|
Spindle eccentricity ? | |||
Post Reply | Forum |
Posted by: Dave B ® 03/11/2006, 01:23:33 Author Profile eMail author Edit |
I hope someone with automotive experience can help. I am building a car using a complete BMW 635 drive train.The purpose is to keep the originally designed brake system intact. Because of structure and space limitations I am converting the front McPhearson strut spindles by cutting the strut tube and fitting ball joints top and bottom via adapters. My quandry is this: Upon measuring the spindle diameter where the front outer bearing rides, I found an eccentricity of .0013". Is this an acceptable deviation from round ? Or is it now just a door stop ? Consider, too, that the engine is capable of sustaining 140 mph ( 'continuous running of 6,000 rpm allowable' according to the driver's manual ) ? |
Post Reply | Recommend | Alert Administrator | View All | | | |
Replies to this message |
Re: Spindle eccentricity ? | |||
Re: Spindle eccentricity ? -- Dave B | Post Reply | Top of thread | Forum |
Posted by: Kelly_Bramble ® 03/11/2006, 09:46:31 Author Profile eMail author Edit |
.0013" divided by two is .00065" extra material on each side extra material relative to the axis. The diameter of the spindle, operating load, and rotational velocity will drive your tolerance reqiurements. If I assume you need a ABEC tolerance of 7 (loose), then for a spindle the bearing will have an ID of +.0000 / - .0010. This is a worst case out of roundness (eccentricity)of .001. So, you want your spindle to be approximately as good as your bearing. so, no your spindle is too far aout of round.
|
Post Reply | Recommend | Alert Administrator | Where am I? Original Top of thread |
Powered by Engineers Edge
© Copyright 2000 - 2024, by Engineers Edge, LLC All rights reserved. Disclaimer