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Thread: Team Bodge Job

  1. #51
    Speed 900 clones at 5:1 would most likely not even move the axe properly (rule of thumb), let alone self right. They definitely have the power, but only after a lot more reduction would you see the sort of power you're getting from the current setup (the 120-180:1 ratios the 550s are running should say it all, you need a lot more than 5:1!)

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    Next step, I'd say, is try and either get a normal drill in there or a larger drill. You can have the torque limiter still in place, which should help take up a lot of the stresses. If it is the pins on the gearbox shafts that are coming loose and letting the gears strip then there are quite straight forward solutions to that.

  2. #52

  3. #53
    If you want to save a bit on space, just go with the traditional grub-screw fitting on the drill instead of having the whole torque limiter setup in place. You can still have the torque limiting just by screwing the grubs down a little less than what you would for drive. It'll take a bit of trial and error though to find the sweet spot between having enough torque to swing the axe but limited enough to slip once you've hit something.

  4. #54

  5. #55

  6. #56
    If you have any old motors with the flat, use one of those? If not, we have had success with a drive motor by crimping the motor shaft (by which I mean hitting it with something very hard and sharp to misshape it), repressing the gear onto the now slightly distorted (be careful not to bend) shaft, and using a decent two-part metal glue. Can't remember how many fights our fix did, 10 or so, with no problems. :]

  7. #57

  8. #58
    i guessing you have a tig set if your gonna try welding it

  9. #59
    The motor shaft material might not mind you welding, but of course bear in mind on the other side of the front bearing there is a lot of glue and plastic. Might be worth opening on old motor, seeing what it looks like, close it back up to test weld it, and then seeing if it looks molten or damaged on the inside. If it does, eh...

    As for welding the pinion on, if you try to weld the drill shafts they become weak and brittle (something to do with the way they're made) and the gears, as I believe they're made in the same way, may suffer from this too.

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    If the motor test weld goes okay, can I suggest you put a small blob of weld on the shaft, then file it down to just a fraction too big for the bore of the gear and try repressing the gear? Essentially the same thing as crimping but you're adding material instead of misshaping it. The shafts are quite tough, you can support the back of the shaft on the other side of the motor and hammer quite hard fairly safely. Just trying to avoid welding the gear as I think it might make it useless.

  10. #60
    if i remember correctly with welding the weld itself is strong but there is a patch around it that becomes weak due to the heat, its the bit to do with annealing i think (the rat that steel get cooled cooled affecting their properties)

    not 100% but that sortof what i remember from my welding classes 7 years ago

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