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Modern Machine-Shop Practice Part 237

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SQUARING A VALVE.--A method not uncommonly pursued in setting a valve is to what is called _square it_ before trying it.

This squaring process consists in so adjusting the length of the eccentric rod that the valve travels an equal distance over or past the steam edge of each steam port; but since the valve does not, when set to give equal lead, travel equally past each port, therefore the work done in squaring a valve is all thrown away, and may result in altering the eccentric rod from its proper length to an improper one, necessitating that it be altered back again in order to set the lead right.

The proper method is to adjust both the length of the rod and the position of the eccentric, by testing the lead at once, lengthening the eccentric rod to increase the lead at the crank end, or vice versa.

Each alteration of eccentric position may render necessary an alteration of rod length, or vice versa, each alteration of rod length may render it necessary to alter the eccentric position, hence the lead should be tried at both ends of the cylinder after each alteration of either rod length or eccentric position.

In vertical engines the weight of the crank shaft causes it to wear the bottom bra.s.s or part of the bearing box the most, thus lowering its position, while the eccentric straps and pins wear most in the same direction; hence the wear increases the lead at the head end of the cylinder when the latter is above the crank, and at the crank end when the crank is above the cylinder.

When the cylinder is above the crank, the weight of the piston, cross head and connecting rod is counterbalanced at the end of the downward piston stroke by giving the crank end port more lead; but when the cylinder is below the crank, it is the head end port that must be given increased lead to prevent a pound or knock, or to allow for the wear downwards of the parts.

After an engine is started, the pet c.o.c.ks should (if they are not automatic) be closed as soon as dry steam issues, and if this cannot be seen, it may be a.s.sumed to occur after the engine has made about 20 revolutions.

The parts that will then require particular attention are the crank pin, main bearings, cross head guides and the pump, if there is one. The former must be kept properly lubricated, so that they may not get hot and the cylinder lubricator (which is usually placed on the steam pipe) must be set to self feed properly.

If the crank shaft bearings should begin to heat, loosen the cap bolts and lubricate more freely, or, if it is at hand, some melted tallow may be applied with the oil, as a heavier lubricant may stop the heating.

The crank pin requires the most attention and is the most difficult to keep cool and to examine, because of its circular path rendering it difficult to feel it. This may be done, however, in two ways, first by standing at the end of the engine bed and gradually extending the hand, until the end of the rod meets it as it pa.s.ses, and, second, by placing the hand on the connecting rod as near to the end of the guide bar as possible where its motion is diminished and moving the hand towards the crank pin, by which means the end of the crank pin may be approached gradually.

If the end of the rod is hot, the engine speed should be reduced or the engine should be stopped so that the connecting rod key or wedge may be eased back and the oil feed made more copious. Then, after the engine has been stopped for the night, the bra.s.ses should be taken out and any rough surface, either on the bra.s.ses or on the pin, smoothed down with a file.

Hot crank pins may occur from several causes, but by far the most common ones are from improper oiling, or from the engine being out of line.

A heavier oil will often stop, or at least modify, the heating, but its cause should always be discovered and remedied.

Engines that are used out of doors or are exposed to temperatures below the freezing point must be left so that steam leaks may not condense in any of the parts or pipes and burst them.

Leaky throttle valves may, for example, cause water to acc.u.mulate in the steam chest and freeze, perhaps bursting the steam-chest cover.

To prevent this let the engine stand with the crank just past the dead centre, so that the steam port will be open, and open the waste water c.o.c.ks on the cylinder, and also on the steam chest if there is any.

If the cylinder is jacketed all the drain c.o.c.ks for the jacket should also be opened.

A leaky check valve may cause the steam to condense in the pump and freeze it up solid or burst it or the pipes. To avoid this, open the pump pet c.o.c.k.

Open all the drain c.o.c.ks on the heater and water pipes.

If the water is left in the boiler all night it is liable to freeze.

To prevent this leave a well banked fire.

In extreme weather remember that on exposed engines the oil, if of such quality as sperm or lard oil, may freeze and prevent feeding until the bearings get hot and melt the oil.

To prevent this use a lighter oil, as, for example, a mineral oil. Or, in case of freezing, melt the oil in the cups with a piece of wire made red hot while getting up steam in the morning.

A good plan to prevent oil from freezing and yet have a good quality of oil is to mix two parts of lard oil with one part of kerosene.

Portable engines should stand as nearly level as possible, so that the water will stand level above the tubes and crown sheet of the fire box.

When feed water is drawn from a natural supply, as from a stream, the strainer at the end of the suction pipe should be clear of the bottom of the stream, where it is liable to be choked.

When the exhaust steam is used to feed the boiler, do not open the valve that lets the exhaust steam into the feed-water tank until a little while after the engine has started, because the oil fed to the cylinder will otherwise pa.s.s into the feed tank and may cause priming.

In engines having plunger pumps for feeding the boiler it is essential to keep the plunger properly packed, as a leak there impairs or stops the pump from acting.

A gauge gla.s.s may be cleaned when the engine is cold by shutting off the c.o.c.ks leading from the boiler and filling the gla.s.s with benzine, allowing it to stand two hours; the benzine must be let out at the bottom of the gla.s.s tube, and not allowed to enter the boiler.

In starting a new engine be careful to let the bearings be slightly loose.

At first give only enough steam to just keep the engine going, and keep the hand on the throttle valve ready to shut off steam instantly if occasion should require.

PUMPS.

Pumps are divided into the following cla.s.ses:

Lift pumps, in which the water flows freely away from the pump, which performs lifting duty only.

Force pumps, which deliver the water under pressure.

Plunger pumps, in which a "plunger," or "ram," as it is sometimes termed, is used.

Piston pumps have a piston instead of a plunger.

A double acting pump is one in which water enters into and is delivered from the pump at each stroke of its piston or plunger, or, in other words, one in which, while water is being drawn in at one end of the pump, it is also being forced out at the other.

A single acting pump is one in which the water enters the pump barrel during one piston or plunger stroke, and is expelled from the pump during the next stroke, hence the action of the suction and of the delivery is intermittent, although the pump is in continuous action.

For very heavy pressures plunger pumps are generally used, the plunger being termed a _ram_.

The advantage of the plunger or ram is that it gives a positive displacement, whereas in a piston pump a leaky piston permits the water from the suction side to pa.s.s through the leak in the piston, to the delivery side.

Piston pumps possess the advantage that there is less difference between the contents of the pump and the displacement than is the case in plunger pumps.

The displacement of a piston pump is found by multiplying the area of the pump bore by the length of the piston stroke.

The displacement of a plunger pump is less than the above, by reason of there being a certain amount of clearance or s.p.a.ce between the circ.u.mference of the plunger and that of the cylinder bore.

It is desirable to keep the clearance s.p.a.ce in all pumps as small as the conditions will allow, especially if the pump is liable to lose its water.

Losing the water means the falling of the suction water back into the source of supply, which may occur when the engine has to stop temporarily, and there is a leak in the suction valves.

[Ill.u.s.tration: Fig. 3322.]

Rotary pumps are those in which the piston revolves, an example of the most successful form of rotary pump being shown in Fig. 3322, which is that used by the Silsby fire engine.

The advantage possessed by a rotary pump is that it keeps the water pa.s.sing through the suction in a continuous and uniform stream, as it has no valves.

It may therefore be run at a high velocity or attached direct to the engine shaft.

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Modern Machine-Shop Practice Part 237 summary

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