I was following along with the troubles with the CA Epa, and after looking through Veggie's site, I was wondering about the Eccentric plunger oil pump for the GM90. How reliable is this unit? And can we use the crank from a GM90 in a standard listeroid to pressurize the crankpin? Can we get them for twin cylinders?
Just a thought
Rom
I just took the inspection cover off a GM90 and a 6/1
To the best of my knowledge, the cranks are not the same.
The stroke is different also.
I do not think the eccentric plunger pump could be adapted to a standard 6/1
veggie
Thank you for the reply Veggie,
No fun that I couldnt just do a quick swap, would be nice if there was a mod kit that we could mod standard engines with.
Rom
Quote from: veggie on January 06, 2011, 02:14:08 PM
I just took the inspection cover off a GM90 and a 6/1
To the best of my knowledge, the cranks are not the same.
The stroke is different also.
I do not think the eccentric plunger pump could be adapted to a standard 6/1
veggie
Thanks, have been wondering too. Looks like there is a place on the crank where an eccentric could be conceivably machined but the crank must also be rifle drilled to take the oil to the throw.
You would also need a method of anchoring the pump to the crankcase wall.
Not sure if the 6/1 has enough meat there. The GM90 has a cast boss with a locating bolt.
veggie
when you break the drill bit off in the crank, let me know
i have a reference as to how they get the broken bit out of the hole
bob g
They drill fine if you take your time with a good drill....I added a slinger system to my 6/1 that has a plunger pump. I filtered the oil to the slinger from the pump that used to lubed the timkens. I had a problem with breakin. I believe that maybe the piston was getting to much oil from the abundant oil being supplied to the bearing. Lots of oil going everywhere! I disconnected it to maybe help with breakin but have not enabled it to see if it starts to slobber again. It takes a big EDM tank to hold a Listeroid crank....even bigger if you have to stand it on end!
(http://i260.photobucket.com/albums/ii31/xyzers/xyzers%20stuff/SLINGERFARCROP.jpg)
i came across a reference a while back related to deep hole drilling of crankshafts back in ww2
the company was having a significant failure rate and loss of crankshafts in the xdrilling process, broken off bits
that they couldn't get out economically
the solution? gunpowder
one of the workers decided to try fine grade black powder (ffff grade)
he simply filled the bit flutes with gunpower and set it off, sometimes the bits came right out
sometimes it took several attempts, his success rate was quite high.
apparently you had to be careful, one of the pictures showed an oak block that he used to catch
a bit, with a bit blown clear through is 4" width.
i will look and see if i have that report and post it.
it just got my attention for being a rather interesting solution to a rather serious problem.
bob g
Quote from: mobile_bob on January 07, 2011, 01:29:32 AM
i came across a reference a while back related to deep hole drilling of crankshafts back in ww2
the company was having a significant failure rate and loss of crankshafts in the xdrilling process, broken off bits
that they couldn't get out economically
the solution? gunpowder
one of the workers decided to try fine grade black powder (ffff grade)
he simply filled the bit flutes with gunpower and set it off, sometimes the bits came right out
sometimes it took several attempts, his success rate was quite high.
apparently you had to be careful, one of the pictures showed an oak block that he used to catch
a bit, with a bit blown clear through is 4" width.
i will look and see if i have that report and post it.
it just got my attention for being a rather interesting solution to a rather serious problem.
bob g
Puts a different meaning to the term "crank throw".