I can't do anything like that.If you can't drill through the nut can you drill down the nut? I'm thinking put the nut in place then drill down between nut and shaft, pop in a suitable diameter bit of rod to act like a keyway
Have you actually tried superglue?
I now have some 638 on order
In the mean time, I did some tests with CA glue and some threaded locker I found in the house. I believe its 871. Just securing a nut to some M8 thread.
After 12 hours to cure (probably needs 24 hrs) I was surprised by the results. The CA was actually harder to dismantle.
Hopefully the 638 will be better.
If you can get a nut on it then you can use a grubscrew, just screw the nut on tight then drill through one of the flats and just into the shaft. Take the nut off and thread the hole. Then reassemble using a grubscrew with a pointed tip that will engage in the hole in the shaft.I can't do anything like that.
The motor has a threaded shaft like this :
View attachment 164265
A piece screws onto the thread. Usually the motor only rotates one way, such that it can only screw on tighter. But I am now using it in a project where the motor can reverse.
- I can't grind a flat on the thread as there is nowhere to use a grub screw.
- It's too small to try and add any kind of keyway
I really am looking for an option that allows me to "glue" it in place. But it sounds like I am out of luck.
As explained a few times now, thats not an option unfortunately.If you can get a nut on it then you can use a grubscrew, just screw the nut on tight then drill through one of the flats and just into the shaft. Take the nut off and thread the hole. Then reassemble using a grubscrew with a pointed tip that will engage in the hole in the shaft.
I suggest JB Weld, which I believe would be very similar to Araldite. CA glue was much stronger.Just out of interest, nobody has mentioned old fashioned 2 part araldite. Would filling the threads not make a decent bond, or is Araldite too brittle?
This looks like a windscreen wiper motor. There is generally an arm bolted onto it.I can't do anything like that.
The motor has a threaded shaft like this :
View attachment 164265
A piece screws onto the thread. Usually the motor only rotates one way, such that it can only screw on tighter. But I am now using it in a project where the motor can reverse.
- I can't grind a flat on the thread as there is nowhere to use a grub screw.
- It's too small to try and add any kind of keyway
I really am looking for an option that allows me to "glue" it in place. But it sounds like I am out of luck.
This was meant to say "I suggested" (in the first post)I suggest JB Weld, which I believe would be very similar to Araldite. CA glue was much stronger.
Not sure I follow. Can you show a picture or photo of what you mean?This looks like a windscreen wiper motor. There is generally an arm bolted onto it.
As a starting point: you could bend that into a U shape and then weld or jb weld a boss with a grubscrew/key way etc to suite your input shaft. Using the epoxy would be easier to get concentric
If you haven't got the arm it's usually 3 or 4mm thick with a tapered hole in it to suite the shaft taper, when you tighten the nut the splines on the shaft dig into the arm
Chris
Yep. Agreed.If the wheel is 200mm in diameter then even a moderate force is going to be exerting so much torque I doubt you are going to do it, short of welding it on.
Enter your email address to join: