HELP welding a stub shaft

   / HELP welding a stub shaft #11  
SODO, I am having difficulty matching up what you show in the first picture with the rest of the pictures. Because I am not familiar with that machine is makes it harder. In fact what does it really do that is not visible? Is it a PTO or belt operated machine? An infinite variety of split hub adjustable sheaves are available at industrial supply places that handle power transmission products. Split hub sheaves tend to be pretty spending, probably above your target of $200. That hole assembly appears to be pretty lightly built for withstanding a lot of vibration or other stresses especially the larger one on the left. A single belt like that is probably hard on belts especially with what appear to be idler and tension sheaves. Reminds me of a low end riding lawn mower. I was looking to get some machine shop work done a couple years ago and they wanted $150 just as a set up fee. And that was over here in low rent Port Orchard. Found a retired machinist over here that had a shop in his garage and he tinkered on small projects for neighbors and friends. he did the job for a bottle of JD and I furnished the material. He died last summer. Successful welding may depend on the material the shaft is made of; forged steel, cast steel, case hardened, cold rolled stock, alloy. From the apparent vintage it is probably machined from a forged billet. To do any welding you have to disassemble the shaft from the housing and pull the bearing off. The break may be allied to a worn bearing. I would plan to replace the bearing and any seals. Again there are infinite varieties and sizes available. I have always been able to find replacements even for obsolete machinery.

I may have some ideas if I understood the machine and how it operates; based on my industrial machinery repair past life. Bring it down to my place and lets brainstorm the problem over a beer.

Ron
 
   / HELP welding a stub shaft
  • Thread Starter
#12  
I was looking to get some machine shop work done a couple years ago and they wanted $150 just as a set up fee.
Thats what I'd expect…..I can't see enough value in this sickle to go to a machine shop. I think I need to just fix it fast& loose and use it with a small tractor & not t full speed.

I have always been able to find replacements even for obsolete machinery.
Now that would be IDEAL! I would like it to be good and strong as new but that may be a luxury that I don't get.

I may have some ideas if I understood the machine and how it operates; based on my industrial machinery repair past life. Bring it down to my place and lets brainstorm the problem over a beer.

And that I would enjoy. Only problem its in the central cascades, pretty far from Olalla...
 
   / HELP welding a stub shaft #13  
I'm sure Ron would agree that going up in diameter is only a matter of finding a bigger & tapered hub & suitable sheave, also(?) that it's a good idea. (Somebody had to keep mfg costs down, not your concern for a one off.)

btw: Tweaking the adjustable pulley to minimize harmonics within the attachment is the only reason I can see for having it, but I guess that's part of the deal.

Sodo, I'd be thrilled to have you drop me like a bad habit, :)thumbsup:).. forget everything I say, :eek: .. if you'll recognize that Tractor Seabee is gonna be your guy for answers (has done way more of this than I) and IMO would be worth paying good $ if you guys can get together somehow. In the trade, we say that doing it right means doing it once. ;)
 
   / HELP welding a stub shaft #14  
Old Grind,

I have no idea where you get that conception of me. I just try to be helpful when I think I may have something to offer. Based on the appearance of that mechanism I doubt increasing the shaft size will solve anything. If he wants a split hub sheave that requires a straight shaft. The hubs come in 1/8" increments and metric shaft sizes. Welding that is not a project for a novice. Keeping it straight and stress free will need pre-and post heating and setting up in some kind of jig. If it is a tempered steel that would defeat the temper. I would be a novice at tempering. Also I am not a machinist by any stretch and have no machinery other than a drill press that I have done some end milling with using a cross slide vise. My major experience is field repair and rebuilding using off the shelf components. Machine work we sent out to a specialist depending on the task. We used to scrape and fit Babbitt bearings but labor cost started to prohibit that so we started sending the parts to a machine shop for recasting and line boring. SODO's machine is a 4-6 hour round trip, just my mileage eats up his budget. It might be time to find a scrap dealer. If he could bring it here a six pack would pay me off to look at it and maybe find an easy fix.

Ron
 
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   / HELP welding a stub shaft #15  
I'm a chipmaker ( machinist ) who has done this type of repair many times in the past. The unknown here is the stress on that part. That said, there is a formula for this type of repair. it is the stub is made 1.25 X original OD to start. Remaining good part is faced and threaded @ .625 X finished OD by 1.5 X the threaded stub in a NF thread. where the shafts come together, parts are V'd for welding @30 degrees and then welded. Only burn half a stick of rod at a time and let the part cool before resuming welding. Clean the welds removing all flux between passes. Start the next pass 180 degrees out away from the first. Continue until the weld is as big as the OD of the stub. Welding rod should be 7018 for mild steel shafts, and 10018 for alloy. Any good machinist will know how to re-machine the shaft from there. Costs for this process could run more than the price of a shop would charge to make a new shaft. Yours isn't a high tec part. In your case, I'd make a new shaft because it's hard to determine what stress is at that point on the assembly. Just sticking a stub on the end of the shaft and welding gives the process a 80% chance of failure due to load and vibration. Go to a shop, let them make you a new shaft, you will be happy in the end. If you had a shaft that was worth $10,000, different story, might be worth it, you don't.
Chris
 
