Having now used the Tracy/Bruce seals (I bought
them from Tracy, but I know they are Bruce's baby), I can see the
best way to assemble them is to superglue them, just like I have always
done with the factory stuff. The earlier 1202-11-300A 3mm apex seals
come with a little piece of rubber to take the spring pressure off the
end piece. However, if they are second hand, and you don't
have the little bits of rubber, so there is no other option but to glue
them.
Same principle as the factory two piece 2mm
N35-11-C00C seals for the REW engines. They come factory glued! So
do the 12A RX7 seals, as well as the 3 piece early model 2mm
seals. If they are not glued, the problem is when you are putting
the centre housing on, the end pieces can pop out as the shaft is
lifted. Not nice!! The end pices then become "devil
bits" . You end up down on your hands & knees saying "where the
devil did that bit go??"
The trick is to scrupulously clean the
surfaces with some carby cleaner/alcohol/MEK/Acetone (whatever liver poison
takes your fancy!). Then lightly scuff the ends of the apex seal
and the end piece with some 400 - 600 wet&dry. Then glue the end
piece just ever so SLIGHTLY up from the top of the main seal. This
puts it out a bit as well. Not much superglue is needed. Just ONE
drop is sufficient!!
I normally lay the seals down on a piece of
plastic. A LIGHT mist of WD-40 or similar will act as a release compound
on the plastic. The superglue doesn't seem to stick real well to
polythene, and if one is careful, none gets on the plastic
anyway.. Only a SMALL drop is needed. Saves getting it on
your claws too!! You will only get it on your claws if you are a
messy child and use too much!! As the housings are torqued, the
glue will break. As George remembers when I showed him, if it's
done correctly, you can actually hear the end pieces click
loose as the bolts are tightened.
To insert the apex seal, I normally remove
the corner seal, slide the apex seal down about half way, then
install the spring(s). Then slide the whole box & dice
down, being careful not to notch the apex seal on the edge of the
trochoid. The spring(s) need to be compressed and the seal held off the
trochoid a bit (The factory seals are really soft - Bruce's seals are
like glass in comparison). I then re-install the corner seal and
rubber plug, and make sure it rides up and down on the spring,
checking that it depresses below the side of the rotor face.
Anyway guys, that's my little canvas bag
full of pesos for today.
Cheers,
Leon
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Tuesday, February 08, 2005 12:45
PM
Subject: [FlyRotary] Re: Engine
assembled
Jesse,
Yep it can be messy alright. That's why I asked
the question.
The real question is how do you get the apex
seal in that tiny slot when your finger's stuck permanently to
it?
George ( down under)
Oh yeah; this reminds, how do you get the
damn stuff safely off your finger when you get too much glue on in too
much a hurry ?
jofarr
What I have been shown is to superglue the
end piece to the apex seal, with spring place under it, and with
the corner seal in place, gently but firmly slide the apex seal ( one
piece now) and spring into
place.