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chicago die casting 888 Grinder/Buffer Bronze bushing - Oiler Question

sometoyotaguy

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Feb 10, 2012
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I picked up this homemade grinder setup awhile back, and am trying to clean it up. The oilers don't seem to have a hole to the inside of the bushings. Should there be a small hole there, or is the oil supposed to soak through?



 
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wayne55

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Oct 28, 2010
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I think the oil is supposed to just soak into the bronze bearing.
 

vero09

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Jan 25, 2015
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yes Should there be a small hole there
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sometoyotaguy

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If it is a bronze bushing it is likely sintered and porous allowing oil to seep into it. From what I've seen and read it absorbs and makes the bronze slick. Large poured babbit bearings are different, they are a softer metal to direct wear and require grooves to be scratched in them to distribute oil.

What type of oil or grease do you plan on using? I've researched that for my sander and haven't found much.

I wasn't sure what was best, but was using some sewing machine oil to try to get things flowing. Everything was pretty dry, and terribly dirty when I bought it.

I'll probably move to 3 in 1 oil or 5w-30 in a oil can for longer term lubrication.

Should I use some acetone on the inside to clean out the pores?
 

2oolhound

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Yep, sintered bronze bushings absorb oil through osmosis. It's fairly high speed so I wouldn't go thicker than 30 wt. If you drip a drop or two of light oil on the outside of a sintered bronze bearing you'll notice the absorption action before long. I've seen guys cut scroll grooves in them on the drilled ones on cam bearings but you want to have a good stream of oil feeding them. If you didn't think it was getting enough oil you could drill a tiny hole through and use a dremel to cut a blind scroll groove that stopped before the edges of the bearing. Scroll grooves are usually X shaped across the hole or spiral shaped.

I looked into making my own but decided not to after I read you have to have the sharpest smoothest cutting action to cut sintered bronze as the pores can be blocked from too dull a tool. I'm not sure the best way to clean them other than a solvent bath or maybe boiling them??? You can't use crocus cloth, hones etc as that will plug the pores. I'd just make sure the shafts are smooth with no burrs and call it good.
 
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