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Metalworking (rec.crafts.metalworking) Discuss various aspects of working with metal, such as machining, welding, metal joining, screwing, casting, hardening/tempering, blacksmithing/forging, spinning and hammer work, sheet metal work. |
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#41
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Ed Huntress wrote:
Of course, the long-wheelbase deal is the real biggie, but I don't like seeing them without a special class. They're sure to win if they're done well. Don't you have a bounding box rule? Saw a kid have to carve off a nice spoiler he'd added to the back because it was outside the box... |
#42
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wrote in message
oups.com... Ed Huntress wrote: Of course, the long-wheelbase deal is the real biggie, but I don't like seeing them without a special class. They're sure to win if they're done well. Don't you have a bounding box rule? The bounding box isn't the issue. A long-wheelbase car, done properly, will fit in the bounding box. In packs and districts where they really get into this, they have a separate class for long-wheelbase cars. They're MUCH faster. The wheels go right out to the corners of the bounding box, and to the corners of the car. Saw a kid have to carve off a nice spoiler he'd added to the back because it was outside the box... Too bad. I've thought about trying an airfoil on top, one that lifts rather than presses down, but I've restrained myself. g -- Ed Huntress |
#43
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jim rozen wrote:
In article .com, tillius says... Let me know what it is? The three wheel one. You rig the car so that one wheel is off the track. This makes a huge difference in the time, and it's legal as far as I know. JIm What principle makes that work? Is it not having to use up potential energy by turning it into "flywheel energy" in the non-touching wheel? Jeff -- Jeffry Wisnia (W1BSV + Brass Rat '57 EE) "Truth exists; only falsehood has to be invented." |
#44
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removal of a friction source - actually 2 friction sources - friction
of that wheel against the track - uses some of the energy as heat. friction of that wheel against the axle - more loss due to heat. Tillman |
#45
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"tillius" wrote in message
oups.com... removal of a friction source - actually 2 friction sources - friction of that wheel against the track - uses some of the energy as heat. friction of that wheel against the axle - more loss due to heat. But you still have the same load, distributed now across the area of three bearings instead of four. Specific friction (friction per square mm of bearing area) goes up...but how much? How linear is the load/friction curve for mild steel against acrylic, or whatever it is? Hmmm...maybe it's time to bow out and leave it to the kids... -- Ed Huntress (remove "3" from email address for email reply) |
#46
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Beeman.
"Karl Vorwerk" wrote in message ... Bee Firearms has moly. Karl "Wayne Cook" wrote in message ... On 7 Nov 2005 07:56:27 -0800, "tillius" wrote: Why would you want to weight the wheels of a Pinewood Derby car? Adding weight at their periphery will increase the rotational inertial of the wheels, and they will accelerate more SLOWLY than unweighted wheels. Just the opposite of what you want. But I may be missing something... Because the track we run on has a very long runout at the bottom of the slope. I was thinking that the rotational inertia would cause the wheel's RMP's to decay slower on the straight away. That, and moving the weight from the body to the wheels would decrease the friction between the wheel axels and the wheels. I think it's a bad idea to weight the wheels but go ahead and try it. Experimenting with these things is good for the kids. I'm still disappointed that the local club did away with the unlimited adult class. It was a lot of fun and allowed the kids to learn. Of course part of the reason they outlawed it was because of me. I always had some outrageous design which looked sure to win. The funny thing is that only one of my cars ever won the race and it was a powered car thrown together in about 30 minutes just before the race. I never had a lot of time to work on many of them since I was also in charge of setting up the track and much of the other work that went into the race. The powered car was simply sawed out quickly on a chop saw to get rid of excess wood. Gutted a old VCR for the motor and friction tire to run on one of the car wheels. Clipped three 9volt batteries together. Wire a on and off switch and a micro switch on the front for the starting gate to keep the motor off till the gate dropped. Some sheet metal and screws to mount the motor and a bunch of hot melt glue to hold everything else. That car won the race. Funny though they never did