluminum plate held in with 4 bolts, but this was not a good solution and flex in the crankcase had shown up in uneven wear on rear bearings. The flex, btw, comes from the fact that these crankcases are mounted rigidly to the frame. So any movement of the frame rails (and there is plenty) can translate to the engine. Not a good thing and this was corrected with later designs that incorporated rubber buffers, sliding tubes, torque reaction dampers, etc.
Because we could not weld it safely, we opted to use a cold repair using aluminum 'dogbones' made out of pieces cut off a billet. These were tapped in to place (holes were cut with a mill, the pieces were hand-filed to shape and fitted with blue and scraping) and pulled the crack up tight. Then tapered threaded pins were used to lock everything together. Then the repair is blended in with the sand casting. This took about 16 hours of work to complete, but the end repair is very hard to see and incredibly rigid.
Here are a few photos of the process.
This is the crack. About 4 inches long and along a flange/buttress on a crankcase. Evidence of old welding that is very solid. But crack formed in the middle of the weld. The blue shows repair 'stitch' pattern.
Using a mill to cut out the repair area. Used a two-flute to plunge cut the initial holes then final cut the holes with a 7/16 mill. Connected the holes with a .200" mill that opened up the connection to just under .250".
This is what the finished recess for the insert-tie looks like. Now to make the insert...
Insert is hand-filed from a piece of billet. It is slightly tapered so that as it goes into the hole it will pull the crack together. The 'insides' of the dogbone (closest to the bridge) are tightest, acting as a wedge.
This shows the insert, ready to be filed to tightly fit in its hole. You can see one tie already in place. Note how tight the joint is. A lot of careful filing and fitting.
As I can only put in 5 photos per post... we'll continue in the next reply.
Cheers,
Sirhr
This week, we were faced with such a problem on a flange for a 1920 Silver Ghost crankcase which had, about 50 years ago, thrown a rod. It was repaired in one area, but the flange, which is critical to keeping the seven main bearings in alignment, had a major crack in it. The crack had been stabilized by the addition of an aluminum plate held in with 4 bolts, but this was not a good solution and flex in the crankcase had shown up in uneven wear on rear bearings. The flex, btw, comes from the fact that these crankcases are mounted rigidly to the frame. So any movement of the frame rails (and there is plenty) can translate to the engine. Not a good thing and this was corrected with later designs that incorporated rubber buffers, sliding tubes, torque reaction dampers, etc.
Because we could not weld it safely, we opted to use a cold repair using aluminum 'dogbones' made out of pieces cut off a billet. These were tapped in to place (holes were cut with a mill, the pieces were hand-filed to shape and fitted with blue and scraping) and pulled the crack up tight. Then tapered threaded pins were used to lock everything together. Then the repair is blended in with the sand casting. This took about 16 hours of work to complete, but the end repair is very hard to see and incredibly rigid.
Here are a few photos of the process.
This is the crack. About 4 inches long and along a flange/buttress on a crankcase. Evidence of old welding that is very solid. But crack formed in the middle of the weld. The blue shows repair 'stitch' pattern.
Using a mill to cut out the repair area. Used a two-flute to plunge cut the initial holes then final cut the holes with a 7/16 mill. Connected the holes with a .200" mill that opened up the connection to just under .250".
This is what the finished recess for the insert-tie looks like. Now to make the insert...
Insert is hand-filed from a piece of billet. It is slightly tapered so that as it goes into the hole it will pull the crack together. The 'insides' of the dogbone (closest to the bridge) are tightest, acting as a wedge.
This shows the insert, ready to be filed to tightly fit in its hole. You can see one tie already in place. Note how tight the joint is. A lot of careful filing and fitting.
As I can only put in 5 photos per post... we'll continue in the next reply.
Cheers,
Sirhr
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