RichardG
If at first you donāt succeed have a cup of tea.
This is going to be a very slow background restoration but I thought it may be of interest...plus it allows for suggestions of how to fix issues
The drill came from a local forge, sat unused in the corner for meany years as theyād upgraded to something much larger. Itās 3 phase. Everything worked and seemed to run OK, gearbox changed speed. The Chuck was chewed and no key so will need replacing, plus one of the arms had been replaced by a threaded rod. Hereās the drill as purchased, it was covered in grease and soot.
The strip down was fairly straightforward, the only issue was removing the quill key which led to be a bit of head scratching. In the end it was easy as itās threaded and a few washes and a puller allowed it to be removed, this picture I found after the event on the Mig welding forum sums it up nicely.
you can see clearly why these drills are not as good as the Fobco/Meddings variants. The main frame although accurately machined is very lightweight when compared to a solid cast lump.
The other problem I found during the dismantling was the pulleys. The motor pulley has a chip on the largest pulley and the quill pulley was split. Both bits I somehow missed on the initial inspection. The thinness of the quill pulley is quite alarming, Iām amazed that this was seen as accceptable!
Next strip down was the 2 speed gearbox I immediately smelled a rat as after I had cleaned the grime off the socket heads showed signs of being removed. After getting to the internals I found 2 of the planet pinion gears damaged, and one of the planet pinion pins sheared. As there are 4 pinions the gearbox still works on the remaining 2 but this needs to be fixed. For info itās part 70 & 71 on the drawing.
And here are the damaged gears.
These are not metal but made of some form of plastic, perhaps Tufnoll? Iāve been told by an engineering friend that this was quite common and ensured these failed first when overloaded to save the rest of the gearbox, not sure if thatās true or just Startrite penny pinching. The downside is that machine spares wants Ā£45 each to replace, theyāre less than 30mm in diameter This may write the gearbox off...However, I have been given the name of a company who can 3d print in a very hard wearing plastic or even metal if I can give them a cad drawing. The price for 3 gears would be less than Ā£30 which is doable. Iāll be investigating this over the coming week unless anyone has a suggestions?
The drill came from a local forge, sat unused in the corner for meany years as theyād upgraded to something much larger. Itās 3 phase. Everything worked and seemed to run OK, gearbox changed speed. The Chuck was chewed and no key so will need replacing, plus one of the arms had been replaced by a threaded rod. Hereās the drill as purchased, it was covered in grease and soot.
The strip down was fairly straightforward, the only issue was removing the quill key which led to be a bit of head scratching. In the end it was easy as itās threaded and a few washes and a puller allowed it to be removed, this picture I found after the event on the Mig welding forum sums it up nicely.
you can see clearly why these drills are not as good as the Fobco/Meddings variants. The main frame although accurately machined is very lightweight when compared to a solid cast lump.
The other problem I found during the dismantling was the pulleys. The motor pulley has a chip on the largest pulley and the quill pulley was split. Both bits I somehow missed on the initial inspection. The thinness of the quill pulley is quite alarming, Iām amazed that this was seen as accceptable!
Next strip down was the 2 speed gearbox I immediately smelled a rat as after I had cleaned the grime off the socket heads showed signs of being removed. After getting to the internals I found 2 of the planet pinion gears damaged, and one of the planet pinion pins sheared. As there are 4 pinions the gearbox still works on the remaining 2 but this needs to be fixed. For info itās part 70 & 71 on the drawing.
And here are the damaged gears.
These are not metal but made of some form of plastic, perhaps Tufnoll? Iāve been told by an engineering friend that this was quite common and ensured these failed first when overloaded to save the rest of the gearbox, not sure if thatās true or just Startrite penny pinching. The downside is that machine spares wants Ā£45 each to replace, theyāre less than 30mm in diameter This may write the gearbox off...However, I have been given the name of a company who can 3d print in a very hard wearing plastic or even metal if I can give them a cad drawing. The price for 3 gears would be less than Ā£30 which is doable. Iāll be investigating this over the coming week unless anyone has a suggestions?