Quote:
: Hey guys,
:
: I have to apologize for being off-topic, but it
: looks like you all may know more about this
: topic than some of the other folks I usually
: deal with. I have some questions about
: crankshaft welding. I have a '49 Dodge
: pickup with a 230 cid flathead 6. I recently
: had the rear main seal surface welded, to
: get rid of rust pitting and build up the
: slightly undersized diameter.
:
: The rear main seal surface is just a bit larger
: diameter than the main bearing journal
: diameters. The seal surface is just in front
: of the flywheel flange, but not part of the
: flange.
:
: Anyway, my machinist removed about 0.030"
: from the surface, then proceeded to weld it
: with a "tri-gas" setup. After he
: finished welding it and grinding it, the
: region where the seal touches the shaft
: looked fine, but the adjacent material had
: some pits left over. I don't believe these
: were the typical weld pits, but rather I
: think they were remnants of the
: "valleys" between the weld beads.
: I didn't want to ask him to re-weld and
: re-grind, because he had already welded up
: the surface once before, but had ground it
: down too much and had to do it all again, so
: I was wary of over-welding. I decided to
: polish out a few of these "pits"
: and found a couple of them to be about
: 0.040" deep. I'm concerned that these
: irregularities can be stress risers, where
: fatigue cracks can start. What do you all
: think?
:
: The other issue is that my machinist did not
: pre-heat or post-heat the crankshaft. Will
: the metallurgy be adversely affected because
: of this?
:
: My crankshaft is a forged steel unit. The only
: thing I know about its composition is what I
: found in an old manual, which says it's
: "high-carbon" steel. I plan to
: make a few performance mods to the engine
: (dual carb intake manifold, headers, cam,
: high-compression head).
:
: The welding process he uses is a
: "tri-gas" setup. What can you guys
: tell me about this?
:
: I'm sorry for the long post, but just wondering
: if my crankshaft will come apart on me
: someday.
:
: Thanks for your info!
: Matt
First, I don't know anything about this 'tri-gas' setup. Perhaps it is something relatively new.
Up until about 15 years ago, I was a journeyman machinist. I worked in a marine machine shop, and one of the things we did was weld stainless 'liners' on forged steel propeller shafts, up to 2' in dia. and 48' long. We used a shaft lathe and a machine to feed flux-filled stainless wire. It is important to maintain the proper angle of the welding head to achieve proper overlap of the beads of weld. It is also critical to maintain a constant correct tangential speed of the surface of the workpiece, and the feed of the lathe apron that holds the fixture. You also have to thoroughly remove the slag from the previous bead before you lay another bead against it. Otherwise you'll encapsulate the slag in the weld, which causes all kinds of problems(some of which you guessed). Occasionally, we would have minor 'inclusions', which we would expose during the machining process. When we approached finish size(say, +.040" to +.060"), we would dye penetrant check the o/s journal. If any pits were 'developed', we would die grind the inclusion out until the hole was gone and then fill in the hole with solid weld. And repeat until it was right.
Yes, preheating is a good idea.
Air cooling should be slow and done by slowly turning the crank in the machine lathe.
Yes, the inclusions can adversely affect the crank.
If you had problems with rust(that you can see) on the surface before, you can have more problems with rust(that you can't see) in the new pits.
Will any of these things cause you problems down the road? Who knows? How will it be used? It doesn't sound like an ideal job, but it might be OK.
Just curious, why didn't you have it sprayed-up, or even chromed?
fglmopar@aol.com