Plastic strut bearings |
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Riley
Grand Poobah Joined: January-19-2004 Location: Portland, ME Status: Offline Points: 7952 |
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Posted: May-14-2018 at 7:04pm |
No bench grinder Pete. Maybe someday. Would like to have one and a drilled press and an abor press and....We need more room 1st.
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8122pbrainard
Grand Poobah Joined: September-14-2006 Location: Three Lakes Wi. Status: Offline Points: 41040 |
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Bruce, You must have bought the bits that were in the discount bin! Do you have a bench grinder? If so, have you tried sharpening the dull bits? |
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8122pbrainard
Grand Poobah Joined: September-14-2006 Location: Three Lakes Wi. Status: Offline Points: 41040 |
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Riley
Grand Poobah Joined: January-19-2004 Location: Portland, ME Status: Offline Points: 7952 |
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Well, I broke open a new set of drills and it cut right into the plastic and made a nice dimple. Last time I installed one I had new drills, but they would not cut that stuff. I did use Locktite as you can't torque down on them very much. Thanks for the tips.
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MrMcD
Grand Poobah Joined: January-28-2014 Location: Folsom, CA Status: Offline Points: 3610 |
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I used the plastic strut bearings on mine 3 years ago. Working fine so far with very little drag on the prop shaft. You can easily spin the shaft with one finger on the prop.
When it came to the set screws I did not like the way they fit either. I played with a few options and then drilled a hole in the strut bearing at the set screw location. I ran a tap through the hole so my set screw could screw into the plastic. I used red Loctite on the threads and put the screw into place making sure to not allow it to touch the shaft. It has worked fine for three years but I did not like any of the options when it came to this job. On a do over I think I would have purchased small screws rather than the allen head original screw and cut the screw length so it would install about 75% into the plastic. Then I could have tightened till the screw head bottomed on the strut while still using Loctite on the threads. I liked the new bearings and the way they function. I was not comfortable with the set screw set up in plastic. |
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JoeinNY
Grand Poobah Joined: October-19-2005 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 5697 |
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negative on that solution those things flex pretty easy, putting the set screw in against them without a dimple will deform them and keep them from turning, or leave the screw with too few threads engaged to lock - a dimple is good idea. I don't remember having any problem drilling one - so I agree on the sharp bit routine |
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8122pbrainard
Grand Poobah Joined: September-14-2006 Location: Three Lakes Wi. Status: Offline Points: 41040 |
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Bruce,
Maybe you should sharpen the drill bit. Seriously, the set screws should be cup point and the plastic is soft enough so a dimple isn't needed. |
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baitkiller
Platinum Member Joined: October-11-2011 Location: SW Florida Status: Offline Points: 1693 |
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drill bit worked fine. Put some locktight on the grub screws because you cant tighten them much.
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Jesus was a bare-footer.............
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Riley
Grand Poobah Joined: January-19-2004 Location: Portland, ME Status: Offline Points: 7952 |
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Has anyone installed these? They are difficult to drill a dimple into them for a set screw. Is it needed? Is there are better way like maybe using heat to melt a dimple?
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