have a unlimited class race after that. :-) But it sure was fun to race the 5 lb ball bearing wheeled car even if it never did win. I took a piece of 1 1/4" pipe. Forged one end to look kind of like a DC-3 nose. Put steel axles through the middle. Filled full of lead (and I mean full with the car being the max length allowed). Made wheels for masonite pressed over ball bearings. That car made everybody stand up and notice. But it never won a single race even after I melted all the lead out to reduce it's weight. It did great on the straight away but took way to long getting up to speed on the slope so it always lost. The first year I lost to a guy who took his old cub scout propeller driven rocket and made a base for it. He used standard derby wheels and filled the base full of lead. But the prop gave him enough of a boost to beat me. After they outlawed the unlimited class I concentrated on design. Helping my daughter come up with designs that brought home at least one trophy a year (some years we brought home 2 or 3 what with the adult class and more than one car entered into it). In fact some cars just kept bringing home trophies for years since we'd enter the old cars into the adult class (we had to pay to do it so it was for a good cause). The last few years the local Awana's club has gone to the boat races instead of the cars. In this case we kept bringing home race trophies since I taught my daughter how to blow them properly plus I always streamlined the boats. In fact my standard design for the boats is a tri-maran with much lower water friction that most boats. But we never got a design trophy for any of them. Looks like I won't have to worry about that this year though. Since my daughter got older and decided to not do Awana's this year. I may end up being roped into the race again though since the water trough tracks are stored at my place (I built them from my own money). Actually the finish gate for the car track was built by me as well though somehow it ended up being stored somewhere else the last year or two of the race. I may be wrong, but since we've got another year to prepare, I was thinking we could set up a small test track in the basement and try different configurations. It would make a great science project for the kids as well. Sounds great to me. BTW, while I'm on the subject, is there a better lube than graphite powder? We tried teflon and graphite this year and the graphite definitely outperformed the teflon by a HUGE margin. Moly is what you want in powdered form. Harder to find than graphite but much slicker. Wayne Cook Shamrock, TX http://members.dslextreme.com/users/waynecook/index.htm |
#47
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In article , Ed Huntress says...
But you still have the same load, distributed now across the area of three bearings instead of four. Specific friction (friction per square mm of bearing area) goes up...but how much? How linear is the load/friction curve for mild steel against acrylic, or whatever it is? Consider the limiting endpoints where you have some *huge* number of wheels, as many as would fit inside the bounding box. You just know that car's gonna be a dog. I think the simple answer is easy - you just run a car and time it. Then take one wheel off and run it again. Just have the weight rigged so it will run ok with three. If it really makes a difference then it should be easily visible in the times. Jim -- ================================================== please reply to: JRR(zero) at pkmfgvm4 (dot) vnet (dot) ibm (dot) com ================================================== |
#48
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"jim rozen" wrote in message
... Consider the limiting endpoints where you have some *huge* number of wheels, as many as would fit inside the bounding box. You just know that car's gonna be a dog. I think the simple answer is easy - you just run a car and time it. Then take one wheel off and run it again. Just have the weight rigged so it will run ok with three. If it really makes a difference then it should be easily visible in the times. Well, that's pretty much what we did, on our 16-foot test track. There was no difference that we could measure. But one car doesn't control for a lot of variables. So I don't know. I *did* test weight placement, wheel camber, toe, etc. No toe; center the weight; camber didn't have a conclusive result; straight-running on a flat floor was the best indicator of speed on the track, all else being equal...which stands to reason, because friction of the wheels against the center strip seems to be the limiting factor, after wheels and axles are fully prepped. -- Ed Huntress |
#49
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tillius wrote:
