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Bizarre shop machinery....

cvairwerks

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I was cruising thru this video about one of my restoration projects. I thought it was pretty wild that during the war, companies were not above building bizarre and exotic machines to speed production. Got to about 14:40 in and see the 185 spindle drilling machine for part of the engine case. Yep....185 spindles turning and making holes in a single pass on the part.


Anyone got other ones they can post?
 
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drivesitfar

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CV: thanks for the video and i could have watched the entire thing and then some, but that's a huge RABBIT HOLE for this old guy that i don't want to jump in at the moment.

wonder if that tooling still is drilling holes or if it was scrapped?

pretty cool old video!!
 
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theoldwizard1

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The multiple spindle machine concept is common. Where I work we have bunches of those in a transfer line to make engine blocks, to the tune of several hundred thousand a year.

Typically, Cross made engine block lines and Lamb made cylinder head and transmission lines.
Yep ! Not that many spindles, but similar.

From a tool perspective, the trick is to making the quills strong/stiff enough not to flex and drill off location. Tool wear, especially between tools, is also an issue.
 

larry_g

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I do also believe that some of these multi-spindle drilling machines led to the development of the left handed twist drill bit. The spindles were chain geared together so 1/2 the spindles turned the opposite direction.

lg
no neat sig line
 

gearhead1

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I do also believe that some of these multi-spindle drilling machines led to the development of the left handed twist drill bit. The spindles were chain geared together so 1/2 the spindles turned the opposite direction.

lg
no neat sig line

Probably so. One the machines we have, they were all geared such that every drill in a head is turning the same direction. Cylinder boring is different, to counteract forces, one boring spindle is one direction and the other spindle is the other direction.
 
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