Brians Slinky Machine

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Brian, by developing this further you could put together an awesome Rube Goldburg machine!
 
Brian, I have to hand it to ya!! It looks great, runs great, and to top it all off a unique project all around. Job well done!!
 
Brian,

Great job, it had me a bit like watching a tennis match with my eyes trying to see what was inside the spring on each slink.
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Best Regards
Bob. :)
 
Now that is cool. And in Christmas spirit Brian had Santa do the dialog.
:big:
Tim
 
You just never realize what you are lacking until you see it! :D

Great idea put into motion Brian! :bow:

Rick
 
Brian,
Awesome work man. But do you realize you have rendered the staircase obsolete with this mighty machine :big:

Cheers,
Phil
 
brian thats a cool machine stupid question how did you make that flywheel from round stock or sheet it looks like about a 1/4 " thick if from sheet I assume you used a rotory table very nice would like to no how to try and make them thank you art
 
artrans said:
brian thats a cool machine stupid question how did you make that flywheel from round stock or sheet it looks like about a 1/4 " thick if from sheet I assume you used a rotory table very nice would like to no how to try and make them thank you art
Artrans--The slinky pulley (its not a flywheel) was cut from 3/8" aluminum plate. I coated the plate with layout dye, and layed out the hole pattern with my old drafting compass. I roughed it out on the bandsaw--first cut out square, then nipped off the corners of the square at 45 degrees. My bandsaw has a 3/4" wide blade, so it doesn't cut out circles very well. I drilled the 1" diameter holes on my big old drill press, because they are cosmetic only---they have no real function . I drilled and reamed the 3/8" center hole on my mill.--The centerhole is critical, as it must be very square to the plate face so that the pulley doesn't revolve in an elipse. Since the 6" dia. pulley was too large to hold in my chuck, and I didn't want to use stand-offs on a faceplate, I scrounged around my scrap pile untill I found an adapter I had made one time for a Chev V8 waterpump nose. I machined the face of it down untill I had a 3/8" hole to fit perfectly through the centerhole in the peice of plate. I then drilled 4 small holes in the plate to accept 5/16" bolts and bolted the aluminum plate to the adapter. I mounted the adapter in my 3-jaw chuck on my lathe, then machined the outside diameter of the roughed out plate to the required profile, and "faced the exposed side. Then I undone the bolts, flipped the plate over, and "Faced" the other side.--I will attach a picture of the adapter and a detail drawing of the pulley.---Brian
drivenpulley.jpg

adapterhub-3001.jpg
 
artrans said:
brian thats a cool machine stupid question how did you make that flywheel from round stock or sheet it looks like about a 1/4 " thick if from sheet I assume you used a rotory table very nice would like to no how to try and make them thank you art
Art, also check out this thread-- a different way to skin the cat: http://www.homemodelenginemachinist.com/index.php?topic=1809.0
 
Very nice build, I could watch that thing all day.

Watching the video, I thought you were going to say you borrowed your daughter's slinky, not her camera. Sorta weird a man owning a slinky but no camera! LOL

Scott
 
I heard on the radio the other day that the inventer of the Slinkie, Betty James just died at the age of 90.
Regards,
Gerald
 
OK Tin, now you've got me going. Every time I drop something on the floor :-[, I'll be looking for some new invention :eek:. I think I just cut my productivity by 50% :big:

Cheers,
Phil
 
Brian, would you please post a pic of the Skinly machine completed, I have been doing the copy and paste and would like to have the finished photo in there, Please, Please, Please and thanks, Lathe Nut
 
lathe nut said:
Brian, would you please post a pic of the Skinly machine completed, I have been doing the copy and paste and would like to have the finished photo in there, Please, Please, Please and thanks, Lathe Nut
SLINKYMACHINEFINISHED002.jpg

SLINKYMACHINEFINISHED003.jpg
 
Thanks, thanks, thanks, now I am happy like a dog with two tales, I really appreciate what you have done in sharing with all of us, take and we are ready for the next project, will be looking at the flyball governor, Lath Nut
 
Brians Slinky Machine, Brian made the copies for a friend of mine who is a retired machinist and a good one, this is what me made, have a video of it if I can figure out how to post it, the machines lives on, we all thank you, Lathe Nut
Slinkymachinetwinengines.jpg
 

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