Re: Harmonic Balancer
Bob -
I am an engine machinist. As others have said, yes it can be drilled and tapped in the car, but if I were you, I wouldn't try it yourself. Even I would not do it in the car freehand -- it is way too easy to get the drill slightly cocked given the position and location of the nose in the car. Screw up, and you are done.
I would pull the motor and have the crank drilled and tapped by a machinist if you have slop on the nose. First though, try a new woodruff key in the crank. Often times they get buggered if someone improperly tries to seat the balancer on the nose or if you lose one. As long as the keyway is not rounded or will not hold the key, this is your best bet at an "in the car" fix. This you can do on the car without too much aggravation.
I did do this a couple of times (to install a helicoil) on a 69 Chevelle and a 71 Monte Carlo with the crank in the car and fabricated what I needed. It was essentially a 3" round X 1/2" wide steel doughnut with a 7/16 hole drilled dead center in the middle as a guide. Three posts were gas-welded to the doughnut and then tapped on the outer ends to grip the nose. I wrapped the nose in thin copper to not bugger up the finish. These were loosely attached with a pilot down the center of the nose, fastened with the pilot in place to lock center, and then drilled and tapped without removing the guide. I also had the car up on a lift so I could appropriately support the drill. It worked fine but I had all the equipment to make what I needed to get the job done.
Good luck with your solution. If you need help, email me and I can send you plans for the tooling.... I just have to find the thing in my toolbox.... It's there somewhere but it's been 15 years since I did it!
Hope this helps --
Pat
Bob -
I am an engine machinist. As others have said, yes it can be drilled and tapped in the car, but if I were you, I wouldn't try it yourself. Even I would not do it in the car freehand -- it is way too easy to get the drill slightly cocked given the position and location of the nose in the car. Screw up, and you are done.
I would pull the motor and have the crank drilled and tapped by a machinist if you have slop on the nose. First though, try a new woodruff key in the crank. Often times they get buggered if someone improperly tries to seat the balancer on the nose or if you lose one. As long as the keyway is not rounded or will not hold the key, this is your best bet at an "in the car" fix. This you can do on the car without too much aggravation.
I did do this a couple of times (to install a helicoil) on a 69 Chevelle and a 71 Monte Carlo with the crank in the car and fabricated what I needed. It was essentially a 3" round X 1/2" wide steel doughnut with a 7/16 hole drilled dead center in the middle as a guide. Three posts were gas-welded to the doughnut and then tapped on the outer ends to grip the nose. I wrapped the nose in thin copper to not bugger up the finish. These were loosely attached with a pilot down the center of the nose, fastened with the pilot in place to lock center, and then drilled and tapped without removing the guide. I also had the car up on a lift so I could appropriately support the drill. It worked fine but I had all the equipment to make what I needed to get the job done.
Good luck with your solution. If you need help, email me and I can send you plans for the tooling.... I just have to find the thing in my toolbox.... It's there somewhere but it's been 15 years since I did it!
Hope this helps --
Pat
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