I ended up only getting an hour of work this morning, so I headed to the shop. Some careful measuring, plus the nice finish of the inside of the cylinder, led me to do the fitting by machining the piston. As mentioned, this requires a split sleeve to fit the piston rod.
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Two light passes got the piston to a nice sliding fit.
I heated the flywheel in the oven for an hour at 275*, then pressed it onto the crankshaft with two 0.010" feeler gauges between the crank disk and the bearing. When the feelers were pulled out, the assembly had just the right amount of clearance.
The last piece was the fitting to bring air to the top of the column. I cut a length of 5/16" brass rod and used my new 5C spin indexer (Tool shipment arrived yesterday.) to mill two flats to allow use of a 1/4" wrench.
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Then back to the lathe to drill a 3/32" hole 1 1/4" into the end of the rod. After that, slim down a short bit at the outboard end and thread to #10-32. Finally, an insert at an angle to form the barbs to hold the air hose.
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Here's the finished engine. I applied a few psi of air pressure and gave the flywheel a spin. It was running right away. It will run down to 2 or 3 psi and really moves at 20 or 30. I made a short video, but trying to attach it results in losing everything I've already typed.
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