TORQUIN
Silver Member
I have a very old pulverizer and the spike on the drum are worn down to almost nothing. I am trying to think of a way to renew it in a time and materials-efficient way. A search here yielded nothing that looked relevant to me, but if you know of a thread, please send it my way.
My first thought was to weld new spikes on, being made from cut pieces of 1/2" rebar, as they should wear longest. Just seems like the welding would take forever.
Next was drilling and tapping holes beside the worm spikes and putting 3/8" or 1/2" bolts in it, which I may be able to replace when they wear down.
My third idea was to drill new holes from one side to the other, just a little smaller than the 5/16" or 3/8" stock I would use for new spikes and drive the stock all the way through the drum so it stick out either side.
I realize that anything I do will take some time, but I don't want it to be a lifelong project.
As far as a new drum, I know nothing about what brand this unit is, as I dug the rusty thing from under a bunch a briars and junk at the sellers farm a few years ago. I imagine a new drum would by pretty expensive anyway.
I am open to ideas.
Thanks,
Chris
My first thought was to weld new spikes on, being made from cut pieces of 1/2" rebar, as they should wear longest. Just seems like the welding would take forever.
Next was drilling and tapping holes beside the worm spikes and putting 3/8" or 1/2" bolts in it, which I may be able to replace when they wear down.
My third idea was to drill new holes from one side to the other, just a little smaller than the 5/16" or 3/8" stock I would use for new spikes and drive the stock all the way through the drum so it stick out either side.
I realize that anything I do will take some time, but I don't want it to be a lifelong project.
As far as a new drum, I know nothing about what brand this unit is, as I dug the rusty thing from under a bunch a briars and junk at the sellers farm a few years ago. I imagine a new drum would by pretty expensive anyway.
I am open to ideas.
Thanks,
Chris