TonySoprano
Computer
- Sep 3, 2003
- 6
I'm not an engineer, as will be quite evident when I pose my question
. I'm sure this forum actually contains my answer but my lack of an engineering background prevents me from interpreting it properly. All that said, I'll plow forward.
I'm attaching a drive-pulley, for a belt driven supercharger, to an OEM crankshaft pulley. I understand that ideally bolts should be loaded in tension, not shear. I have a diagram to illustrate most of the various parts I'll refer to but it won't allow me to hotlink the image.
In this diagram, although not clearly pictured for some reason, the OEM crankshaft pulley is fastened to the crankshaft boss (11-411) with four 6mm fasteners. The supercharger kit replaces the circled spacer (11-408) with a thicker spacer, and four longer 6mm fasteners, to space the supercharger drive-pulley out from the crankshaft pulley (11-371). In the diagram you can see the holes in the spacer for the four 6mm pulley fasteners, and you can just make out a fifth hole to accomodate the drift pin that is pressed into the crankshaft boss.
Now here is where my perceived problem lies - the drift pin that is pressed into the crankshaft boss is sufficiently long enough that it goes completely through the crankshaft pulley, and even the thicker spacer that replaces the OEM 11-408 spacer. However, it is not long enough though to go through, or even reach, the supercharger pulley. I think that means the shear forces imparted by the supercharger pulley are left solely to the clamping ability of the four 6mm pulley bolts. Is that correct? The pulley attachment bolts are only torqued to 8-13 ft-lbs. That doesn't seem like a lot of frictional force to overcome before the pulley bolts are in shear.
If my assumptions are correct, what would be the better solution? -
a) drill and tap the crankshaft pulley boss (11-411) so that I can use larger pulley attachment bolts (8mm) and thus higher torque values on the fasteners.
b) use a longer drift pin, or add an additional pin that is long enough to also locate the supercharger pulley.
Thanks in advance for any input.
I'm attaching a drive-pulley, for a belt driven supercharger, to an OEM crankshaft pulley. I understand that ideally bolts should be loaded in tension, not shear. I have a diagram to illustrate most of the various parts I'll refer to but it won't allow me to hotlink the image.
In this diagram, although not clearly pictured for some reason, the OEM crankshaft pulley is fastened to the crankshaft boss (11-411) with four 6mm fasteners. The supercharger kit replaces the circled spacer (11-408) with a thicker spacer, and four longer 6mm fasteners, to space the supercharger drive-pulley out from the crankshaft pulley (11-371). In the diagram you can see the holes in the spacer for the four 6mm pulley fasteners, and you can just make out a fifth hole to accomodate the drift pin that is pressed into the crankshaft boss.
Now here is where my perceived problem lies - the drift pin that is pressed into the crankshaft boss is sufficiently long enough that it goes completely through the crankshaft pulley, and even the thicker spacer that replaces the OEM 11-408 spacer. However, it is not long enough though to go through, or even reach, the supercharger pulley. I think that means the shear forces imparted by the supercharger pulley are left solely to the clamping ability of the four 6mm pulley bolts. Is that correct? The pulley attachment bolts are only torqued to 8-13 ft-lbs. That doesn't seem like a lot of frictional force to overcome before the pulley bolts are in shear.
If my assumptions are correct, what would be the better solution? -
a) drill and tap the crankshaft pulley boss (11-411) so that I can use larger pulley attachment bolts (8mm) and thus higher torque values on the fasteners.
b) use a longer drift pin, or add an additional pin that is long enough to also locate the supercharger pulley.
Thanks in advance for any input.