Mark you are plain nuts!!!!! But I LOVE IT!
I just came in from the garage after reinstalling my SUPERCHARGER ...on my FERRARI ...with UPGRADES, feeling pretty badass !!! I read the new posts in this thread and it makes me feel like a kinder-gardener.... Mark, your an insane genius... and I mean that in a good way. Thats some very nice work !!
What process are you using to Weld the thick aluminum? How many amps and are you preheating? Are any of the casings distorting from the welds? I've only been welding aluminum for a couple years and I haven't tried too much more than 1/4" thick. Only have 230amp TIG. Looks like you really now what your doing, shame you are not closer, I'd love to help/watch/learn.
Everything is TIG welded with straight argon. I do pre-heat, although not as much and as well as I probably should, I go to about 200F. My welder is a 400 amp machine but the torch I used (W20, water cooled you want a water cooled torch if you dont already have one) is only good to 300 or 350 depending on which brand .mine is supposed to be 350 but that must be under ideal conditions because its looking pretty melted these days. For the block I had the welder set to 325 and had the pedal to the floor a good amount of the time and that requires a 1/8 tungsten. The trans is not as thick, Ive got the welder set at 300, but almost never have the pedal all the way down. With more preheat you can use a lower power setting but you have to watch over heating the weld zone, aluminum weld best when you put the power to it and go fast The more you pre-heat the less distortion you should get at least in theory but any time you weld anything the only thing you can count on is that its going to pull in the weld zone. The block is out .010 down the main bearings and will need to be fixed by either oversize bearings or welding up and re-cutting the journals. Also on the front face of the block its pulled in around the bores and Ill need to weld up the surface and re-cut it. I think the trans is ok so far because the precision stuff is far enough anyway from where Ive been working, but I wont know for sure until I get it off the jig and check it.
LOL Lou, for all my big brain I was still stupid enough to start this project in spite of very sound advice not to. Also it never occurred to me that you could put a flow restrictor on the intake of centrifugal blower to help flatten out the boost curve ..I designed a set-up with a continuously variable transmission between the drive pulley and the blower and decided it was more trouble then it was worth.
It must be a blessing to be doing this in Winter! Your electric bill must be significant but it is balanced by how much less the furnace has to run.
Any time a project involves a lot of heavy welding it's a winter project. Welding in the summer is just horrible. Im not sure about the electric bill honestly because Lana pays that, but I know the meter really spins when the welder is on. Ive got about 3 hours of welding time in the trans right now and Id guess another 2 before its done with the piece I still need to add on the left and I need to weld up the top of the rails on the right I think because it looks like they pulled a little more than I planed on. I think Ive got 12-15 hours of welder time in the block so far.
Both Miller and Lincoln have a pretty good motorsports division and offer discounts to racers. If you know anyone in your area that has a team get them to call and order the things you need at a pretty good discount. Nascar guys get the best discount with Lincoln, even the local Nascar. They will send it to your local dealer or just have the dealer sell it to you and they will send the dealer a replacement. About how much penatration would you guess you are getting on the thick stuff? I've been afraid to mess with too much cast alum unless it is something that I'm not afraid of warping. A buddy brought over a case from his sportster and I chickened out and just did a mechanical fix since it was only an about 2 inches from the sealing surface for the two halfs of the case. This thread has so many posts I haven't read everyone but what other wild projects have you done before this? People see some of the stuff I do and I tell them it's just metal but what your doing is blowing me away and I can't even get around the scope of the project. I missed the Cabin Fever Expo at the York fairgrounds to go to Barrett Jackson this year. Great work!
Mark, I use just a little helium in my pure argon, , for Aluminum. You will see that you won't need as much heat to do the bigger stuff. (I just found this out last month.) Oh, I still need your 308 crank, or I have to go down to LA. (emailed you) Ed
I've heard 10%-20% helium helps but I've never tried it....mainly becasue I never wanted to pay for another tank and regulator. Did you get my email on the crank situation? PM or email me.
Is it an optical illusion or are the top rails bent down from getting soft during welding? Nice work Mark. P.
Its no illusion theyre bent, the rear one in particular. It was hot when I took the pictures so I didnt measure it but it look like about .060 give or take. My plan was to have an 1/8 to cut do deal with stuff like that but the front rail already used up almost all of it by sucking down along the case weld. I'll measure everything to see if I can cut it, but the easiest thing might be to simply weld across the top 6-8 inches on the right and cut it back flat. It looks like the flange pulled in as well along the bottom so I may weld that too depending how much it is.
Weld doesn't penetrate aluminum worth a damn so it's all about the fillet for corners or cutting on a generous weld prep for butt joints. Where the flange meets the rails for example I ground in a ¼ from all 4 sides so the ½ plate is completely through welded and going nowhere. The ¼ fill panels got a 1/8 weld prep along the seams so they are also through welded. By doing it that way I can grind all the welds flush and smooth so it will look like its all 1 piece without losing any significant amount of strength. If it's a little weld it will only have a little affect but if its a big weld you can just about bet things will move. You dont have that problem with a mechanical fix, but it will look repaired vs a weld that can be ground and hidden. That's what I say, it's just metal. I've done a few stupid things over the years. A few supercharger set-ups for 308s, the manifold in the picture is a weldment that used 71 separate pieces welded together and ground smooth. A harely XR1000 engine de-stroked to an 860 then converted to wet sump, fitted with a kawsaki 6 spd trans and installed in a 1-off frame to fit a roadrace class. The fiadillac, a fiat x 1/9 fitted with an eldorado drivetrain and subframe. A couple formula SAE cars with a couple other guys in college. Those are the big ones off the top of my head. Image Unavailable, Please Login
I measured the rails and as Paul pointed out they pulled down just under 1/8 so Ill weld the end up the next time Im welding. These things happen, no worries. Todays project was making the semicircle piece for the left end. I was too cheap the bandsaw it out of a big expensive piece of billet so I took a piece of ½ x 2 and bent it into shape in the press. After about 45 minutes of back and forth I got it to where it looks like its within .015 everywhere. I made it about 18 undersize so there is material to machine after welding. Hopefully Ill get it welded in tomorrow or the next night. Image Unavailable, Please Login Image Unavailable, Please Login Image Unavailable, Please Login Image Unavailable, Please Login Image Unavailable, Please Login Image Unavailable, Please Login Image Unavailable, Please Login Image Unavailable, Please Login
So much metal, so many disjoint shapes, the tools, the torch.... We're watching an engine being crafted by hand. Not merely assembled but actually shaped.
Plus I wanted to make sure ernie knew I'm willing to work for that Stooge title....why cut up a $200 piece of billet when a $5 piece of bar stock will do with just a little work.
THAT'S what I'm talking about!!!! You are gonna fit in with the Stooges REAL well. What does the birdie say when it flies over a Stooges garage? Cheap, cheap, cheap. LOL!!!
This is the most insane thread yet......AND I"M TOTALLY ADDICTED TO IT!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! I cannot wait to see that this car runs! Thanks for sharing this project with us mere mortals. JIM