The other pins are just strait ones with a strait head. Measure the holes and the thickness of the parts and you can machine them. The pin 4744 is strait with on both sides a chamfer and on one side a grove for the locking plate. The locking plate on the 119863 is a piece of flat metal with a hole for the stud and the radius is the same as the bottom of the grove in the pin.
Bold and nuts are all standard UNC threat.
henk wrote:The other pins are just strait ones with a strait head. Measure the holes and the thickness of the parts and you can machine them. The pin 4744 is strait with on both sides a chamfer and on one side a grove for the locking plate. The locking plate on the 119863 is a piece of flat metal with a hole for the stud and the radius is the same as the bottom of the grove in the pin.
Bold and nuts are all standard UNC threat.
Thanks
Now i'm just need some dimensions for the bracket 4736, and what is the 4732 for??
Fordson for life...
1955 Fordson Major (restorating)
1963 Fordson Super Major New Performance (New Project)
4732 looks like the only number that I cannot see as it is slightly off of the page. If it is the pin I think it is, it goes into the bottom of the transmission to align, and hold the drawbar casting in place. Dandy Dave!
Dandy Dave wrote:4732 looks like the only number that I cannot see as it is slightly off of the page. If it is the pin I think it is, it goes into the bottom of the transmission to align, and hold the drawbar casting in place. Dandy Dave!
Yes its the pin... okay so the draw force is going to the pin instead of the four unc bolts... thanks
Anyone who has the measure from flat surface on transmission down to the center of the pin 4744
Fordson for life...
1955 Fordson Major (restorating)
1963 Fordson Super Major New Performance (New Project)
Well I am impressed with all the drawings and the skills being shown here, I kinda think there is at least 2 guys on the forum that have way to much spare time if you actually end up making this part from the drawings please put up pictures . This is gonna be something that's going to have a high degree of engineering and be beyond most of us here's ability/ machine availability ,it will be very interesting to see .
Regards Robert
It's not a matter of too much spare time. I have to practice my skills to keep ahead of the students. Beside I like doing it. Whit these modern 3D cad programmes it's possible to draw fast. You learn a lot of these sometimes strange casted parts.
The measure 101 should be 101.6 mm.
I'm know the programme but never used it. At schools over here they use SE, SW or inventor from AutoCAD. We have chosen for SE.
[quote="henk"]It's not a matter of too much spare time. I have to practice my skills to keep ahead of the students. Beside I like doing it. Whit these modern 3D cad programmes it's possible to draw fast. You learn a lot of these sometimes strange casted parts.
Hi Henk
yes being ahead of the Students is a good thing and this is certainly good practice for you.I would not have the patience to do this,I would still be on the phone looking for the original. When I was in school sometimes i think the person that was 3 pages ahead in the text book stood at the front and taught us .
i guess this information will get fed into a computer controlled lathe and miller and be done pretty sharp too .
Regards Robert
henk wrote:
The measure 101 should be 101.6 mm.
I'm know the programme but never used it. At schools over here they use SE, SW or inventor from AutoCAD. We have chosen for SE.
Nice i changed the measure ... We did try SE and inventor at work, but we feel in love in SW
And SW is working great along with my cnc mill så if i can draw it, its making it
Fordson for life...
1955 Fordson Major (restorating)
1963 Fordson Super Major New Performance (New Project)
The next step for me will be the use of EdgeCam with the use of a small CNC lathe. We do not have a CNC milling machine. BUT!!!! We just received an offer for a 3D printer. That will make real plastic components. But I guess a plastic drawbar will not do.
henk wrote:The next step for me will be the use of EdgeCam with the use of a small CNC lathe. We do not have a CNC milling machine. BUT!!!! We just received an offer for a 3D printer. That will make real plastic components. But I guess a plastic drawbar will not do.
Have you seen delcam?? and even better delcam for solidworks, drawing and cnc program in one go
if you get that printer cant you print a pair of fenders for my major
Fordson for life...
1955 Fordson Major (restorating)
1963 Fordson Super Major New Performance (New Project)
Now were talking! This is the kind of thing that makes this forum special, its amazing what some of you guys churn out, whether it be engineering skills like this or mechanical knowhow!
Looking forward to seeing the finished product here
Oh yay, look, another seized bolt! Lets get a hammer.....and some kano.....and some cider!