Jeff “Brakes
are for Sissies” Hughes would never approve of what I’m doing to the 1961 Fox
Go-Boy Kart (AKA “Shine”).
Shine is
almost completely stock, and with the twin West Bend 580 engines, it looks very
similar to the Fox advertisement for the 1961 Karts.
While
restoring Shine I had an issue with the brakes.
You can see that the original hub is distorted at the axle hole. Also, the 5” Bendix brakes offered no
cooling.
So I checked
the Vintage Karting rules to find that an upgrade in the brakes is
allowable. Shine is “… an original production Kart from the
Historic Era (1964 and before) …”
however, “…Modern brake upgrades are permitted and recommended.” So I decided to upgrade to 6” drum
brakes.
There was a
problem with this idea: the larger drum could not be mounted in the stock frame
location since it would conflict with the left rear motor mount, and possibly
the recoil starter on the left engine.
So I turned to my Coaster Train buddy, Dr. Tom Bartol for a
solution. Tom is a scientist at the
prestigious Salk Institute, but he is also a first-rate machinist. Tom has restored some vintage machine tools
including a 1954 Sheldon EM56-B Lathe and a 1962 Bridgeport Series 1 J Head
Mill, and he is using them to build a personally-designed,
meticulously-constructed telescope. As
soon as I showed Tom the need for a frame-to-brake spacer he began to design
the perfect part.
On a Sunday
afternoon I took Shine and the new 6” brakes to Tom’s machine shop. He began by cutting a billet of 6061-T6 aluminum,
and then he used the mill to be sure that all surfaces were square and exactly
sized to within one-thousandth of an inch.
Next we
moved to the lathe where Tom showed me the art of using a four-jaw chuck, a
pilot drill, and finally a boring bar to put the axle hole perfectly in the
center of the spacer block. The process
starts with boring a pilot hole. I was surprised to see that the tools remained
fixed, and the part moved! I enjoyed
watching the long, continuous ribbons of cut aluminum wind symmetrically off
the spacer and into the bed of the lathe.
Next the
hole is bored to finished size with the boring bar.
Once the
center hole was perfect, Tom set up the mill for the attaching holes and cutting
recesses for the brake backing plate springs.
The stock mounting arrangement was for two 5/16” bolts to hold the brake
backing plate to the frame, and also to hold the left rear bearing
retainer. Tom and I decided that it would
be possible to machine the spacer and the frame to use two additional bolts for
added strength and rigidity. Machining
the two stock holes was fairly straight-forward. What really impressed me was the trigonometry
Tom used to calculate the exact location of the additional (top) holes knowing
the circumference of the hole pattern of the brake backing plate while
realizing that the holes were 60 degrees apart!
He quickly calculated the X and Y coordinates for the two additional
holes. I knew all that high school math
was good for something.
After boring
two new holes in the frame, the assembly of the brakes and rear axle went
smoothly. The spacer fit perfectly
giving the new brakes a rock-solid mounting, and plenty of clearance.
I think it
is so cool that Tom used vintage machine tools to create a custom spacer for a
Vintage Kart! Thanks Tom!
great story, you should ask Tom to let you run the lathe yourself, I think you would have a feeling of accomplishment when you pull a finished piece out of the chuck.
ReplyDeleteHi Arthur, Tom let me "pretend" to do some of the machining. It was very cool, but I'm happy to have an expert doing the fine machining! You will have to meet Tombthe next time you come to San Diego!
DeleteHi Arthur, I let Cary perform a couple of pilot hole enlarging operations to get the feel of aluminum peeling off in nice continuous ribbons once you hit the sweet-spot in the feed rate.
DeleteCool stuff Cary! That thing is gorgeous. Are you going to run that kart or is it show only? I had a shifter kart for a couple of years and it was one of the more thrilling drives I've ever experienced.
ReplyDelete