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> Cooling fan woodruff key, Crank is damaged
malcolm2
post Feb 25 2023, 06:44 AM
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Have only run maybe 4 gallons of gas thru a new rebuiltengine. Ran on the bench and recently installed. My cooling fan came loose.

Woodruff key is damaged along with the slot in the crank where it sits. Hub too.

Is there a way to suitably repair the crank without total engine removal and teardown ?
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930cabman
post Feb 25 2023, 06:52 AM
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QUOTE(malcolm2 @ Feb 25 2023, 07:44 AM) *

Have only run maybe 4 gallons of gas thru a new rebuiltengine. Ran on the bench and recently installed. My cooling fan came loose.

Woodruff key is damaged along with the slot in the crank where it sits. Hub too.

Is there a way to suitably repair the crank without total engine removal and teardown ?


How did this happen? Depending on the level of damage to the crank, it could get ugly. New hub, no problem, new fan, no problem Can you send a pic or two
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malcolm2
post Feb 25 2023, 07:40 AM
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I can't imagine that this will be JB Weld kinda fix....

I am not sure about the HOW. The O-ring from a rebuild kit was very flat, squished, when I removed it. It is also gouged. Don't know if the gouging came after tho. As I torqued nuts and bolts on this engine, I marked the head with a paint pen. This bolt had the mark on it. Some how came loose.



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malcolm2
post Feb 25 2023, 07:41 AM
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moved the light and zoomed in.

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malcolm2
post Feb 25 2023, 07:43 AM
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barefoot
post Feb 25 2023, 07:57 AM
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Just trial fit a new woodruff key it the slot to see if it fits tight, if so, no crank mods needed. I bent one also cause the flywheel wasn't torqued enough during cam break-in
Put in new key and all was fine
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malcolm2
post Feb 25 2023, 08:04 AM
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QUOTE(barefoot @ Feb 25 2023, 07:57 AM) *

Just trial fit a new woodruff key it the slot to see if it fits tight, if so, no crank mods needed. I bent one also cause the flywheel wasn't torqued enough during cam break-in
Put in new key and all was fine



Dang Doc, That is the best diagnosis I could have imagined.... But are you being facetious?


* Playfully jocular; humorous.
* Given to wit and good humor; merry; sportive; jocular.
* Characterized by wit and pleasantry; exciting laughter.
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Bartlett 914
post Feb 25 2023, 08:17 AM
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QUOTE(malcolm2 @ Feb 25 2023, 08:41 AM) *

moved the light and zoomed in.

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It looks like the pulley was loose. The key only locates the position of the pulley. It is the taper that does the holding work (mostly). Make sure the crank and opening of the pulley are smooth, clean and free of burrs
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malcolm2
post Feb 25 2023, 08:27 AM
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Yes, the pulley was loose. ALT belt vibrating like crazy, vibrating other tin around it. I heard it first.

The close up looks like the key slot is really raised up, but, to the touch, it is not. In this case there is a hub that is what is attached here. The key did some damage in the slot of the hub.

I do have a 2nd, undamaged hub. Fan is fine.

What is the groups thoughts on the o-ring source? I found that size is 28 x 3. I can get a large assortment of metric sizes from Amazon for like $7 vs AA has 1 for $5.25 then $7 shipping. Pelican is about the same, but they will take 9 days to find the part and pack it up.... crazy.
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Dave97
post Feb 25 2023, 08:35 AM
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I had the same thing happen, except the fan came loose after at least 10,000 miles.
Are the threads in the crank OK? Does the bolt feel tight in the crank? I had to drill out and tap the crank to a larger size. A couple of suggestions:
Clean up the crank and lap the hub to the crank.
Jb weld a new key. Your old key is probably worn
When you get it together check top dead center with relation to the fan marking, this may have changed. A little bit off at the crank get bigger off at the fan. Dave
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malcolm2
post Feb 25 2023, 10:15 AM
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QUOTE(Dave97 @ Feb 25 2023, 08:35 AM) *

I had the same thing happen, except the fan came loose after at least 10,000 miles.
Are the threads in the crank OK? Does the bolt feel tight in the crank? A couple of suggestions:
Clean up the crank and lap the hub to the crank.
Jb weld a new key. Your old key is probably worn
Dave


Luckily, for me, I am just in the garage revving and setting the carbs and timing and heard the awful vibrating and tin rattle. So I think the only damage here is the key slot and the key. I have a couple old 66mm cranks leftover from other projects, so I rounded up 2 keys.

Oh yeah the key is now "S" shaped.

With the key out, i assembled the hub, fat washer and bolt. It threads fully into the crank easily by hand. Not loose and not wobble.

Lapping will be easy. Good idea. Ok to leave the seal in to do that?

