Ridgerunner
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How thick is the adapter plate, 3/8" or 1/2" ?
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But when it's a laser job, it's programmed once, for one plate, then as many plates pasted on a sheet of steel as possible. You'd still have the chamfering to do, but it would be a viable way to lessen costs in the future. You'd be hard pressed to get low costs on intial development of anything.I have a fair number of parts built for the work I do, as a general rule of thumb having something machined or welded costs about $25 per operation, regardless of how you do it. Manual machining takes more time, but the time is cheaper. CNC, waterjet, laser, etc. takes less production time, but more setup / programming time, and the time on the machine is a lot more expensive. You don't get much of a price break until you are talking about 100's of parts, where you get into dedicated setups and tool and part changers.
I count about 35 operations (and at least 2 setups) on one of those plates so $220 a plate sounds like a deal to me....
Who is badmouthing anyone?In atankerdads and 100dollormans defence, I build this same wheel. I have been in the metal fab business for almost 30 years. 220-250 dollars for the plate is COST!!!! I know everyone here in this hobbie would love to find a cheaper way to mod. these wheels. We are all up for new options on this matter. So, unless you have designed and built your own adapters, you do not have the right to badmouth. There are those that "do". And, there are those that wish they could do. Those that wish, post what they think they can do with no facts to back it up. It is what it is! Stop wasting energy badmouthing and put some thought into finding a cheaper way! Please, try your idea yourself to see if it will work before posting a bunch of worthless treads. My hat is off to you 100dollarman and atankersdad! Job well done!
In atankerdads and 100dollormans defence, I build this same wheel. I have been in the metal fab business for almost 30 years. 220-250 dollars for the plate is COST!!!! I know everyone here in this hobbie would love to find a cheaper way to mod. these wheels. We are all up for new options on this matter. So, unless you have designed and built your own adapters, you do not have the right to badmouth. There are those that "do". And, there are those that wish they could do. Those that wish, post what they think they can do with no facts to back it up. It is what it is! Stop wasting energy badmouthing and put some thought into finding a cheaper way! Please, try your idea yourself to see if it will work before posting a bunch of worthless treads. My hat is off to you 100dollarman and atankersdad! Job well done!
A large number of the posts on this tread are negative. Every adapter that is being built, that I know of, is using state of the are tooling and processes. The laser does not cut to the tolerances they claim. The laser does remove a lot of material which saves time and tooling. But, it still has to be machined. Many of these posts are an insult to the builders intelligence. Like I said earlier, we are all looking for a better deal. If you come up with a better way, build it. Then, post it.
What kind of precision are we talking here? Is .0006 to .0010 good enough with no Laser scale, on a multi axis machine? Come on, we're talking about a wheel center here, not parts for the space shuttle, but hats off to the OP for getting it done.
The stock wheels have pressed centers though. MUCH stronger than flat plate.Someone posted earlier about using thinner plate. The thinnest plate that will hold up to the deuces weight is 3/8". Rock crawlers use thinner plates. But, most of their units don't even weigh 1/3 of what a deuce does.
I think what's more important is the location of the wheel-stud holes, relative to one another. If those are off, lugnuts aren't going to stay tight. But that's the thing, by whatever process these are made, assuming it's automated, I don't think holding acceptable tolerances should be much of a problem.I can't imagine the balance of the plate being that critical. The big tires you would be running would be at least a few ounces out of balance anyway. If you can get a 48" tire to dynamic balance within .5 ounce you're the God of tires.
Um, I think he used that "remark" to try and illustrate a point. Maybe I'm wrong, but that's how I read it. Rat4Spd may be a butter bar Army Officer, but "back in the day" he was a highly trained nuke machinist mate on a sub. Very small pool of people are smart enough to pull that off. I think that qualifys him to give an opinion on tolerances.was the space shuttle remark really necessary?
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