Posts: 3,798
Threads: 184
Joined: Jun 2012
Location: Farmington Hills, Michigan
The lap in your set up will tend to follow the tapered bore rather than correct it's misalignment. It looks like this lapping operation is normally done on a vertical mill with the spindle being dead perpendicular to the table. I don't know if you've seen this site, but here's a guy demonstrating it:
Cannonball and the Beast
There is also a ton of other info on flywheel alignment on the site.
Tom
The motor is a v-twin flathead similar to what you see in today's modern Harley-Davidson. Both connecting rods ride on a common crankpin that spins between two flywheels. These flywheels turn on 2 pins called a drive & and a pinion pin. The whole thing is bolted together and before assembled in the cases need to be true in a truing stand. The same as putting a shaft on centers in a lathe. The shafts are the persuaded to run true with a lead hammer. Hopefully this explains what's going on.
(06-22-2012, 08:12 PM)TomG Wrote: The lap in your set up will tend to follow the tapered bore rather than correct it's misalignment. It looks like this lapping operation is normally done on a vertical mill with the spindle being dead perpendicular to the table. I don't know if you've seen this site, but here's a guy demonstrating it:
Cannonball and the Beast
There is also a ton of other info on flywheel alignment on the site.
Tom
I have and the problem with it that he indicates the bore of the taper but then does not fixed the wheel to the table. It's allowed to wander and seek it's own true.