I would just like to say

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@DanClarke
I was musing just the other day, why not put a sturmey on the crank of a two wheeled bike and another at the back and get rid of all the messy fragile derailleurs. Loads of ratios and a straight drive train. Your doing much the same? Have I found a niche in the market, or missed summink?
Yes & No.
Intermediate gearboxes using IGH hubs have been used quite often, but usually on commercial products and with a high cost.
Mine is home-made and the SA 8-Speed is a robust hub with a 325% gear range.
You can also now get what are called "pinion gears" in the crankset (https://pinion.eu/en/ ) as well as rear wheel IGH hubs and then there's the Schlumpf drive.
Its all out there. But very expensive.
My mate got me the 8-Speed at a cycle jumble for £12 so my messing with it won't really hurt my pocket.

:D
 
Espresso.. it's ancient and the pump is probably not making the pressure anymore. They don't last forever!! Wonder if i can put a new pump in?
Don't ask me, I thought they made the pressure bt boiling the water and letting the steam pressure build up, which then forces itself out through the coffee.
We have one expresso machine which makes tiny amounts of p^*s weak coffee and at least 6 of these.
51e58tFuDHL._AC_SL1317_.jpg

(Oops, sorry the image is so big, just copied it and pasted it off the Amazon catalogue!)

In various styles and sizes. All stainless though and all can go in the dishwasher despite what the peeps doing reviews say.
Makes it just a strong as we like it, so not strong enough for some, maybe. Could make it stronger if we reduced the amount of water.
Can't believe the prices of some of them so, didn't realise W spent that much on the big ones!:eek:

so Oldskool and no elctronix to go wrong. Just need a new sealing ring once in a blue moon.:):):)
 
Yes & No.
Intermediate gearboxes using IGH hubs have been used quite often, but usually on commercial products and with a high cost.
Mine is home-made and the SA 8-Speed is a robust hub with a 325% gear range.
You can also now get what are called "pinion gears" in the crankset (https://pinion.eu/en/ ) as well as rear wheel IGH hubs and then there's the Schlumpf drive.
Its all out there. But very expensive.
My mate got me the 8-Speed at a cycle jumble for £12 so my messing with it won't really hurt my pocket.

:D
Thinking of the awful, accident you had on a previous trike, and you wondering how to secure the ends of those bolts.
How bad would it be if one or more of them came undone when you were at speed?:eek::eek::eek:
Must admit I wouldn't trust threadlock. I'd put a blob of weld on em. That'd keep em tight, wouldn't it? ;)
 
Thinking of the awful, accident you had on a previous trike, and you wondering how to secure the ends of those bolts.
How bad would it be if one or more of them came undone when you were at speed?:eek::eek::eek:
Must admit I wouldn't trust threadlock. I'd put a blob of weld on em. That'd keep em tight, wouldn't it? ;)

We use loktite 638 to fix the threaded connections on our pumpsets, 1" bsp.
Is designed to fix bearings on smooth shafts I think but is bombproof, only a blow torch will make it let go. Goes off real quick mind you. I'm told that the patent has lapsed, so others like Bondtite have the same stuff with a similar number, but much cheaperer..
 
Well yes we do, cos it's hardwood.
they doesn't like hardwood.
Like the Irish woodworm, that was found dead half-way through a brick! (Other nations are available to be insulted!)

I was going to ask how you know it was Irish but then re-read it o_O Eating bricks aint good for wood worms
wonder if it had covid n lost his taste :confused:
 
Don't know what they have done to the forum but all my notifications via email are now turning up in my spam folder. I have tried marking them as "not junk" to try to persuade my email thingy (Thunderbird) to stop doing this but to no avail.
I am wondering if this is happening to others and that this may be why it is so quiet on here at the moment?
They must have some characteristic that makes them look like spam.
I of course have no idea!
 
I have reported on this thread before on my slow and painful progress as a trainee metal-mangler.
As some of you have seen, I have been trying to make a mid-drive gearbox out of an 8-Speed bicycle hub where the input comes in on the hub's normal sprocket, but instead of the hub having a rim and a tyre affixed to it I am adding an "output sprocket" to drive 2 rear-wheels via a secondary chain. 8-Speed gearbox? That'll do nicely sir.
There are commercial trikes in the USA doing exactly this, but I am trying to make my own in my very modestly equipped little workshop.
Here's what happened today...... :D
I am delighted to report that the first "trial fit" of all of the parts together has been achieved.
However, like a Spacex launch it may all fly to pieces on its first outing. :)


Today I drilled the bolt-circle for the output sprocket. 9 Bolts! (who is this madman?).

Actually, I just transferred the pre-drilled bolt-holes that were already in the sprocket onto the top plate with a transfer punch (new toy I got yesterday).

IMG-20230420-133156-710.jpg



I used the little mini mill to drill all the 9 holes to be tapped for M4 bolts, and TBH I found it remarkably easy with the hold-down clamp and some backing Aluminium plate (to prevent drilling into the mill table).

I then tapped all the holes for M4 thread.
It was an absolute nightmare to assemble as the M5 bolts that pass up through the hub-flange are over length and so they start off trying to get through the flange and the bottom plate at and angle.
At one point I just could NOT get the bolts to pass through the flange, lower-plate and the spacer blocks and into the threaded holes in the upper plate; my heart sank and I thought perhaps I had got it wrong somehow.
But, I had put index markings on the hub and the two plates so I knew that they had been put together ok before and I just persevered.
I did get the two plates and the spacers all bolted onto the hub-flange successfully in the end.
I then attached the output sprocket to the upper plate with 9 M4 bolts, it is standing off from the upper plate by a truly ridiculous amount as the sprocket is sitting on the ends of the 6 M5 bolts.
Now I can either cut the M5 bolts off more or less flush with the top plate's upper surface and rely on threadlock to prevent the bolts from undoing, OR, put M5 Nyloc nuts on the bolts and then cut ant remaining bolt off beyond that. What do you guys & gal's think?
While this is All of the bits bolted up together, there are still things yet to be done.
When the M5 bolts are cut down I will use M4 washers to stand the sprocket off from the upper plate only by a sufficient amount to ensure that the chain's side-plates are not trapped.
As you can see below the sprocket is quite high but still inside the OLD anyway and cutting the M5 bolts down will allow the sprocket to be placed close to the upper plate.

IMG-20230420-160302-284.jpg



IMG-20230420-160249-596.jpg

In closing this update I would say that it has been a hoot to make these things from raw steel plate and to such tight tolerances and have them actually all line-up and work. Yay! Go me! :D
Is that ice cream in the red bowl?
 
Don't know what they have done to the forum but all my notifications via email are now turning up in my spam folder. I have tried marking them as "not junk" to try to persuade my email thingy (Thunderbird) to stop doing this but to no avail.
I am wondering if this is happening to others and that this may be why it is so quiet on here at the moment?
They must have some characteristic that makes them look like spam.
I of course have no idea!
Yer need to tell it the email address sending the email is safe.
 
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