If this is your first visit, be sure to
check out the FAQ by clicking the
link above. You may have to register
before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages,
select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below.
Originally posted by DiverRay Mason,
I (gasp) held the disk down by hand!! And no, it wasn't that hard, There is a LOT of mass, so it didn;t try to spin very much.
Ray
you are pretty big, you have met me, do you think it's dangerous for me to hold it down?
"a good man knows his limitations" dirty harry
History
85 Yamaha FJ 1100
79 yamaha xs1100f
03 honda cbr 600 f4
91 yamaha fzr 600
84 yamaha fj 1100
82 yamaha seca 750
87 yamaha fazer
86 yamaha maxim x
82 yamaha vision
78 yamaha rd 400
I don't have a drawing of the pattern to send. The pattern is pretty easy to set up, however.
If you notice, the top hole lines up with the previous set's bottom hole. This makes it easy to create a template that locates on the rotor's center hole and only has locations of one set of holes.
I center punched a set of holes, rotate the template (indexing with the last (bottom) hole and punch another set.
To make sure the right side and left side would match. I started from a rotor mounting bolt hole.
ok then what was the radius of your sweep,
if i measure the straight line distance from cl of the first hole to cl of the last hole of a set of holes, i can place this measurment on the sweep, and space out the holes equally.
you have 12 sets of hole per discs right?
then i would put a clock pattern on the disc with straight lines radiating from the rotor's center, starting the first set of holes from a rotor bolt hole.
then i'll use this pattern and gap adjacent lines from bottom of one to the top of the next line; ccw for the right rotors and cw for the left rotor.
There are 12 sets of holes. The top and bottom holes are on the hour (every 30 degrees). The rest of the holes are on the second (every 6 degees).
The top hole is centered on the top wear line and the bottom hole is centered on the lower wear line of the rotor. The remaining holes are centered between the top and bottom holes and where the 6 degree angle intersects. This is what creates the arc.
I drew the lines in with a pencil to make the visible to the camera. You are looking at the template as it would apply to the right side.
Remember to start the pattern from one of the rotor mounting hole at 12 o'clock so the right and left side will match. You will notice that one of the mounting holes is centered on a rotor spoke. That is where I started.
Yes, the rear rotor is just like the right front rotor.
Originally posted by Ken Talbot Mason, try the pdf template files on this link I just checked it out and did not have any trouble.
As you scan the article, you'll see I had no trouble drilling the rotors with plain, garden-variety cheap drill bits. Mind you, I did use a fairly decent sharpener to change the bits to a better split point, and ket the bits sharp. The the rotor material is not difficult to drill if you use a low feed speed, cutting fluid, and a freshly sharpened split-point drill bit.
hey ken,
do all drill sharpeners have the ability to creat a split tip on bits?
"a good man knows his limitations" dirty harry
History
85 Yamaha FJ 1100
79 yamaha xs1100f
03 honda cbr 600 f4
91 yamaha fzr 600
84 yamaha fj 1100
82 yamaha seca 750
87 yamaha fazer
86 yamaha maxim x
82 yamaha vision
78 yamaha rd 400
Only sharpeners that do 135 degree split point are professional models, way too expensive. However with the years of experience I have doing that I can do it on a bench grinder. Get some old drills and practice, you can probably do it too. If you buy them that way and don't wear them out too much you can put a new edge on them pretty easily.
You can't stay young forever, but you can be immature for the rest of your life...
'78E "Pathfinder" Show bike...
Lovingly restored by Dave Delzell
Drilled airbox
Tkat fork brace
Hardly mufflers
late model carbs
Newer style fuses
Oil pressure guage
Custom security system
Stainless braid brake lines
do all drill sharpeners have the ability to creat a split tip on bits?
I'm only familiar with the Drill Doctor units. Their models 500 (1/2" max) and 750 (3/4" max) will both do split points. I've got a model 750 on its way for my BL and it cost US$119 plus shipping. The lowest price I've seen online for a model 500 is about US$88. They also have a model 350 that can be had for about US$59, but it will not do split points.
Originally posted by Ken Talbot Mason, try the pdf template files on this link I just checked it out and did not have any trouble.
As you scan the article, you'll see I had no trouble drilling the rotors with plain, garden-variety cheap drill bits. Mind you, I did use a fairly decent sharpener to change the bits to a better split point, and ket the bits sharp. The the rotor material is not difficult to drill if you use a low feed speed, cutting fluid, and a freshly sharpened split-point drill bit.
since this will be my only drilling project, how much cutting fluid will i actually require? 8oz? 4oz?
"a good man knows his limitations" dirty harry
History
85 Yamaha FJ 1100
79 yamaha xs1100f
03 honda cbr 600 f4
91 yamaha fzr 600
84 yamaha fj 1100
82 yamaha seca 750
87 yamaha fazer
86 yamaha maxim x
82 yamaha vision
78 yamaha rd 400
I use a 1/8" punch for just about everything I do, but that's really because the next biggest size in my toolbox is dull. Like a lot of tools, you just want to be sure your punch is sharp enough so it doesn't bounce or skate all over the place when you give it a whack. You don't need to keep hitting it till it has produced a 1/8" crater either. A crater between 1/32" and 1/16" will be plenty if you are using split point bits.
I wonder why you would put so much effort into drilling discs that are scored. If they are badly scored they may be no good anyway unless there is enough thickness to clean up and still be thick enough.
You can't stay young forever, but you can be immature for the rest of your life...
'78E "Pathfinder" Show bike...
Lovingly restored by Dave Delzell
Drilled airbox
Tkat fork brace
Hardly mufflers
late model carbs
Newer style fuses
Oil pressure guage
Custom security system
Stainless braid brake lines
you know that i am bored, and i am not buying new ones, they stop fine, i'm doing this mostly for show, i will ride 5k miles a year, so i'll look good for 5 ....maybe....
"a good man knows his limitations" dirty harry
History
85 Yamaha FJ 1100
79 yamaha xs1100f
03 honda cbr 600 f4
91 yamaha fzr 600
84 yamaha fj 1100
82 yamaha seca 750
87 yamaha fazer
86 yamaha maxim x
82 yamaha vision
78 yamaha rd 400
Comment