Brass throttle blades?
Discussion
Unless you can point to an actual example brass is indeed exclusively used for throttle butterflies. I've never seen anything else used in either carbs or TBs and we've made throttle bodies for 15 years. Like these.
http://www.pumaracing.co.uk/TBs.jpg
Mild steel would be stupid. It rusts like buggery.
http://www.pumaracing.co.uk/TBs.jpg
Mild steel would be stupid. It rusts like buggery.
Edited by Pumaracing on Monday 25th July 10:26
The clearances are pretty tight; I suspect the butterfly material would have to have similar expansion characteristics to the throttle housing to prevent either sticking or lots of leakage when closed under extremes of temperature.
FWIW the throttle bodies on some bikes have two sets of throttles, one in the normal location controlled by the throttle cables and one the upstream of the injector controlled by a servo motor. The upstream butterflies appear to be made from an aluminium alloy, and the downstream ones are brass.
FWIW the throttle bodies on some bikes have two sets of throttles, one in the normal location controlled by the throttle cables and one the upstream of the injector controlled by a servo motor. The upstream butterflies appear to be made from an aluminium alloy, and the downstream ones are brass.
Edited by Mr2Mike on Monday 25th July 21:38
Boosted LS1 said:
Have you any advice you could share regarding the machining of the blades and tolerances in the choke area?
There's really no point making them from scratch when you can buy Weber ones for a few quid each unless they absolutely have to be a non standard size. Then you just have to drill and tap your spindle for securing screws at the appropriate places to match the butterfly. The choke would just be bored to the nominal size of the butterfly i.e. 45mm or whatever to within a couple of thou.Stainless steel is expensive and can be very hard to machine, especially trying to take the final small cuts to get something to an exact size. If it starts to work harden during machining then you're pretty much buggered unless you can finish it by grinding. No one in their right mind would use it for throttle butterflies.
Brass is easy to machine, it cuts very cleanly and precisely to an exact size with a sharp tool, it's more than strong enough for the job, it doesn't corrode much and it's proved to be the ideal material for a century or more. Why reinvent the wheel?
Aluminium would be ok and is similarly easy to machine but in an aluminium bore it would have a greater tendency to wear or gall against the bore surface. Tribology mandates than you ideally use different materials in contact with each other to minimise wear. Usually one hard material against another softer one such as a hardened steel gudgeon pin in an aluminium piston, a soft white metal bearing against a steel or iron crank journal or a rubber oil seal against a metal shaft. What you then find to your surprise is the harder material usually wears faster than the softer one but that's another story.
Brass is easy to machine, it cuts very cleanly and precisely to an exact size with a sharp tool, it's more than strong enough for the job, it doesn't corrode much and it's proved to be the ideal material for a century or more. Why reinvent the wheel?
Aluminium would be ok and is similarly easy to machine but in an aluminium bore it would have a greater tendency to wear or gall against the bore surface. Tribology mandates than you ideally use different materials in contact with each other to minimise wear. Usually one hard material against another softer one such as a hardened steel gudgeon pin in an aluminium piston, a soft white metal bearing against a steel or iron crank journal or a rubber oil seal against a metal shaft. What you then find to your surprise is the harder material usually wears faster than the softer one but that's another story.
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