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I still say etch the spokes
...or cast them Otto K.
Peteski, what you say about cutting a groove or relief into the face of the rim may be a way to go, if I can figure out how to do it.Notice how, even on the prototype photo you showed, the center insert with the spokes is indeed always set in a little lower thanthe tire/rim. So if I could machine a small lip down into the first, say, .005" of the inside of the rim, that would do the trick.Once the spokes and that lip are painted black, and the rim is blackened metal, it would look just right.Of course... machining that lip is no easy feat on those tires. It would have been a trifle easier if I had thought of thisand done it before I parted them off the tube.
I hear you on the chuck vs collet. That's why I tested and measured them. But the runout gauge doesn't lie.The collet has about 10x the runout of the chuck, and the chuck seems darn good at .0002". Frankly, I'm surprised thatanything on a mini mill is that good.
Great idea, but unfortunately, no. That page, if you click for specs, shows that the maximum temp for those phenolic materials tobe around 275 - 288 F. It will never stand up to soldering heat.