This has been an interesting couple of pages. Turns out it really wasnt an easy question to answer.
This has been an interesting couple of pages. Turns out it really wasnt an easy question to answer.
This has been an interesting couple of pages. Turns out it really wasnt an easy question to answer.
Block side is every so slightly less than a half circle, a little more than a half on the cap.
I guess I still don't see how you can get the same centerline without coming out with a less than perfect circle, or moving the centerline up?? Can someone draw another pic? Or I can tomorrow on a cad after work
Basically it will take a little off the main and the cap where the two parts meet, but depending on how much you removed from the two mating surfaces it will take more off the cap at the bottom to in the end make a circle.I guess I still don't see how you can get the same centerline without coming out with a less than perfect circle, or moving the centerline up?? Can someone draw another pic? Or I can tomorrow on a cad after work
I would think you zero your tool out at 0 or centerline using the main as top or 0 degrees and the 90 and 270. Then the only place you take material off is in the cap. This would be in a fixed jig so to speak so your tool can't walk around. You would start taking material off at the 180 mark and keep going till it contacts the 0 mark making a perfect circle.
It's all good. I remember this from when I was 16 and watching a machinist at the CAT dealer I worked at align bore different stuff including a 3512 engine block for ironically the same thing.Your right the 315ie (actually anything plus/minus 0) will have meat shaved off. The cam to crank won't change. In a fixed jig. Sorry for being so questioning, I just drew your thesis in the carpet with my finger and see it works lol
take a piece of paper and cut a circle of known diameter out of it and then cut it in half. imagine one side as the block and one side as the main cap. trim some from both sides of the "mating" surfaces, put the pieces together and measure the diameters both ways. It will shrink both parallel to the cut as well as normal to the cut. as long as you don't take any material out of the mains in the block, your centerline remains the same. of course in order to do this, you need to take more out of the cap. you can see this by placing the paper circle back over the hole previously cut.
Question number 2 if we cut the caps when does it become needed to shim under the girdle??
How much do you want to bow it down?