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So has anyone ever bent a connecting rod trying to remove a clutch on anything ?????
There, I fixed it for you!
You're welcome
So has anyone ever bent a connecting rod trying to remove a clutch on anything ?????
As a mechanical engineer, you guys have peaked my interest as to the actual compressive forces in the piston rod during removal.
I drew some free body diagrams and came up with a formula for the compressive force in the piston rod . . .
This shows that the closer the piston is to TDC or BDC, the larger the force on the piston rod. It also shows that the least amount of force is exerted on the piston rod at ?=90. If blsnelling had too much or too little rope in the cylinder, he could have been far from the desired ?=90.
It also shows that the least amount of force is exerted on the piston rod at θ=90. If blsnelling had too much or too little rope in the cylinder, he could have been far from the desired θ=90.
See my post above WT. The crank has huge leverage on the rod near TDC. At this point you have very little movement of the rod little end for a great deal of movement at the crank. This is mechanical advantage. Camlocks work in the same way. The rod has the greatest force on the crank when the two form an "L". This is why you put a big cc engine at TDC to start it.
As a mechanical engineer, you guys have peaked my interest as to the actual compressive forces in the piston rod during removal.
I drew some free body diagrams and came up with a formula for the compressive force in the piston rod.
The formula is
F=T/(Rsinθ)
where
F is the axial compressive force in the piston rod
T is the torque exerted by the wrench
R is the fixed distance from the center of the crank to the piston rod connection on the crank(not to be confused with "r" from previous posts)
θ is the angle of the crank from TDC
If we apply a torque at θ=90 degrees, the formula will give us a numerical value for F. Now try the same torque near TDC. Let's say θ=10 degrees. The formula shows that F will be 5.75 times larger at θ=10 than it was at θ=90. Now try the formula 10 degrees from BDC. At θ=170, F is also 5.75 times larger than it was at θ=90.
This shows that the closer the piston is to TDC or BDC, the larger the force on the piston rod. It also shows that the least amount of force is exerted on the piston rod at θ=90. If blsnelling had too much or too little rope in the cylinder, he could have been far from the desired θ=90.
The formula doesn't work at exactly TDC or BDC because you can't divide by zero. The rope wouldn't provide any resistance to turning at TDC anyway.
Hmmm, see Tzed post. Max torque is at the point the rod is at 90 deg to the crank throw, not at 90 deg of crank rotation from TDC. That is that the piston if locked will have the maximum holding force on the crank when the rod is at 90 deg angle from big end center to the center line of the crank.
The exact ideal point will depend on the rod ratio, but in general it's more in the 75 to 80 deg from TDC area for rod ratios typical of a chainsaw. Edit to add thought (the longer the rod in relation to the stroke the closer the ideal point will move to 90 deg from TDC)
Here is a graph by my own calculations of piston velocity typical of a small stock chainsaw , peek velocity is about 77 or 78 deg, this is the point where the piston moves the most from a single degree of crank rotation. This then too is the point where the piston will have maximum mechanical advantage or holding force on the crank.
Here is a good article that explains why this is.
http://www.epi-eng.com/piston_engine_technology/piston_velocity_and_acceleration.htm
Food for thought, a wrench is going to be puting all the force required to move the nut through the rod, the closer to TDC the more this force will be amplified trough the vectors of the crank throw and rod angle. Impact gun will be putting some of the force on the rod but will be using the inertia of crank, flywheel to take some of this force off the rod.
The way I see it, the crank at 90 degrees from TDC is applying all the force in the upward direction. Leverage or not, any movement on the crank with a frozen piston at 90 degrees is going to bend the rod. Whereas at TDC, all the movement of the crank is applying force perpendicular to the rod, and thus no energy is transfered to the rod to compress or bend it. It would seem from the photos in the posts here that the rods had massive bends in them. Thus the crank had to travel a good distance to do all that bending.
I took one survey course in statics at university.... a long time ago.
In static terms there is no force that can be put on a rod but 100% straight line pull or 100% straight line push as each end is centered on a bearing. When the crank is somewhere anywhere away from TDC or BDC the rod will be on an angle but any force on it can only push down it's length, there is no other way for the force to go as both ends of the rod are free to pivot and piston can only move in one dimention.
I had a MS180 presented to me for a bit of tweaking, The oiler wasnt working and the air cleaner was missing!
I whipped the clutch off with the 18V impact wrench and a bit of rope without any problems and all the oiler parts were fine
The oiler pipe turned out to be blocked at the 90° bend, I used my pressure testing bulb to pressurise the tank via the oiler pipe and quick removal poped the dirt out
I had the impending doom feeling before touching this saw but its fine now!
I would have removed the flywheel first to remove the possibility of stripping the cast in key.
But if the piston is against a rope against the top of the head how can any force be applied to the flywheel?????
You would still have impact action going on on the crank. The rope's going to have some give in it. I just know that the little cast in keys are easy to shear. Just don't ask how I know, lol
You would still have impact action going on on the crank. The rope's going to have some give in it. I just know that the little cast in keys are easy to shear. Just don't ask how I know, lol
Hard to belive it still works!
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