I do believe we have come to the end of the milling that we are doing on the rotary table. Both the slots are finished as far as I can tell at the moment, so we need to have a look, have a measure, and think about the next steps.
Monday, 2 March 2026
Model A - changing setup
Saturday, 28 February 2026
Model A - still milling
It's been a busy week what with one thing and another but one thing that did happen was a delivery from Tracy Tools - 2 milling cutters and a slot drill which enabled me to finish the first slot and start the second.
This is how it looks in place:
And for the record, from the other end of the kickstart travel:
Next we are back on the lathe to mill the long slot that goes most of the way around the shaft:
That picture shows three 0.5 mm passes.
This next one shows progress after another three 0.75 mm passes:
Wednesday, 25 February 2026
FH - 30 miles in an Hour
Having taken the wrong turn, we rode down into Salthouse and took the steep road up to RAF Bard Hill. We turn off to visit the remains of the RAF radar station. Bard Hill was established in 1941 as a ship tracking and Chain Home Low radar station and stands on a bluff above the village. There's not a great deal left here now other than a blast wall, concrete base and the foundations of the huge antenna tower. There's a memorial in Salthouse Church to a Lancaster crew who had the misfortune of flying into one of the antennae in the middle of the night and later crashed at Langham airfield.
Back down the hill, which the Ariel's full width hubs handled pretty well, we stop for a minor carburettor adjustment at a regular watering hole, The Dun Cow. The pub garden looks out over the salt marshes towards the sea and is a lovely place to spend the afternoon on a fine day. If it's windy, go and huddle indoors - this can be a wild & rough place, much like the Huntmaster's idle. We spend the first half of the trip moving the idle air screw up and down trying to get the engine to keep running.
We ride along the edge of the salt marshes and the beginning of Norfolk's famous bird reserves. we pass through the village of Cley, to buy some cake for later, with its windmill which used to look out over a huge harbour from Tudor times, long since silted up. Twisting through the village we come out the other side and head up the hill towards Blakeney.
Blakeney has a lovely harbour, pictured elsewhere on the blog but we're not going down there today. Whipping through the village on the main road, we travel along the coast through Morston to the village of Stiffkey. We stop by St. John & St. Mary's church, known for its slightly wayward vicar who's life inspired Michael Palin in the film 'The Missionary', and who met his fate after his ecclesiastical career finished as a rather unsuccessful lion tamer.
Next we're off to find the iron age hillfort known as Warham camp, which we know to be on the Wells & Walsingham Light Railway, just inland from Wells-next-the-Sea. We find the village of Warham but we've completely forgotten how to get to the earthwork from the village and instead take the next road to Binham to take a picture of a beautiful priory in the morning sun:
Another station to end the trip - Weybourne station, which is about 2.5 miles from Holt and another 2.5 miles to Sheringham - seen here with the marvellous English Electric Class 37 locomotive D6732 on a sunny day last year. The loco was built at Newton le Willows in 1960, so it's a bit younger than the Huntmaster.
Monday, 23 February 2026
Model A - milling the kickstart shaft
Milling starts with the realisation that I only have long-series end mills, and the largest one is pretty blunt.
We crack on anyway, to get a feel for it, test the setup, and try out the rotary table.
Shortly after I took this picture, and having spent some time sharpening a cutter, I broke the 3/8" mill by feeding it too hard. I pressed a dovetail bit into service and got a lot more material out.
Friday, 20 February 2026
Model A - Kickstart Shaft, setting up for milling
After a turn on the railway and with the grandchildren coming for the weekend there's not much time for workshop stuff, but I'm inching closer to finishing the setup for milling.
Some countersunk M6 screws have arrived to clamp the right angle plate to the cross slide, underneath the rotary table:
Using the slot that we milled a few weeks ago, we can adjust the rotary table to align with the centre of the lathe spindle:
The tap follower I'm using as a pointer here looks like it might be useful for marking out the parts of the work we are going to mill away.
A little while later, after all the preparation for the visiting little ones is done, I venture back to the workshop. I've reduced the diameter of the 2" section to the required 1.990" to match the original, and increased the length of the 1 1/8" section by about 0.040" such that it protrudes from the kickstart shaft bush by 0.020" rather than hiding inside it. I've also changed the carbide tool inserts for new ones.
I've also made a new set of clamps, but I've made them a bit big - I think we might have to do that again... That's development work for you!
























