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17th January 2014, 07:44 AM #31Distracted Member
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Lex, I went back through the thread looking for details on the clutch and found none. Can you tell us about it please?
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17th January 2014 07:44 AM # ADSGoogle Adsense Advertisement
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17th January 2014, 10:58 AM #32SENIOR MEMBER
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Lex, I would also appreciate it if you posted photos here rather than links to photobucket.
Photobucket wants permission to execute 15 Javascript programs from 15 different Web sites and after allowing all the ones that I think are OK I'm left with a pile from ad companies, data miners and others I frankly have no clue about. I'm not going to give them permission to run and I can't get the Photobucket pictures to display by permitting a subset to run.
So.... call me paranoid but I won't access pictures posted on Photobucket if it requires that many different Javascript programs to work (and frankly it's not important enough for me to try too hard). I am interested in your electric clutch setup though.
PDW
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17th January 2014, 02:02 PM #33Senior Member
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17th January 2014, 02:38 PM #34
Not a problem for me, but I understand PDW's concerns about dodgy javascript..
Click on the image icon, and select "from computer" instead of url. select the files you want, you can do multiple files at the same time.. Click upload. The images will appear in thumbnail size in the body of the message
then when someone wants a closer look they click the thumbnail to open the image in a lightbox.
As a demo..
DSC00774_zps250661b6.jpg
Hope that helps..
Very interested in following your progress with the SG, looks good.
Ray
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17th January 2014, 04:16 PM #35
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17th January 2014, 05:04 PM #36Senior Member
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I find the thumbnail pictures a pain to view, having to open each one and waiting for it to appear. If it is OK with the moderators I will continue to use Photobucket.
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17th January 2014, 05:33 PM #37SENIOR MEMBER
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Whatever. It's not important enough to me to try to convince you otherwise and I'm certainly not going to enable Javascript running on sites I don't recognise (or do recognise and don't want to provide with information).
Be aware though, that if you ever remove photos from Photobucket or delete your account, threads like this become pretty useless. There are a number of old threads on Practical Machinist that have broken links to photos that were hosted on external sites, severely reducing the value of the information posted.
PDW
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17th January 2014, 06:26 PM #38
That is one point of view. Personally, having a slow satellite connection I find them better than full pictures. I can choose which ones to load, in a new tab and continue reading while I wait. Then I can continue to look at these pictures as much as I want while I read the post and try to work out how it fits together. The https://www.woodworkforums.com/f65/di...ajesty-180755/ thread started by Michael is a case in point as are Steamwhisperer's presentations.
It is however your choice in the end.
Dean
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17th January 2014, 08:17 PM #39Senior Member
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Good point about the broken or old links PDW, I will try inserting images for the first time here.
Bryan, the Electo-magnetic clutch is just a 12volt unit for an automotive a/c compressor. This clutch is about 120mm diameter.
DSC00779.jpg
I wanted to use this one from a Falcon because the diameter (100mm) was almost the same as the original but the direction of rotation was wrong and the V grooves were inappropriately placed for my application.
DSC00782.jpg
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18th January 2014, 07:45 AM #40SENIOR MEMBER
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OK, thank you for that. May I ask how you got the clutch off the compressor head? I have one sitting around here but haven't tried removing it yet - I assume it's on a tapered shaft with woodruff key, not sure how much force is going to be required to free it. There are a couple things I could use it for on my boat.
PDW
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18th January 2014, 07:54 AM #41
I have to ask the question "how do you get an a/c clutch that operates in the other direction?"
Does the motor it came off run in the opposite direction to the Falcon? A/c unit turned around 180deg? I have to say I have not yet experienced this, but I have not worked on any of the newer Asian brands etc. Ford and Toyota are my limit in recent (A/C equipped) years.
Dean
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18th January 2014, 05:04 PM #42SENIOR MEMBER
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Hi PDW,
I added a second sanden AC compressor to my Prado for on board air, I had to remove the clutch off the existing compressor and machine and weld in a second pulley. From what I recall the clutch came off easily, no need for a puller.
Regards
Bruce
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18th January 2014, 09:19 PM #43Senior Member
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"Spot the difference" in the 2 photos to see why I had to use the large black clutch to get the correct direction of rotation
DSC00783.jpgDSC00784.jpg
PDW depending on the age and brand of compressor you have, it may have a tapered shaft. but the modern ones are just a parallel shaft with a square section key. The Sanden type (right photo) usually come off pretty easily, as argeng pointed out, because the armature air gap has to be adjusted by shims whereas the unit in the left photo requires a special puller because the armature is pressed onto the shaft, to achieve the gap, and retained by a locking nut.
This is a puller I made years ago, to remove the armature on a friend Rolls Royce A/C compressor, which I modified a few weeks ago by cutting a 22 x 1.5mm thread on the other end to allow the removal of the very tight black clutch.
DSC00786.jpg
Lex.
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18th January 2014, 09:43 PM #44
Maybe I should have asked why does the black clutch run in the other direction?
Dean
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19th January 2014, 02:22 PM #45SENIOR MEMBER
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Hmmm, thanks for that. I bought mine for $5 in a tip shop so I have little invested in it. I'm pretty sure it's a tapered shaft, might not be worth any trouble playing with it. A straight shaft unit would be a lot simpler all round. i keep thinking of adding either an on-demand second alternator to charge the house battery bank or a hydraulic pump which would also only get intermittent usage. Possibly both....
Might be time to investigate the wreckers....
PDW
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