Eagleview
Veteran Member
This is what I had to do this week when the old 1956 Crossley 14hp Diesel engine that runs our lighting plant had a mishap . I came back to the shed after doing some fence work and could smell oil . The generator had been running , charging our battery bank . The oil filler cap had come off and the crank was throwing out all the oil . It was only lucky I caught it before it through the rod out of the block . Being a 1956 model , no parts are available so I rang around until I found an old engineer who could pour a new White Metal bearing in the old shell . He tinned the old shell and then poured the White Metal into the closed rod end . He then bored it out to the measurements I gave him .
For those who may not know about Flexigage measuring for checking a bearings clearance , a piece of the product is torn off from the packet . It is very fine Plastic , almost like wax in nature . It is laid across the bottom bearing shell and the cap is carefully tightened up to torque on the crank . Once again , carefully undone again and the thickness of the squashed Plastic is compared with the scale on the side of the packet . My crank pin varies a little from one side to the other but averages around 2-3 thou clearance , quiet acceptable for a 3 1/4" pin that runs at 800 rpm's . Main bearings can also be checked with this product .
Please excuse the workbench , my wonky old knee won't allow me to kneel down so I had to raise it to my level .
For those who may not know about Flexigage measuring for checking a bearings clearance , a piece of the product is torn off from the packet . It is very fine Plastic , almost like wax in nature . It is laid across the bottom bearing shell and the cap is carefully tightened up to torque on the crank . Once again , carefully undone again and the thickness of the squashed Plastic is compared with the scale on the side of the packet . My crank pin varies a little from one side to the other but averages around 2-3 thou clearance , quiet acceptable for a 3 1/4" pin that runs at 800 rpm's . Main bearings can also be checked with this product .
Please excuse the workbench , my wonky old knee won't allow me to kneel down so I had to raise it to my level .