What does anyone think about thread locker on this bolt? Medium, High??? or Hell NO!!! I never know for sure when locker is a bad idea.
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mgphoto
post Feb 25 2023, 10:17 AM
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New key tack welded to the crank. JB Weld could create a bigger problem.
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malcolm2
post Feb 25 2023, 11:09 AM
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QUOTE(mgphoto @ Feb 25 2023, 10:17 AM) *

New key tack welded to the crank. JB Weld could create a bigger problem.


what more trouble could JB Weld cause here?


I would struggle to weld the tiny key to the crank and protect everything from the welding while all still installed, then file down the weld to a point that the hub would slide on.

If it was all out of the engine and on a table, I might give it a try.
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Superhawk996
post Feb 25 2023, 12:05 PM
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First up - let’s talk about how this is designed.

The key is only there to align the fan to the crank so that timing marks are in proper location. The key isn’t there to resist any significant shear / torque force.

The fan hub is held to the crank by the taper and having sufficient clamp load on it to keep the hub in TIGHT interference around the whole taper. A taper like that can carry a lot of torque provided there is uniform contact around the whole diameter of the taper. This is the way many machine tools operate via taper fit (R8, CAT 40, Morse Taper, etc.)

There are two reasons yours came loose

1) you didn’t torque it properly and didn’t have enough clamp load when it was first installed to create a good interference fit in the taper.

2) your taper was damaged to some degree already with a high spot somewhere. Without proper interference around the whole taper, it can only carry a fraction of the torque it is designed to carry. Also it may begin to wobble on the high spot further accelerating its demise.

What to do?

If there is any chance of this being reliable, you need to ensure the taper doesn’t have a significant high spot. Either at the damaged key slot or elsewhere.

I would lap it and use some Prussian Blue to ensure that the taper is making contact everywhere and to correct it if needed.

Then reinstall using the proper torque with a torque wrench.

If they key slot is damaged so much that it won’t hold a key, JB weld or tacking welding the key aren’t going to help - you will have some variability in where your fan ends up in relation to the crank but it won’t be huge as long as there is a key there. This will cause some variability later on setting timing. Example: 30 degrees at the fan may only be 27 degrees or perhaps it could be 33 degrees at the crank. You get the idea. You can eventually find the sweet spot but there will be a little more trail and error setting timing.

Thread locker is useless. Once the taper has been properly installed onto the crank, the bolt technically doesn’t do much. It’s like a tie rod end. Once it is torqued intro the steering arm, you should (in theory) be able to remove the nut and throw it away. Of course no one does this - keeping the nut in place serves as a factor of safety to keep it from dropping out completely should it somehow loosen. It is for this reason that tie rods rarely come with castle nuts and cotter pins nowadays. Same principle in play here.
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930cabman
post Feb 25 2023, 12:11 PM
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I might dress down the material proud of the taper on the crank, inspect the tapered bore, clean everything good and try some prussian blue to ensure you have a decent contact area. I would stay away from any "metal patch" and a new key for sure, it does resist the pumping action of the fan
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Superhawk996
post Feb 25 2023, 12:20 PM
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QUOTE(930cabman @ Feb 25 2023, 01:11 PM) *

it does resist the pumping action of the fan

Negative

The interference taper is the only thing resisting torque.
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porschetub
post Feb 25 2023, 02:28 PM
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QUOTE(malcolm2 @ Feb 26 2023, 02:41 AM) *

moved the light and zoomed in.

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Thats pretty serious damage (IMG:style_emoticons/default/sad.gif) ,looks like it may have happened before as someone has dot punched the crank in some insane attempt to fix the problem which in turn only made the issue worse.
The taper fit of the crank/hub is a precision fit and this one may take a lot of "lapping" to get that fit back again and due to the damage in the key area the replacement key will be a poor fit and it will be inclined flog loose unless the taper is restored to 100%.
Another problem maybe getting the key to stay put when the hub is refitted ,sorry to sound negitive but its not a quick or guaranteed repair .
Cheers and good luck.

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malcolm2
post Feb 25 2023, 03:37 PM
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As I did some lapping for about 45 minutes and cleaned it off, I noticed the "pits" on the taper too. I don't see me getting down thru them.

This is a used 71mm crank a friend gave me. He had checked it out, but IIRC mainly the bearing areas....
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Superhawk996
post Feb 25 2023, 05:08 PM
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Don’t worry about pits below the surface, make sure all high sports are gone and that you have the vast majority of the taper in contact with the hub.
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930cabman
post Feb 25 2023, 05:14 PM
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Also get some prussian blue to ensure there is a high percentage of contact. Why would anyone center punch the tapered portion of the crank?
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