don't tell Osha lol.
don't tell Osha lol.
Mesta Machine Company rope drive wheel. Homestead, PA. 1905/1925.
Fullsize image: https://s3-us-west-1.amazonaws.com/h...l_fullsize.jpg
https://s3-us-west-1.amazonaws.com/h...rive_wheel.jpg
782
I never knew that.
Attachment 43305
Multiple rope drives driving lineshafts on each factory floor
yup I saw that somewhere I visited. them smart fellers, split the power to any where in the factory.up down over change ratio for something I was amazed whay all they had done with it many many years ago. the down side is...when the power head stops it all stops. but there are addvantages to just one power unit, like put it outa the way.heat,noise etc.
Good stuff. When I was a kid I liked going to Greenfield Village in Dearborn Mi. and always spent the most time in the machine shop, all belt driven. I think I need another trip there. Mr Mikey.
when my wife retires ,I... we hope to travel the country and see lots of stuff like that. thats if there is still a country to see.
What am I missing?
I am looking at that massive "wheel" which appears to be cast in one piece. The hub is bored and spilt. They appear to be cutting the keyway. There appears to be 4 bolts to clamp the hub to the shaft by squeezing the 2 halves of the hub together. Each half of the hub is attached to the outer rim rim of the wheel by 3 stout spokes.
Something has to move when they squeeze that hub down onto the shaft. Does it flex that massive wheel?
Attachment 43315
Hello, I'm just guessing, maybe the shaft and bore clearance is slightly press fit then when the clamping bolts are torqued as runout is measured its in spec.? also since belts are running at a slow rpm its not considered an issue.? Mr Mikey.
If you want to see one (all right, a much smaller one) in action...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jlW3sv9ZKxs
Exactly right, but only the hub, there aren't spokes across the center.
The cutter head has a tapered arrangement with set screws to control depth. Boring a split hub is common, the gap is shimmed and clamped, the same torque on fasteners secures on shaft at installation.
It looks like a boring mill, so must be using the quill Z axis as a broach, like a lathe chucked part, cutter driven by carriage. Possibly, that era had a mechanism to run the quill in and out without rotating spindle?
However, can't imagine a spindle within a square quill, I believe the machine is a shaper.
An alternative would Z the table; but this is a floor machine, not table type. Floor machines are considered 'portable', they secure the column at the part, the 'floor' actually is a giant Tee slotted plate. Dialing in a part, isn't a couple handles like a Bridgeport.
Along with all that, the bore could have been done in a vertical lathe. The casting has been turned, those grooves ain't cast, an concentricity included. Biggest I've heard of was 33'; if man in picture is 5'5'', that's an 16' to 18' sheave.
But, here's a 42' Industrial History: Big Machine Tools
https://newatlas.com/the-citroen-che...3868/?amp=true