The three wheel one. You rig the car so that one wheel is off the track. This makes a huge difference in the time, and it's legal as far as I know. Yep, it's legal. And it's funny too. A lot of parents will accidentally get the wheels aligned that way then come to the workshop and ask us to help them fix the car so all the wheels are touching. So we do ![]() D'oh... and to think we always shunned the nail slots which provide this capability and sought out a drillpress to drill aligned holes instead! I recall a friend roughing something out with a pocket knife while his dad was out of town, and doing suprisingly well given the crude results - perhaps this is why. Having the event have an ability to ignore common parental input can be an advantage... At the time, I was wondering if leaving the mold flash on the wheels was the reason - started to wonder about evening it up rather than removing it. (Despite storing the official track at our house, my dad wouldn't use it for test runs - made our own 10 foot test track) |
#50
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On 7 Nov 2005 07:56:27 -0800, "tillius"
wrote: Why would you want to weight the wheels of a Pinewood Derby car? Adding weight at their periphery will increase the rotational inertial of the wheels, and they will accelerate more SLOWLY than unweighted wheels. Just the opposite of what you want. But I may be missing something... Because the track we run on has a very long runout at the bottom of the slope. I was thinking that the rotational inertia would cause the wheel's RMP's to decay slower on the straight away. That, and moving the weight from the body to the wheels would decrease the friction between the wheel axels and the wheels. I may be wrong, but since we've got another year to prepare, I was thinking we could set up a small test track in the basement and try different configurations. It would make a great science project for the kids as well. BTW, while I'm on the subject, is there a better lube than graphite powder? We tried teflon and graphite this year and the graphite definitely outperformed the teflon by a HUGE margin. Tillman At a bearing store I saw a spraycan of dry film lubricant based on molebdynum disulfide, and I think it has some teflon in it as well. I bought a can. When the stuff dries, it stays put on the metal, doesn't come off on my fingers. It is seriously slippery stuff! I cleaned up a 40-year-old Palmgren drillpress vise and lubed the "ways" and screw with this stuff. WOW!!!! I put a knurled knob on the screw in place of the little crossbar, and now I'm thinking about putting a little spinner on the knob! I can run the vise open and closed from end to end just by dragging my sleeve on the knurled knob, though the vise is snug enough that there is essentially zero wobble and play in the vise. (This little vise is used on the bench for small things, rather than on a drillpress) |
#51
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On Mon, 07 Nov 2005 15:25:31 GMT, "Greg Krynen"
wrote: Okay try this... Use putty style silicone mold material (it mixes by squishing it together). Put the mixed material into the wheel and let set (about 10 mins). Remove model once set by simply pulling it out. Now use this mold to create another mold using more of the putty. Simply put it on a flat surface, mold the new lump over it and let set. (Oh side note, powder the model or it might stick permanently to the mold body.) You should now have a mold of the correct dimensions of the wheels inner spaces ready to receive molten lead (or lead free white metal/pewter) that can withstand the low heat and be reused a great many times. Lead melts at about 640F. Some silicones will take that .... but you might have better luck with 30/70 body solder. It's almost as heavy as lead and melts at considerably cooler temperature. You could cast your weights directly into the wheels using CerroBend. It's not as heavy as lead, but it's pretty heavy -- and it melts at 157F. It's specific gravity is 9.4 vs lead's 11.35. CerroSafe goes at between 168 and 190F, probably about the same density. McMaster Carr carries these products. |
#52
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#53
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Don Foreman wrote:
CerroSafe was developed specifically because it is safe for kids to handle, as in casting toy soldiers. No, it's not. It's 37.7 % lead and 8.5% cadmium, worse actually than CerroBend. The "safe" refers presumably to slight initial shrinkage allowing a duplication casting to be removed without cracking the part you are using as a mold, allegedly it then expands back to the original dimension. The plain tin/bismuth alloys (example CerroTrue) would be less toxic, but the lowest melting point there is 281 F, so you can't use the water bath and as a result have to be carefull not to overheat. |
#54
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![]() wrote in message oups.com... Don Foreman wrote: CerroSafe was developed specifically because it is safe for kids to handle, as in casting toy soldiers. No, it's not. It's 37.7 % lead and 8.5% cadmium, worse actually than CerroBend. It might have meant safe temperatures. |
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