Jump to content
I Forge Iron

picker

Members
  • Posts

    68
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Profile Information

  • Gender
    Male
  • Location
    Arkansas
  • Interests
    Music, blacksmithing

Recent Profile Visitors

3,369 profile views
  1. This is the stand alone tripod blower that need some TLC. Not as bad off as the first one. Cleaned polished and added some new shims. She is a 1/47 ratio. Gave her a racy paint job just for the xxxx of it.
  2. I just overhauled one of these little guys - he was filled with grease. He cleaned up rather nice.
  3. This is the result of my latest find and overhaul. Remember, light oil. A sparingly few drops.
  4. So, I am helping a Pioneer Village get their blacksmith shop up to speed so some enterprising young guys can work and makes heads and tails with the space. First order is a clean up date next month. But, in the meantime I need to overhaul the blowers (3) for the individual rivet forges available. So, I bring a couple home. They are seized up. Full of dirt dobber's and some wasps have been living in them. No problem... I slip off the cover of the little Buffco and I actually chuckled out loud... See for yourself... I managed to soak most of the gunk out, and then pressure washed the rest. She is polished out and works just fine now. She's getting a new paint job and I'll post them in a day or so.
  5. Yeah, I know. I have a buddy who is going to fabricate the correct piping for me. Champion was smart with their custom piping set up. I'm sure they sold lots of custom units.
  6. Yes, she cleaned up really good. She's snug, but not tight. Has the identifying whirrrrrr sound. No grease was used. I used a few drops of lite oil. For my next magic trick, fitting some correct pipes.
  7. Finished putting the 400 back in service today. It was a real pleasure to work on. Every part and piece was inspected, cleaned and polished. In my haste I didn't think to open the top and photograph the gears and innards. Will post that tomorrow. I was just happy that it worked almost like new.
  8. Finished putting the 400 back in service today. It was a real pleasure to work on. Every part and piece was inspected, cleaned and polished. In my haste I didn't think to open the top and photograph the gears and innards. Will post that tomorrow. I was just happy that it worked almost like new.
  9. Yes, the caps were full of coagulated grease. Will do on the bar oil and STP. Thnx for the tip.
  10. Here is the update on the 400 I'm overhauling...She hasn't lived a charmed life. She looks rough. The bronze gear looks pretty worn down. But, it seems all the parts are there down to the correct nuts and bolts. I thought the bushings on the bronze gear were going to be a tough nut, but they came out for the first time in over a hundred years. I'll replace the bearings, and clean her up good (big job), regrease her, and give her a nice coat of paint.
  11. Hey thanks, I watched this yesterday. Gives me a bit of confidence. I think I tracked the problem as I was peeking into the works today. The worm gear isn't tight against the bronze gear, thus the grinding. I will overhaul it next week and provide an update. I'm hoping the bronze gear has enough life, and teeth to keep on working. Everything on outside of the unit looks okay. Brass caps are still in place, the housing isn't cracked and the impellers look fine, no bends or warps. I'm in central Arkansas, outside of Cabot near the Air force base.
  12. The shop I'm helping restore is an historic blacksmith shop circa 1920. It is located at a settlement park. There is a nice forge and plenty of good space. The shop is part of a relocation and restoration venue of old buildings - a church, dog trot homes, one room school house, train depot, and vintage homes that have been taken apart and restored. The Champion 400 blower has some grinding, and slipping gears. I haven't taken one apart in 20 years. I'll be sure to make a video so I won't end up with extra pieces... I opened her up and took a good look - it's pretty clean, but the bronze gear teeth look a bit worn and thin. I'll replace the bearings and tighten up as much as possible. My questions: regarding tolerances and timing with the worm gear, are there any bushings on this gear? Also, the small queen gear seems to have a timing problem and isn't quite lining up with the larger gear, thus grinding. I tightened the internal screw and the nut, it seems to help the timing, but becomes too tight to crank freely. Any tips on this guy before I commit to it would be appreciated. Thnx.
×
×
  • Create New...