Nathan 4000C's in 1.5" Scale
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Re: Nathan 4000C's in 1.5" Scale
Anthony: Sorry, if I caused any confusion. when you wrote " ...shrinkage due to the temperature of the aluminum when shooting..." I ASSumed the aluminum was molten. I now understand that you were referring to the temperature of the aluminum mold when the wax is shot.
- Greg_Lewis
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Re: Nathan 4000C's in 1.5" Scale
Sandiapaul wrote: ↑Thu Feb 25, 2021 6:08 am "Hopefully no one plays around with it... but now you've given me something to be concerned about!"
Reminds me of a story...a good friends dad was a machine designer/engineer/machinist, the best blend of how things used to be back when. There was a machine he had designed(at TRW) that kept coming back all out of whack. He noticed that the operators were fiddling around with it and that was the problem. So as a test he took off one part, took it it the shop and machined a small ring and a groove into a solid part so it looked just like a slotted head screw. Again the machine came back needing adjustments. Sure enough he found marks where someone had tried to "adjust" this "screw"!
Since we're telling stories, some years ago I visited the Moa telescope in New Zealand. This is a large research instrument and the mirror has weights around the perimeter which are set to correct for sag in the glass (think wavelengths of light). There is a tag on each adjustment that reads, "Never touch this." When I asked about the unusual wording, they said that "Do not touch" didn't work but this wording did.
Greg Lewis, Prop.
Eyeball Engineering — Home of the dull toolbit.
Our motto: "That looks about right."
Celebrating 35 years of turning perfectly good metal into bits of useless scrap.
Eyeball Engineering — Home of the dull toolbit.
Our motto: "That looks about right."
Celebrating 35 years of turning perfectly good metal into bits of useless scrap.
- AnthonyDuarte
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Re: Nathan 4000C's in 1.5" Scale
Picked up a body casting for the 4000C. This was a test to see if the gating worked out, and it seems to have worked pretty well. The wax for this had some issues, but I still wanted to try it out. I’ll machine it up and use it to dial in the water and steam valves so they’re positioned perfectly with respect to the starting lever.
Here it is next to the 1.6” 1918A body casting. Quite a difference in size!
Here it is next to the 1.6” 1918A body casting. Quite a difference in size!
Re: Nathan 4000C's in 1.5" Scale
Very impressive! The control quadrant puts it over the top. Nice work
Re: Nathan 4000C's in 1.5" Scale
Nice jewellery!!
- AnthonyDuarte
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Re: Nathan 4000C's in 1.5" Scale
It occurred to me that, since these injectors will be bolted onto the cradle casting like the prototype, they will benefit from the cast elbow that was required for the tight clearances. Luckily I have the drawing for said elbow. The 3.5" pipe union, which the drawing specifies should be "extra strong," will be cast in so all you have to do is solder in your 3/8" tubing. Everything you'll need to install the injector with or without the elbow will be included. The instruction manual keeps getting longer and longer!
- AnthonyDuarte
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Re: Nathan 4000C's in 1.5" Scale
The nozzles are complete. The 4000C body is so darned tall that I needed to add a spacer to the delivery cone. This pushes the delivery cone an extra .516” into the body. The only alternative would be to make it all one piece, but that would make machining the taper unnecessarily challenging.
Re: Nathan 4000C's in 1.5" Scale
Wow!
I would love to see a video of your machining processes. CNC I presume.
RussN
I would love to see a video of your machining processes. CNC I presume.
RussN
- AnthonyDuarte
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Re: Nathan 4000C's in 1.5" Scale
Had the pleasure of seeing the progress on Jim’s Berkshire at Jack Bodenmann’s shop. What a work of art... the more you look at it the more you see, which is one of my favorite aspects of super detailed models.
Part of the reason for the visit was to bolt up the 4000C body to Jim’s cradle to see how it fit, and man it fit like a glove!
It’s a good thing I switched to 1.5” scale because it would not have cleared the back of the cradle otherwise, and the mounting bosses on the injector lined up perfectly with the existing holes. With the cradle holes spot faced, we did have to add a #5 washer but that’s all that was needed.
You can see why the cast delivery elbow was a necessary addition!
I also brought a completed quadrant so we could see how it layed out in the cab.
All the waxes are at the foundry now except for the main body castings. They’re such a headache to shoot that I haven’t had time to sit down and get them all done.
Part of the reason for the visit was to bolt up the 4000C body to Jim’s cradle to see how it fit, and man it fit like a glove!
It’s a good thing I switched to 1.5” scale because it would not have cleared the back of the cradle otherwise, and the mounting bosses on the injector lined up perfectly with the existing holes. With the cradle holes spot faced, we did have to add a #5 washer but that’s all that was needed.
You can see why the cast delivery elbow was a necessary addition!
I also brought a completed quadrant so we could see how it layed out in the cab.
All the waxes are at the foundry now except for the main body castings. They’re such a headache to shoot that I haven’t had time to sit down and get them all done.
Re: Nathan 4000C's in 1.5" Scale
Hello Anthony, Absolutely incredible work. On the cool factor scale of 1 thru 10, this about a 100.
Vic
Vic
For Duty and Humanity
Re: Nathan 4000C's in 1.5" Scale
What's that huge hole thru the middle of the valve there for and what does it do? I assume it is prototypical but it looks to be right in the middle of the flow path.
- AnthonyDuarte
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Re: Nathan 4000C's in 1.5" Scale
It’s the connection point for the overflow. The “flow path” at that point is entirely inside the nozzles.