Back in the bad old days when I worked for a living, really back, we used to
grind-plate-grind jugs for P&W 2800 and CW 3350s on planetary grinders. It
was kind of strange at first, but worked OK. The spindle rotated one way and
the grinding wheel spun the opposite way. You set the radius of the spindles
rotation and the depth of the stroke. Every body called the machine "Wobble
Annie" Much later they got jig grinders that did the same thing but
smaller. never ran one of those but was a lead for the guy who did.
----- Original Message -----
From: "Larry McAfee" <lgmcafee@mchsi.com>
To: "land speed" <land-speed@autox.team.net>
Sent: Wednesday, April 23, 2008 5:34 AM
Subject: [Land-speed] Land speed web site
>I looked this up and the article made it sound a who lot easier than it is.
>I
> bore out small motors (outboards) on my mill and have thought about
> grindings
> cyl for a while. You need some kind of rotary table (that I have) that
> would
> turn or a cnc machine that would move to make this work. Just having a
> grinding wheel on a mandrel you still have a long way to go.
> Larry Mac
>
>
>
>
>
> I saw this machinist tip from the publisher of Home Shop Machinist and
> Digital Machinist and figured some of you guys who like to do your own
> machining on small engines in the J and K category as well as small bike
> engines might find something useful here.
> Grinding on the Mill by George Bulliss
> http://homeshopmachinist.net/passblast/dm/dmapr08.html
> I'd note here that an imaginative machinist could easily gimmick up a
> power
> down feed for the mill spindle for the slow feed plunge grinding process
> George Bulliss describes.
> Ed Weldon
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