In the middle of a 5 lug conv. all the prices I have seen are around 300 for redrilled rear hubs and thats plus core. so I started thinking and a drill press is only 200. Ques. is has anyone ever tried this? I presume all one needs is alot of time on setup and it cant be that tough.
Thoughts?
Im doing the same thing, and Fat performance in Orange, CA is significantly cheaper. I think they charge 40 bucks a hub minus studs.
www.fatperformance.com
I havent done it, but my concern would be: how you are going to hold the hub while drilling. Most people use a Bridgeport mill with a monster holding table and some kind of tool steel fixture. If you get it wrong.. you will eat wheel bearings and lose fillings...
B
accuracy will suffer unless you have a proper fixture with the new bolt pattern and hardened drill guides/bushings
i wouldn't recommend it at all since the rear hubs are not hubcentric and the wheel relies on the studs for it's location. if you are off too much, major wheel balancing problems will happen, that is if you can get the wheel mounted onto the studs if too far off or if the studs are not perp. with the hub surface
the spot drilling on the far side can be done with a drill press as long as you can safely hold the part.
I wouldnt do that to my car.. and if I did, I would kick myself every day for trying to be cheap.
Dont do it yourself, its just one of those things you just dont do yourself.. ( like Knife edgeing the crank. or regrinding the cams...)
Get someone else to do it who knows what their doing and has done it before.
Andrew
And, you have to wonder how good a 200 dollar drill press is. If I had a 10,000 dollar bridgeport sitting in my garage ("if"), I would only start to consider it, but without quality machinery and the knowledge to do it, you are bound for disaster.
I just took mine to a local engineer. Doesn't need to be someone who works with cars for that matter. It a very straight forward job for any machine shop. Should be inexpensive. Re-drilling, spot facing and pressing in the new studs was about 70 quid , maybe $100 back then.
Hard bit will be getting the buggers off the trailing arm.
I have to salute the "have a go" attitude though
I did a set on my six a few years back.
What I did was draw up a Round drill template on AutoCad. Od was same od as rotor,Id was same size as hub,so it would slip over nicely.
I eyeballed the template to tranfer punch the holes between the vanes in the rotors.
Removed the template,laid the rotor flat on the drill press,and drilled right thru.
When done I chamfered all holes top & bottom to try to minimize cracking.
With the drill template.2 rotros took less than 30 minutes,start to finish to do.
Also,the material that rotors are made of is very soft,there no need to lock the rotor down while drilling.I held it by hand.
Ron
Attached File(s)
FRTRTEMP.dwg ( 24.68k )
Number of downloads: 42
forgot to mention.
The templates were lasered out.
Ron
for the main motor, I bought a VFD (varible freq. drive, this takes in 220v 1 ph and outputs 3 phase) and for the stepper motors, I'm going to re-wire the transformers to run off of 220 single phase...not a big fan of static converters, or at least not for a CNC machine
Dave,
You are right,
I misread the post.
My Bad.
Ron
Send them to me. I'll do them for $80.00 plus $2.00 per stud if you want them studded. That's a "Ben" Plus Shipping.
thats a good price...you should jump on it
Andrew,
The VFD, is an inverter, it mimics the 3 different legs, what is nice is the controller can change the frequency, so instead of 60hz, I can slow down or speed up the motor with just a few clicks of a button
the VFD cannot be used on transformers, it is only for motors. The static converters cheat by using resitors and caps, but they are really not a true 3phase. Rotary converters are basicly a 3phase motor that is turned into a generator to supply the 3phase, these work really well, but can get expensive and they suck up more electricity.
Mueller,
Cool. Did you not have a variable speed head on your mill, or did you just want to be really cool? How much do VFD's run?
Andrew
I did my fronts on a bench top drill press. I used my wheel spacers for a templet. I did the rears on the car. Used the spacer as a templet. I used one of the factory 4 hole bolts to align spacer, and the pin that slides out of the end of my digital caliper to check the spacer (which was machine cut) alignment to the rotor all around. I have a round table on the drill press. I could easily spin the table and drop the bit into the next hole without moving the drill head. Worked for me. I had to bring the fronts to a machine shop to spot face the back side of the fronts. the web was in the way on the head on the lug stud.
Mike
Have the city run three phase into your garage. You will be a happy camper when that lathe shows up and Huge TIG machine shows up.
I drilled mine but haven't done anything with them. Just grab the machinest handbook and get the XY coordinates for a five hole pattern and locate off one of the factory bolt holes. Then start reading that nice DRO that I am sure you have and start drilling. Very Carefully.
okay, my school has a bazillion dollar mill that i can use for this project. the thing accepts "mastercam" files. otherwise id have to do it all by hand (dila gauge, etc etc)
can anyone draw up a 5 x 130 rear hub file for me? i dunno how to do that, is "mastercam" a widely used file type? the mill accepts these on a floppy disk.
also, does anyone have a diagram of the rear hub (blueprint)
thanks.
mucho appreciated. if this can get done, i can run a couple of sets of hubs for basically free.
I live in mastercam. Talk to me on AIM. My sn is matt7320 .
Ask Mueller, he seems to do some wierd stuff with the computer and programs..
I think..
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