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Dave Gingery's letters tell most of the story: "Here are a couple of sketches of the new hot-air engine project...
I've built a single cylinder engine of a similar design and it runs great.
Practically no sound or vibration at about 1200 rpm... It is a great training
project that should be appropriate for second and third year shop students...." This is a free-style design with no practical application except as a demonstration engine. However, it is not a toy engine, and the builder will gain some valuable additions to his tooling as well as acquire new skills... Aluminum castings are a major portion and the remainder is made of common water pipe, drill rod, brass rod and ordinary hardware, fittings and sheet metal. A small lathe fitted with faceplate, chucks and ordinary tooling will do the work. You will greatly expand your skill and you will end up with a mechanical marvel ..." Dave stopped by one time and fired up his prototype engine. From the outside ends of the opposing cylinders the engine is 11 1/2" long. When he fired up the alcohol burners, the engine sat there on my desk and silently started spinning. It was really something to see.
"I've killed a disgusting number of hours watching it run." This is the usual full-tilt Dave Gingery manual with all necessary illustrations and step-by-step how-to that has made his name a famous one among machine shop enthusiasts. (Engines have been built without using castings.) You get history, theory, drawings, photos, the whole thing. Another Gingery book!. A "must have!" Order a copy today! 8-1/2 x-11 softcover 76 pages No. 1302 ... $12.95 |
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