Col, that "last resort" - sometimes referred to as a "1 number, tool, fine adjustment, for the use of" has come jolly close to being a preferred option in what is now turning out to be yet another sorry saga?!
I suppose the very notion of cutting gears by hand was probably bound to fail if the truth be known, and it should come as no surprise that it has indeed proved problematic, although not for any of the expected reasons !!
A great puzzle that has been vexing me is an extremely odd tendency of the gears to run sweetly on the bench, then completely jamb up after only a few test operations?! I could guess, but not prove that the gearbox was becoming twisted when attached (deep inside the boiler) to the bulkhead? Each time it happened, everything had to be dismantled for further investigation. Trimming various "suspect" teeth seemed to sort the issue, but each time only temporarily.
I felt that one possible answer was to fit an extra, fourth spacer in the small remaining corner of the box immediately adjacent to the potentiometer:
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There was not really quite enough room for the bolt and collar, but after shaving a thin layer off the plastic knob there was an even line of daylight showing when it was all reassembled.
Worked fine on the bench again... but not for long...
Then a thought occurred:
All the teeth are profiled with a taper, so it is the basic law of physics that determines that when one set on the large lever pushes another on the small wheel the energy generated wants to travel in a line of least resistance - rather than turning at right angles to rotate the wheel !!
Also, being an old, once upon a time, serious cyclist, and therefore quite familiar with chain sprockets, should have known all along about the dynamics of engaging a small gear on the hub to a large bottom bracket - and having to stand on the pedals when forgetting to "shift" !!
Making the frame more rigid might divert some of the energy from trying to push the potentiometer outwards into the business of turning the wheel?
Some hope! That silly plastic knob must be the culprit then?
After the umpteenth dismantling, a hole was drilled in the box cover and another in the centre of the small wheel, then a tapered brass pin was pressed firmly in the gear to make a free running axle, thus ensuring that the distance between the axis remained constant.
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All set and powered up again, the new mods still looked reasonably pretty, and worked fine...
BANG !!
The energy couldn't go where it used to, so went somewhere else instead: It found the weakest link - in this case the aluminium shaft and bearing surface inside the potentiometer itself!
Lets face it, a little potentiometer like the one used here is usually only required to control volume and such like, by being twiddled (with even pressure) twixt someone's thumb and forefinger - and definitely
NOT by a hard and unyielding set of metal cogs!
Replacing the potentiometer simply won't cure the fundamental design problem.
In utter desperation, and in order to avoid any temptation to apply that heavy hammer, I put the engine and stuff away on the shelf and slumped in front of the telly.
While watching (if that's the right word?) some completely meaningless nonsense, endlessly re-cycled plot, sci-fi film that was little more than a whole load of pretty, flashing lights, an idea suddenly sprang into my mind:
I am terribly sorry if I disappoint anybody, but it has absolutely nothing to do with zapping aliens!
It is nonetheless a cunning plan!!....
Pete.