As some of you know, I just went back in to my motor for another gear fix. I have noticed that as I grind on the gears to bevel them, the first few thousandths of metal on the surface is extremely hard. After this initial hardness is gone, the metal underneath is fairly soft. This resulted in some really terrible looking gears that somehow were still functioning.. but I fear not for long.
So here's the deal... I have been approached for an experiment that may help anyone who ever needs to do the gear fix. I have just about exhausted my supply of gears between the sets I have done for me and the sets for others that I donated. The few I have left are the worst of the bunch and doubtfull they are even fixable. So I sit here on the street corner, rattling my cup, hoping not to get laughed at and spit on.. lol. I am hoping someone can dig into their stash of parts and find a decent set of gears they'd be willing to give me.. I would pay for the shipping. 3rd gear rarely goes bad, so I would only need 1st, 2nd, 4th, & 5th.
The experiment has to do with re-tempering the gears after being ground and making them hard again. This process unfortunately will temper the whole gear.. not just the surface.. so my fear is that the gears may be too brittle for use. The difference with this process is that it doesn't involve heat tempering that makes things very hard but brittle.. it's done cryogenically. It is completely different on a molecular scale. They use this process to harden tooling tools (Which are extremely hard anyway) and it makes them last 5 times longer than they normally would. That is a metal on metal application, which makes me hope this would work for the gears on our bikes.
It would mean going back into my motor and replacing the gears I just put in AGAIN.. along with a minimum of going back in to examine them again in the fall. (If they last that long) I was kind of "Nominated" as guinea pig to do the trial since I have been known to abuse the transmissions a bit more than most.
XSChop is the one I am working with on this. IF this works, he would be able to get this process done to a complete set of gears (All 5 gears) at a so far estimated price of $100 plus shipping. That's cheaper than you can buy just one new gear for.
I'm not much of a salesman and don't like to ask for parts (And REALLY not looking forward to tearing apart the motor again) but I would like to see if this works. Anyone out there willing to part with a set of gears to help with this?
Thanks.
Tod
So here's the deal... I have been approached for an experiment that may help anyone who ever needs to do the gear fix. I have just about exhausted my supply of gears between the sets I have done for me and the sets for others that I donated. The few I have left are the worst of the bunch and doubtfull they are even fixable. So I sit here on the street corner, rattling my cup, hoping not to get laughed at and spit on.. lol. I am hoping someone can dig into their stash of parts and find a decent set of gears they'd be willing to give me.. I would pay for the shipping. 3rd gear rarely goes bad, so I would only need 1st, 2nd, 4th, & 5th.
The experiment has to do with re-tempering the gears after being ground and making them hard again. This process unfortunately will temper the whole gear.. not just the surface.. so my fear is that the gears may be too brittle for use. The difference with this process is that it doesn't involve heat tempering that makes things very hard but brittle.. it's done cryogenically. It is completely different on a molecular scale. They use this process to harden tooling tools (Which are extremely hard anyway) and it makes them last 5 times longer than they normally would. That is a metal on metal application, which makes me hope this would work for the gears on our bikes.
It would mean going back into my motor and replacing the gears I just put in AGAIN.. along with a minimum of going back in to examine them again in the fall. (If they last that long) I was kind of "Nominated" as guinea pig to do the trial since I have been known to abuse the transmissions a bit more than most.
XSChop is the one I am working with on this. IF this works, he would be able to get this process done to a complete set of gears (All 5 gears) at a so far estimated price of $100 plus shipping. That's cheaper than you can buy just one new gear for.
I'm not much of a salesman and don't like to ask for parts (And REALLY not looking forward to tearing apart the motor again) but I would like to see if this works. Anyone out there willing to part with a set of gears to help with this?
Thanks.
Tod
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