Sign up to occasional emails

Showing posts with label balancer rebuilder. Show all posts
Showing posts with label balancer rebuilder. Show all posts

Monday, 1 February 2016

Why can't you fix my damper, crank balancer?

Why can't you fix my broken damper, crank balancer?

There are some jobs we just cannot make a custom repair for, and there's a lot of reasons.

  1. COST:- The design of the damper means that when it is worn out, it cannot be re-manufactured by hand without enormous cost to you, the customer. If cost is not an issue for you, we can put the time into our best effort at getting you a newly functioning damper. Because John is an aircraft fitter he can create all new parts if the damper is in such poor condition that it cannot be re-used. 
  2. DESIGN:- Like a lot of mechanical parts, automobile and truck harmonic dampers were not created to be dis-assembled and re-manufactured. 
  3. MANUFACTURE:- Manufacturing processes used to make them aren't conducive to repairing them. Parts like crank pulleys/dampers are made to a designated price; cheap and fast is the way they are made in the past 50 years. Recent dampers are made in temperature controlled robot factories using techniques humans cannot replicate.

Making parts disposable and only replaceable with new OEM parts protects manufacturers from law suits. It also guarantees that consumers must buy newer vehicles when old vehicles become obsolete.
Catch with this? Once all the old parts are sold your vehicle is off the road for lack of one small but crucial part - the crank pulley or harmonic damper.
That is where we can usually help you.

1930s Packard damper
What is it like inside?

So what are our specific difficulties?

Time.

Many of our customers need the part yesterday. This is because they checked the harmonic damper last in their maintenance schedule. We cannot make up for time our customers have lost by not sending the part to us in a timely fashion for repair.
Unforseen glitches in the repair process can take a lot of time to resolve. 
At HDR we take the time to give you a great result.

Dis-assembling the part to find out how it was made without breaking it.

Often the majority of time spent on a new job will be this seemingly simple task. If the delicate cast iron of the hub or inertia ring is broken it is really hard to repair so we don't break it. 
Complex dampers with flimsy light parts and large areas of rubber molded around internal metal components are almost impossible to dis-assemble without damaging the parts.

Parts are too worn out.

Some dampers are so worn out that there is no regular fix and the worn or broken parts must be repaired by hand. Cast iron welding, keyway cutting, new springs, inertia rings and hubs can all be made but at a cost of time and money for you the customer.

Unusual manufacture: 

We see crank pulleys from 100 years of automotive history. From Bugatti to Packard and Rolls Royce; GM and Ford to Hyundai, Renault, Datsun and Skoda. And everything else in between.
Because each crank pulley has been designed to dampen the vibrations from one particular style of crank shaft they are all unique. Functionally they do the same job, but the reality is that for every engine there is a different damper designed by a different group of engineers to solve specific harmonic vibration issues with the engine in the development stage. 
So unless we get a run of dampers to repair from the same year, make and model of engine, every job is very different and requires different skills. 
It's a dual hazard and joy of working in a custom rebuilding industry.
Successful difficult rebuild: Renault 05

We can't duplicate the way it was made to re-assemble it so that it works the way it was designed to work for your engine. 

Sometimes there is no alternative way to assemble it.

Over the past nine years we have developed a lot of different techniques using new rubbers, special bonding agents and the like to solve re-manufacturing issues but there is a limit to our ingenuity when it comes to re-assembling some crank pulleys.
Some components fail to:
  1. Balance
  2. Weigh the right weight 
  3. Have the inertia ring run concentric with the hub
  4. Include all the components they are supposed to contain in the space they were designed to occupy.
  5. Run the pulley belts in the correct alignment
  6. Have the timing in the correct place; 
Whatever the reasons for these issues, if they cannot be resolved it means we can't begin or complete the job. 
Toyota boat special before repair

Toyota boat special after repair

If we say we can't fix it we really mean it. 
It means that in our experience it will be uneconomic, or simply not possible to repair.

If you want us to go the extra mile, it's your call: feel welcome to have a discussion with us about your needs.

Making a completely new damper or a prototype damper for an engine which has never had a damper 

If you can afford the time and cost for us to put the time into hand crafting a completely new damper by making a new hub, inertia ring, rubbers, springs and other parts, most worn out crank pulley/dampers can be repaired so they work or alternatively completely accurately reproduced.
This could save your special engine from death in the back of the shed. 
Contact us damperdude - at - gmail.com and send some photographs of your crank pulley.
Or give us a call, we are friendly and keen to learn and share information. 00 64 7&863 3350

Check out our featured book http://quintessence.papertrell.com/id003678303/Lets-Fix-It

Tuesday, 28 October 2014

Harmonic Dampers - Who Cares? We do.

What is a Harmonic Damper? 
Why should I be bothered about it when I am rebuilding my engine?
In the eight years we have been repairing these automotive parts this is our most often heard query, even from experienced mechanics and engine rebuilders.

  • Harmonic Damper or Torsional Vibration Damper is the correct name for the crankshaft balancer or pulley which is on the front of the crankshaft of your car, bus, truck or boat engine. It absorbs critical vibrations in your engine which would otherwise cause the crankshaft to fail and the vibrations would rapidly wear out other engine and vehicle components.
  • There are hundreds of harmonic damper designs but the most common design uses a metal hub with a spigot on which the oil seal runs. On the outside of the hub is a layer of rubber and on the outside of that is an inertia ring of metal. 
  • The damper works because usually they are made from cast iron, which of itself absorbs vibrations, the rubber also absorbs vibrations acting as a spring and the inertia ring dissipates harmonic vibrations in kinetic energy and heat. 
  • The design of each damper has been engineered to match the vibrations set up by your engine. This means that just any old damper or balancer won't work on your engine, you must use the one that was manufactured for your engine.
  • Rubber tends to last only about 10 years, after then it breaks down becoming either shrunken and hard, or soft and gluey. At this point the harmonic damper ceases to do it's work and wear will occur in your engine.
  • Most engine rebuilders only consider the harmonic damper as the very last item they have rebuilt on an engine; some rebuild the engine and ignore the damper altogether. This is a mistake as if the engine needs rebuilding then likely the damper will need it too.
  • Rebuilding an engine several times because of damage caused by a malfunctioning harmonic damper can be very expensive.
Our small team are working every day custom remanufacturing to as-new or better standards Harmonic Dampers for dozens of different makes and models. 

Contact us 
  • If your engine is vibrating at different speeds
  • If you are rebuilding your engine
  • If you are a collector of classic cars and engines
damperdude - at - gmail.com


Our service isn't fast or cheap but it will provide you with many more years of comfortable safe driving in your precious collectible car, truck or boat.

Yes we are based in New Zealand and yes we do trade internationally. We accept credit cards, paypal and payments direct to our bank account.



International Fire Truck before restoration - note rubber distortion

Buick 1950s before restoration

Buick after restoration with custom made rubbers


Cadillac after rebuild with new hand laid rubbers inside
Copyright Harmonic Damper Rebuilds Ltd 2019
29 Russell Street Waihi
3610 New Zealand