Hi everyone
I am making some suspension rocker arms for a single seater. Do I need to mount them on bearings or can I use a bush of some sort?
Thanks
Dan
[Edited on 12/5/14 by dan8400]
JPSC cars used to be on bushes and were changes to roller bearing to reduce wear and cope with the excessive forces going through them.
By excessive I mean more than required. Do a search and you will see that inboard suspension and rocker arm style trick stuff has its faults.
These are what I want
http://img832.imageshack.us/img832/350/ra15.jpg
I have this chassis. Bought it second hand (although it's NOS). Can't get hold of the company that made it for parts though. So I am unsure
how the rockers are bushed/bearinged up
Thanks
Dan
Most Fury's are on nylon bushed rocker arms. Problems have arisen where the pivot has seized/corroded; One of mine went tight after the first
year. Adding a grease nipple and regularly checks and service cure that. 6 years of use and I've had no further problems.
Some have been converted to needle roller bearings, though there are reports of them failing prematurely, as the range of motion in the rocker is
limited and the load is constantly on the same bearing.
So by adding a grease nipple you can use nylon bushes no problem?
Which grease do you use? I have a grease gun
Thanks
Dan
The image you picture is just a 'rocker' rather than a 'rocker arm' (the latter tends to imply a rocking wishbone, a la Sylva or
Lotus 25).
That arrangement tends to develop some axial thrust, which needle rollers on their own can't cope with.
You need to use either a taper roller bearing (which tends to be quite heavy/bulky), or a combined needle roller/needle thrust bearing (eg the
Nadella), which are expensive, hard to source (though you can get
separate needle roller and needle thrust bearings and use them in combination) and tend to develop 'flat spots' through excessively loading
just 2 or 3 of the needles, or else you use DU style shell bearings and thrust washers and replace them regularly as a 'service item'.
Nylon bushes, as used on the rocking wishbones of some (most?) Sylvas and Fishers won't last two minute on a rocker (pushrod/pullrod) set-up.
You pays yer money, and you takes yer choice... as bi22le suggests, there's no perfect solution.
I have seen the nadella bearings and, yes, they are very expensive
Did you look at picture I posted? Just wondered how they mounted that. Just looks as if it's bolted straight through the chassis
Not saying that would work just trying to fathom out how they've done it
Thanks
Dan
quote:
Originally posted by Sam_68
The image you picture is just a 'rocker' rather than a 'rocker arm' (the latter tends to imply a rocking wishbone, a la Sylva or Lotus 25).
That arrangement tends to develop some axial thrust, which needle rollers on their own can't cope with.
You need to use either a taper roller bearing (which tends to be quite heavy/bulky), or a combined needle roller/needle thrust bearing (eg the Nadella), which are expensive, hard to source (though you can get separate needle roller and needle thrust bearings and use them in combination) and tend to develop 'flat spots' through excessively loading just 2 or 3 of the needles, or else you use DU style shell bearings and thrust washers and replace them regularly as a 'service item'.
Nylon bushes, as used on the rocking wishbones of some (most?) Sylvas and Fishers won't last two minute on a rocker (pushrod/pullrod) set-up.
You pays yer money, and you takes yer choice... as bi22le suggests, there's no perfect solution.
I take it something like this is no good?
http://www.bearingboys.co.uk/OB101316_Plain_Oilite_Bearing_Bush-3654-p
Thanks
Dan
quote:
Originally posted by dan8400
So by adding a grease nipple you can use nylon bushes no problem?
Which grease do you use? I have a grease gun
Thanks
Dan
Ok no problem.
Thanks
Dan
quote:
Originally posted by dan8400
Did you look at picture I posted? Just wondered how they mounted that.
Thanks for that Sam
Thanks
Dan
quote:
Originally posted by dan8400
I take it something like this is no good?
http://www.bearingboys.co.uk/OB101316_Plain_Oilite_Bearing_Bush-3654-p
Thanks
Dan
Good info Sam. Thanks