158 posts to this thread...
and in conclusion?
(A quote from a post long ago)
Hi Max,
over this past weekend I was showing off how well the Kato FEF runs.
and showed off the sound in the b-mann berk.
my friend asked why the berk seemed unable to move as slow...
or why the Kato went slower and without all the hitchy-ness.
I thought about it some...
I decided the single biggest problem is the way b-mann
made the motor/worm/worm-wheel.
Kato uses 2 threads on the worm and the gear reduction is lower.
the worm has far less thrust on it than the b-mann...
dangit.... I do not want to tinker in the Berk for my forseeable future...
never mind
victor
The worm and motor are certainly part of it. Are you saying Kato's worm has two teeth contacting the worm wheel
at any given time, so the pressure on the worm is spread out over 2 teeth instead of 1?
The worm and motor are part of it, but I really think the demon is in the sloppy rods.
Watching how the rear driver plays catch-up around the circle, I think that
is a big deal. There is a little bit of rotation where only 3 drivers are actually moving, and then the rod hole on #4 catches up and drags #4 along. Every once in a while, usually at 1 or 2 specific locations in the rotation, when #4 catches up and has to be tugged along, it is in a bad spot for that to happen. By that, I mean, for example, that the lefthand rod has been free-running, and #4 isn't turning, and when #4 takes up the slack in the hole, the wheel is in a bad spot for the left side to be pulling it, and it hitches a little until the wheel moves. If the quartering and the holes were really tight, the wheel would have moved just a little before the lefthand rod had to pull on it, and it would have been able to pull it easily.
If you quarter to try to eliminate that problem in one spot, it just appears at another place in the rotation. Which
means to me, after a lot of experimentation with it, that there is no one orientation of
the quartering of driver #4 where the problem stops happening. The crankpin always hunts back and forth in the
rod hole, too much to tolerate.
It's really just quartering, but with sloppy rods. It's like the driver goes in and out of quarter all the time, no matter how carefully it is actually quartered. Taken to the extreme, if the rods were sloppy enough, it would not run at all.
It would jam.
By converting it to use one solid rod, I partially alleviated the problem, because the rod can't droop downward
at number 4 anymore. We get a little more gentle pushing from below the crankpin as the rod comes up, which helps take some of the slop out of #4's motion. A more precisely-drilled 3-4 rod with very small crankholes may have helped. I tried that, but the first test rod I made didn't work. Divining just how far apart those holes should really be isn't easy.
If I wanted to make a months-long project out of this, I suppose I would start with another fresh engine,
pull the motor and everything out except the wheels, and make sure they can all roll with just side rods on them.
My bet is that even like that, you would feel a bind in that driver that can't be completely eliminated by adjusting the quartering.