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#1
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Same, too, as many motorcycle clutches. I suppose driving a chain by sprocket and a track by sprocket are similar tasks, so I wonder which concept came first?
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#2
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The multi disc clutch pack is found everywhere, and apart from hydraulic systems is universal in heavy machinery. (I can't think of anything else)
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Bluebell Carrier Armoured O.P. No1 Mk3 W. T84991 Carrier Bren No2.Mk.I. NewZealand Railways. NZR.6. Dodge WC55. 37mm Gun Motor Carriage M6 Jeep Mb #135668 So many questions.... |
#3
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..And as clutches in all automatic gearboxes, machine tools, crawler tractors, and as oil immersed brakes in earthmoving plant axles. They were used as oil immersed clutches in WW1 FWD model B trucks too.
David |
#4
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Silly question, but does the Chev engine turn the right way to ensure you have 4 forward and one reverse gear instead of the other way around?
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Bruce
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#6
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Colin have you got crank handle dogs on both engines?
Most engines run clockwise as you look at the front pulley. So if your V.L.T. crank has / had a crank handle and the dog is also the bolt that locates the front pulley and it is a r.h. thread, then your rotation will be the same for both engines.
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Bluebell Carrier Armoured O.P. No1 Mk3 W. T84991 Carrier Bren No2.Mk.I. NewZealand Railways. NZR.6. Dodge WC55. 37mm Gun Motor Carriage M6 Jeep Mb #135668 So many questions.... |
#7
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You would have thought so but....... Each individual engine of the Chrysler Multibank engine rotates anti clockwise but they still use the standard crank dog which would suggest they rotate the other way! Obviously, they simply used the standard dog to hold the damper hub on as you would be hard pushed to turn the engine over on a hand crank.....
I know it is a special case but I thought worth mentioning. It doesn't alter the validity of Lynns point though!
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Adrian Barrell |
#8
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Bruce - not a silly question at all. Potential to save a lot of heart ache. ![]()
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Howard Holgate F15 #12 F15A #13 (stretched) F60S #13 C15A #13 Wireless (incomplete) |
#9
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During WW2, when Rolls Royce car engineers were working on adapting the Merlin aero engine to use in tanks, they had change the rotation to Clockwise because that is how auto engines were and this entailed making new camshafts. This is not a myth, it came from the RR Historical book on the development of Meteor.
Just looked at the Light Tanks manual and the valve timing diagram for the Meadows (and Rolls on earlier Marks), appear to be clockwise.
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Richard 1943 Bedford QLD lorry - 1941 BSA WM20 m/cycle - 1943 Daimler Scout Car Mk2 Member of MVT, IMPS, MVG of NSW, KVE and AMVCS KVE President & KVE News Editor |
#10
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Most certainly an interesting factor
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