Mostly busy with spring work on the hobby farm, but sneaking into the shop ocassionally to work on a few things.
Been pressing my luck (literally) by using a hydraulic press for broaching. Back in March I ordered a Vevor 3T arbor press through Amazon. Wanted the height, if I actually need 3 tons of force I'll go back to the hydraulic press. It arrived with a broken handle, I discussed this with Vevor (through their website portal) and they initially were going to send a new handle but after a few weeks sent a whole new arbor press, saying no need to ship the old one back.
Well, the arbor press, both of them, are pretty sloppy fit. Here's a close-up of the working bits.
Right to left is a locking ring to hold the press handle, the press handle, a ratchet ring with pawl and a spring pin release, and finally the body of the press. The (broken) wheel goes on the left side of the body. Note the press handle pivots freely on the shaft. The locking ring is held on with a set screw, and the ratchet is held to the shaft with a square key.
I decided to work on one. Shaft was 2.306" in diameter, the press was bored to about 2.332, the handle around 2.324, the ratchet around 2.334. That made for a press handle that felt like a limp noodle with all the cumulative play in it. Didn't really want to make a new shaft as it has an integral gear cut in it. Decided to put a bronze sleeve on the shaft. Cut the shaft down to 2.00, made a bronze sleeve with the ID of 1.998. Heated the sleeve up nice and hot with a propane torch and slid it on. Turned the sleeve OD to size afterwards:
Bored the handle out, wanted 2.335 but I ran afoul of backlash in the boring head, ended up with 2.342. Decided to live with that.
As shipped the ratchet pawl on the handle pivots on an M8 bolt. The bolt is just loose threaded, tightening it down would seize the pawl. Decided to make something a little more elegant.
That last pic shows the pawl, the M8 bolt, and the piece of 4130 I turned and pressed into the handle after milling out the previous M8's threads to .375 with an end mill. Did that because the previous hole was a bit off center, plunging an end mill allowed me to center it up. The pressed piece was threaded for a #8 screw to hold bronze cap I made to the size of the M8 head, so it all recessed appropriately. Had to make a small arbor for the bronze cap as my first attempt a few tenths to large for the pawl to pivot freely. I have to believe that the original M8 bolt would be the weak link in pressing. It is only at about a 2:1 advantage from the gear, so 3 tons of press would mean at least 3000 lbs of sideways (shear) force on that bolt through the pawl, ignoring the angles involved. I think the slightly larger 4130 pressed pin should be a bit stronger but still skeptical that it is sufficient for rated capacity.
Decided to clean up the ratchet piece a bit so it didn't catch on the body, and used a flat file on that face of the body to take off some of the high spots.
That was partially filed as pictured. Also did some file work on the raised part of the body hub. That raised shoulder acts to disengaged the pawl at the top of handle travel. I cleaned up the inside of the bore with some emory cloth, didn't think it was worth trying to set it up on the mill table to bore it cleaner than the rather rough bored and painted over factory job. To be truthful, I'd already measured that bore ID and turned the bronze OD so I was committed to that size.
Last thing I had to do was mill a new slot for the square key in the shaft through the bronze sleeve. Made the slot extra deep to go through the bronze into the steel, otherwise the press force would be trying to rotate the bronze sleeve on the shaft. With the extra deep slot I had to make up a new no-longer square key (not shown).
So it is all back together, except I for that pesky broken wheel. I ordered a "boat wheel" off amazon that I'll need to adapt. And I ordered some brass bolts from McMaster to replace the steel bolts that take the play out of the moving press colum. Picture of it all back together? You already saw that above, this is one of those projects where none of the work is obvious by looking.
About $100 worth of parts (mostly bronze) into this, and a lot of time that I enjoyed. Now to decide what to do with the 2nd press.