In the last installment we carefully machined a sharp 15-degree bevel on the edge of the ball seat. Now it is time to seat the ball to the valve seat. The ball we use is a precision stainless steel bearing ball. It has very close tolerances and a hardness approaching Chinese Arithmetic. It should do fine.
To seat the ball, set the valve body on a flat hard surface. Drop in a ball. Use a length of brass rod as a drift punch. Get everything lined up and give the drift a pop with a hammer. Here is the set up.
The ball will make a slight spherical impression in the ball seat. The question is: how hard do you hit the drift with the hammer? I dont know how to describe it, medium light(?) If done right, the ball will make an air tight seal if you suck on the bottom of the ball seat with your mouth. There should also be a very slight indentation left on the seat edge by the ball.
The valve stem comes next. It is a straight turning job from 1/8 brass rod. Turn the stem between centers on the lathe. Drill a #60 hole in the end of the rod to a depth of about 1/16. Follow up with a 5/32 drill bit to cut a shallow V notch in the end of the stem to center the ball over the valve seat. The #60 hole serves as a center hole for the lathe tailstock.
The final part to make is the stem adjuster nut. This nut bears against the valve spring and adjusts the valve to open at the desired pressure. Pressure adjustment on this valve can go from zero to total lock down.
The adjuster starts out from a short length of brass rod. Thread the rod with 1/4 x 40 for a length of 1/4". Drill a #50 hole for a smooth slide fit with the valve stem.
The safety valve drawing shows six holes, #57 in size, drilled in a hex pattern thru the nut. These are steam relief holes allow the escape of steam thru the valve body when the ball lifts. These holes are needed or the valve doesnt work. The are spaced at 60 degree intervals from the center. They lay on what is called a pitch circle. The diameter of the Pitch Circle in our case is 9/64 or .140. That puts them about half way between the outside edge of the center hole and the root of the thread.
There are a number of ways to layout and drill the relief holes.
1. Use a CNC machine.
2. Set up a rotary table or some indexing device on the mill to space out the holes on a 60-degree interval.
3. Use a drilling spindle on the lathe cross slide and index the lathe on 60-degree intervals.
4. Do a mathematical bolt circle calculation and use the X Y table on the milling machine.
5. Layout the holes by hand, center pop and drill.
Option #5 is easiest way to go and will produce a perfectly satisfactory result. But, instead of doing it the easy way, we are going to use method #4. The challenge is converting angles from the center to X Y coordinates for the milling table.
The following diagram shows the layout of the relief holes as if the stock were clamped in the mill vice. Holes #1 and #4 are easy to drill. They are simply plus and minus 0.070 from the center. Holes #2, #3, #5 and #6 require a combination of X and Y movements. It is those values of X and Y we need to find.
The diagram shows a convenient 30-60-90 degree right triangle that includes hole #2. As you know from your High School trigonometry class, the sine of an angle multiplied by the hypotenuse give the length of the side opposite the angle. In this case, the sine of 30 degrees is 0.500; the hypotenuse is 0.070. The Y distance from the center to hole #2 is 0.035. Similarly, the cosine of an angle multiplied by the hypotenuse gives the length of the adjacent side. The cosine of 30 degrees is 0.866, hypotenuse is still 0.070. They X distance from the center to hole #2 is 0.061. Since the remaining holes are equally spaced around the pitch circle, the values of Y=0.035 and X=0.061 will reach all of them.
Lets drill some holes. Clamp the adjuster nut stock in the mill vice and center it under the mill spindel. Use a center in the drill chuck to center the stock. Lower the center into the hole and adjust X and Y until center. You eye is a precision instrument and will get this right on.
Traverse the Y-axis by plus and minus 0.070 to drill holes #1 and #4. Use a center drill to spot the holes before switching to the smaller bit.
Now, using the values of Y=0.035 and X=0.061 traverse from the center to drill the remaining holes.
They came out spot on. The lead screws on my mill have a lot of backlash in them. That prevents me from simply running around and drilling the holes. I started from the center on every hole.
The last part is the spring. It is a precision stainless steel spring, with a diameter of 0.120, length of 0.250 and a wire diameter of 0.016. It has 5 full turns. The spring and ball came from McMaster Carr.
Here is the safety valve ready to set.
The final thing to do on the valve is to set for pressure. We will do that later when we fire the boiler on steam. Next time we will work on the site glass.