surfly wrote:Upon finishing the assembly of my case halves I have very smooth effortless crankcase rotation from 0* to 200*. In this arc the distance between the prop hub and the case halves is about thirty thousandths. In the last 160* of rotation the clearance between the hub and the case tightens up at the upper side of the case, opening more at the lower side, to where during the last 90* or so of rotation the hub actually comes into contact with the case causing the need for an increase in effort to turn the crank. This effort needed is not what I would consider to be a teardown issue feeling that during running this would settle itself.
My real concern is that if the hub is slightly crooked as it seems that it will cause a problem my prop arc alignment.
Opinions please
Surfly
I had similar issues when assembling my AeroVee. After torqueing the crankcase bolts I could not turn the crank 360 degrees. Factory assembled hub/crank. I could see that the hub was rubbing on the case, so I measured the hub run out with a dial indicator:
Hub shaft .014" out of round
Hub flange OD .020" out of round
Hub flange face .007" wobble
On the flange OD there was an area that was of insufficient diameter to even be machined, not too much of an issue (?), but that would seem to indicate there was a problem with the piece before machining began.
I asked Sonex tech support about the out of round hub, and requested specifications/tolerances on the part, was told there are no specifications or tolerances available. I was then told the out of round hub should not be an issue, and that I should remove material from the case to allow free rotation. Since this did not make sense to me and could possibly cause oil leakage, I asked if they would inspect my crank/hub, which they agreed to do, but not while I waited. Sonex is only 2 hours from my home, so not a big deal, but wanting to get my engine built, I purchased and picked up a 2nd crank/hub assembly when I dropped off the original for inspection. Checking the 2nd crank/hub assembly I made these measurements:
Hub shaft .005” runout
Hub flange face .004” wobble
Better than the original crank/hub, but upon installing the crank and bolting up the case halves, I still could not rotate the crank 360 degrees. When Sonex tech support got back to me on the inspection of the original crank, I was told there is nothing wrong with it. When I reported my findings on the 2nd crank I was told to take my case halves to them for inspection. Eventually I was told the case was not machined correctly. I received a replacement case, I kept the better of the 2 crank/hub assemblies (the 2nd one), returned the original crank/hub, and assembled the engine. I was able to rotate the crank 360 degrees at that time.
With a hub shaft run out of .014” and .005” it does not make sense that the issue was an improperly machine case. I suspect that the replacement case just had the front hole opened up. The engine is completed and mounted on the aircraft, but I have not mounted the prop yet nor started the engine. I am interested in seeing how much tracking error there is at the prop tips. Hoping for engine start in the next couple of months.
Pictures and more details can be found in my builder’s log:
http://www.mykitlog.com/users/display_l ... 227&row=44Terry