Monday, May 27, 2013

Post Mortem

To celebrate the many wonderful men and women who serve and have served our country in military service, I did an autopsy on my broken coupler. I know that does not really connect in any way, but that is what I did this memorial day. I did enjoy a couple flyovers of 7 WWII planes.

I got the engine hoist from a neightbor yesterday and started working on it today. Got the motor out and found that the key in the coupler did not break, but did work its way out as a few people said it might. What I am not happy about is, the coupler that I got from a company Evolve Electrics sent me to for the adapter/coupler combo, failed. I have notated this before, but they sent me the wrong thing a couple times and then they assured me what I had would work. I will note that I don't believe Evolve uses this company for adapters and couplers anymore. It turns out they used a part of a Lovejoy connector for the motor connection side and it is made from a soft steel. The torque from the motor shaft on the key deformed the keyway on the coupler and the key wiggled out. Here is a shot of the coupler with the deformed keyway.
Deformed Keyway in coupler
Here is a shot of the key. It survived, but has minor damage at the end which I believe is where it finally came out of the keyway.
Key with minor damage
Unfortunately the motor shaft also took some damage, but I think we will be fine once we get a better coupler made that extends down the majority of the shaft. You can see the dark area on the shaft at the front of it. This is how far this coupler would go onto the shaft. Not even half way.
Damage to motor shaft
So I showed the coupler to another neighbor and he said he thinks he can salvage the splined side of the coupler that goes on the transmission input shaft. He said he can make a better connection on the motor side and make it extend down the entire motor shaft and also make it a compression fit. He is a life saver. I would be looking at $300-400 for a new coupler. He makes stuff for his bosses at work, so they don't mind if he does a few side projects on the machines. I could have the coupler this week and the motor back in the car next weekend. As these things go it will probably be a couple weeks.

I thought I would take a couple photos of some of the more recent work I have done with the mounts for the vacuum braking system. This is the bracket that came with the vacuum pump and where it is mounted on the front sidewall of the car behind the headlight.
Vacuum Pump mount
 And this is the bracket I am making for the vacuum canister. It still needs a couple mounting holes and then a paint job.
Vacuum canister mounting bracket
So that wraps up the weekend. Hoping to get the re-worked coupler this week and maybe get the motor back in on the weekend. Then back to the vacuum brake system.


1 comment:

  1. As far as worst case scenarios, the damage to your system is not too bad. I had to pony up the $400 because the first company I ordered my hub from sent me a hub held onto the shaft with set screws, when I wanted a taperlock. The compression is a good idea. The part should not fit when cold, and just barely slip on after heating in the oven. Best of luck with the new hub.

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