- Get a pair of pliers, a rectangular piece of soft wood (like pine), -- 1x4 will do, a sacrificial axle and a sharpie.
- Take a throwaway axle, insert into wheel, find the area where the axle comes out of the hub. Decide on your desired gap and add that space just beyond the protrusion point. Mark it with a sharpie.
- Draw a perpendicular line in the middle of your block, cutting across the 'short' dimension.
- Clamp the throwaway axle with the pliers, with the axle head protruding, at the mark you made on the axle. Keep it straight.
- Still holding the axle in the pliers, line the tip of the pliers up with the base of the wood, at the line you drew. Align the axle shaft with the line.
- Press down hard to make an indention into the wood. Throw the sacrificial axle away.
- Take your good axle (that you've polished) and place an alignment mark on the head. Lay the axle into the indention you've made, with the alignment mark at the 12 o' clock position. Clamp it with the pliers at the edge of the wood. Place your other hand over the one holding the pliers and apply gentle, steady downward pressure. Less is more, and it's better to underbend than over. If your bend is not deep enough, place it back into the indentation with the mark at 12 o' clock, re-grip, bend further.
- Save the wood, as you can use it to bend future axles without having to make a new indentation.
[/QUOTE]Vitamin K said:Some folks like to clamp the nail in a vise and then put a screwdriver against the head and tap gently with a hammer.
mritter said:I also need information regarding how to align wheels for rail riding.
Thanks in advance!!!
First clamp the DFW axle in a vise very close to the groove. Next place a screwdriver in the notch on the axle shaft and tap very, very lightly on the screwdriver with a rubber mallet. You want to bend this axle to about 3 to 6 degrees. This is not an exact science, but the axle needs to be bent to steer the car.
Obsessedderbydad said:mritter said:I also need information regarding how to align wheels for rail riding.
Thanks in advance!!!
What do you mean info on aligning wheels for rail riding. You should only be bending your DFW and drilling a cant on your rear wheels. No alignment required. Only tuning your steer. If you're bending your rear axles, you're going to have to go to the derbytalk forum to find out how to align your car. No offense, but we dont promote rear axle bending.
5KidsRacing said:Vitamin K said:Some folks like to clamp the nail in a vise and then put a screwdriver against the head and tap gently with a hammer.
HurriCrane Racing said:If you have no other way to bend an axel, clamp the axel in a bench vice just below where you want the bend.
DerbyJP said:HurriCrane Racing said:If you have no other way to bend an axel, clamp the axel in a bench vice just below where you want the bend.
So where exactly SHOULD we want the bend, right where the axle would exit the car body?
zeebzob said:Maybe we can cut this guy a little slack. after all, it was his very first post.
zeebzob said:Obsessedderbydad said:mritter said:I also need information regarding how to align wheels for rail riding.
Thanks in advance!!!
What do you mean info on aligning wheels for rail riding. You should only be bending your DFW and drilling a cant on your rear wheels. No alignment required. Only tuning your steer. If you're bending your rear axles, you're going to have to go to the derbytalk forum to find out how to align your car. No offense, but we dont promote rear axle bending.
Maybe we can cut this guy a little slack. after all, it was his very first post.