Rick4070 wrote on Jan 21
st, 2016 at 9:42pm:
Well, I got a set of plans from the archives, the first set somehow went on a walkabout, and I never received them.
Laurie was kind enough to send me a second set, which arrived safely.
I have had them enlarged to full scale at my local copy shop, they looked at me strange when I started checking the plan dimensions against my dial calipers...
Real close to right on, although the lines are pretty "thick."
Now I have had a thought after looking at the plans, I am a pretty fair machinist, and could, over time, and after scrapping lots of parts, probably do this, but, being as I have no examples to look at, and see exactly what is what, I am wondering if purchasing a set of castings from Shiloh would give me a head start.
I don't know what they would cost, I got a response back today after inquiring, that parts castings are available, and to call the foundry.
Any thoughts, pro or con on starting out with a set of castings???
No doubt they'd give you a big head start and may also cut down on possible errors - how much, I couldn't say because I've never been down THAT road.
I'm about 95% done my Highwall action from those plans and a rough estimate of my time spent would be roughly 400 hours.
Probably 100 or more hours spent in AutoCAD drawing and re-drawing things. Actually, my second attempt because I made a fatal error at about 50 or 60 hours in and had to start over. Caused in part by lack of detail and partly by me just forging ahead when I should have thought things through more before starting the spindle.
Surely, there's lots of advantages in starting with castings -- but then you did say you wanted a challenge. Starting from scratch would definitely be a challenge.
PM me if you like, I don't mind sharing notes.