   / HELP welding a stub shaft #16  
I do think that a split sheave hub with it's tapered OD would handle the loading but the key and keyway might be the weakest link. Probably would be hard to find an adjustable sheave though to fit the hub.
A "D-method", if the inboard part of the broken shaft isn't hardened would be to drill and tap it as large as possible in the area "under" the main bearing land. Then a replacement tapered end could be made with an integral threaded stud to match the tapped threads along with some Loctite. The direction of the thread (RH or LH) might best be determined by the direction of rotation so that it is self tightening. Could this be done for $200? Probably depends on if you can find a machine shop looking for work and it might be easier to just make a whole new shaft.
What is the purpose of the flats on the shaft next to the bearing land?

Great minds think alike :thumbsup:- I suspect you were writing the above as I posted what I did a couple of minutes before you. I do think a threaded shaft screwed into the existing broken hub might be the least expensive and possibly most effective way to remedy the broken shaft. And the possibility that the bearings played a part in the shaft's demise is certainly worth consideration too.
What say the OP about these concerns/solutions to the problem?:confused3:
 
   / HELP welding a stub shaft
  • Thread Starter
#17  
I don't know about threading it. Thats a big hole to drill, probably 3/4" hole? And I think I could center it better welding than choosing a center to drill and tap on two shafts and hope they align.

Chris, If I welded on an oversize shaft (as you described) and brought the wobble crank to a machinist, along with its mating tapered hub; do you think a machinist would do the taper, matched to the hub, woodruff, and threads for $200? I think that sounds like $500, and since I'm 10 years behind the curve actual cost will be $1,000.

Remember the goal is just to cut some weeds. I'd like this implement to be cutting weeds at $300. If the the finished project looks 95% as good Flusher's mower below I will be thrilled!
:cool2::cool2::cool2:
353917d1389206725-mf-31-sickle-bar-mower-mf31-mower-pulleys-medium-.jpg


:2cents:
At this point it seems like I should just weld on an oversize the shaft stub (1.25") and use a browning split hub with a 1/4" keyway and hope it survives a small tractor mowing weeds twice a year at half throttle. And if it comes loose maybe just weld the split hub directly to the shaft.

When I'm on my tractor on a warm spring day, out in the woods, making my retreat look nice with a tool that I fixed with my own hands, not admitting to the time spent, but not having blown a lot of money either, that is success to me. From this I will learn whether a sickle mower works for me. If it craps out but I LIKED having a sickle mower,,,, then I know that I need to buy a good one.

Anyway I'm enjoying all the ideas and experiences you guys have offered; elements from all of them are interesting and will play a part in what I finally do.
 
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   / HELP welding a stub shaft #18  
Am I the only one with eyes that work on this forum?!!
Take another look at the pictures of that shaft!
The keyway is not only hopelessly wallowed out, but the pressure side is totally compromised. (Broken away)
And how about the bearing land? Does it look concentric?
How about the beat up threaded end ?
The cotter pin way?
This entire thread just HAS TO BE some sort of sarcastic joke to see how many people will sucker in.
THE SHAFT IS IRREPAIRABLE!!
There are only two sane solutions:
1) Find NOS
2) Draw it up and have it fabricated.

Geeeeeeeeeeeeeeezzzzzzze!
 
   / HELP welding a stub shaft
  • Thread Starter
#19  
Here is a pic of a (damaged) MF 31 shaft from TBN's Barry1.
354535d1389473063-help-welding-stub-shaft-mf-31-shaft-keyway-ruined.png

I think everybody can see that shaft is a total wreck. My shaft is broken off; missing the end. I'm showing Barry's wrecked shaft to help folks envision the part.
 
   / HELP welding a stub shaft #20  
Am I the only one with eyes that work on this forum?!!
Take another look at the pictures of that shaft!
The keyway is not only hopelessly wallowed out, but the pressure side is totally compromised. (Broken away)
And how about the bearing land? Does it look concentric?
How about the beat up threaded end ?
The cotter pin way?
This entire thread just HAS TO BE some sort of sarcastic joke to see how many people will sucker in.
THE SHAFT IS IRREPAIRABLE!!
There are only two sane solutions:
1) Find NOS
2) Draw it up and have it fabricated.

Geeeeeeeeeeeeeeezzzzzzze!

Doubtful. IF you actually read the thread you'd know the shaft you refer to is for reference ONLY. It is NOT the broken off shaft base shown early on in this thread. I guess reading and understanding two pages of thread with numerous pics is TOO difficult for some. Geeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeezzzzzzzzzeeeeeee!:duh:
 

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