English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

4 answers

If you are thinking of setting up the factory.

Fork blanks is mainly drop forge, operation.

The blank is machined to specification. Most cases does not need hardening.

If you just need to make a fork, you can get the old worn out fork repaired. A metalliser can rebuilt it. Then it can be machinedand harden.

You can have it machined out of solid piece of steel and have it hardened to speck.

2006-11-11 00:25:06 · answer #1 · answered by minootoo 7 · 0 0

Drop forging OR investment casting. If the part is well designed, you probably do not need forging. You need a milling machine to face the portion that fits into the moving sleeve. And an (induction) hardening set-up to harden the same milled portion, since it will be touching a highspeed rotating sleeve.

2006-11-11 20:59:47 · answer #2 · answered by WizardofID 3 · 0 0

Milling machine, but you also have to harden the material afterward. More expensive to make the fork than to buy unless it not available.

2006-11-11 00:34:32 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

WHO DO U CALL A GIT

2006-11-11 08:30:29 · answer #4 · answered by yeshpaltomer123 2 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers