id is 25mm od is 75mm. i got them off alibaba so i suspect they may not be genuine although they offered me a choice of genuine or generic. All the markings on the bearings and boxes look the same as images i found on various websites selling them. i do find it a little odd that German made bearings shipped from Taiwan but i guess there are lots of machine builders in Taiwan that may use them, i did see that quite a lot of industrial printers and embroidery machines use the same bearings as our machines. if they are fake they are very good fakes as i really cant tell the difference.
I measured them up with a micrometer and they are spot on dimension id, od and thickness. i have no way of measuring run out on the bench as they need a preload on them. i guess i could stick them in the machine and measure with a dial gauge but i'm not at the point of installing them yet. The lady i dealt with was very responsive and helpful, they shipped via dhl and it only took 2 weeks. it feels kinda sketchy sending a person in a foreign country money for something but i figured i could always get my credit card company to step in if the deal went sour.
here are the generic ones
https://xrtbearings.en.alibaba.com/p...479e43d4Adesxn
here are the ones they claim that are genuine.
https://xrtbearings.en.alibaba.com/p...479e43d4Adesxn
will do Steve i hope your not too desperate for it. Im a bit of a way off doing the centroid conversion at the moment. I have the spindle motor rebuilt now, tool changer is pretty much rebuilt. currently waiting on the new gears for the transmission, ordered them over a week ago but marc at geartechnic said they are behind on shipping out orders so they wont go out until mid next week.
once i have the gearbox, spindle motor and tool changer back on the machine and have confirmed i haven't broke anything, im then going to dig into the axis, i need to check all the ball screws replace the worn thrust bearings, measure and rebuild the screws/trucks if necessary, once that is done and the machine is in tip top mechanical shape i will dig into the centroid oak conversion. my biggest problem at the minute is getting parts with all this virus stuff going on everything is taking way longer to arrive, i'm stuck at home with additional time to work on the thing and no parts grrrr....
Well i finally got round to cutting a few more videos together. im not really a fan of video editing, id rather just do it i one cut but that's hard on some of the items that take a long time to rebuild. the motor rebuild ones are pretty long and probably not very interesting but hopefully they are helpful if you even need to crack into one.
anyway here are the links. working on crunching and uploading some more vids soon.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OzNotyod9GI&t=305s
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=729Uzz8W-Gw
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1Dw-fdQ7ygg
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4HFQXiJhW14
Appreciate the pics and videos! I just bought one of these machines myself. Your "internal views" are super helpful! Amazing work on the machine it will likely be the nicest TC22 in existence once you have finished. I'm not planning to fully restore mine but I've been servicing it ahead of doing some projects with it.
I was planning on changing the gearbox oil and rebuilding the gear change actuator as it is a little slow changing gears. It sounded like when you opened up your gearbox you found it was so gummed up it really needed to be opened and cleaned vs just having the fluid changed? Any idea how much fluid it takes? The proper Mobile SHC 626 is available in quarts, gallons and naturally 5 gal pails. I was considering just filling it with synthetic ATF but the 626 is quite a bit thicker so that seems like it might be a poor substitute. It is also multiweight though so is closer in viscosity to the ISO68 once both are hot.
Ash,
Any updates on your retrofit? I just purchased a TorqCut and I'm thinking about the Centroid Oak control.
cheers,
Jim
Hello looking for a source for the way wipers for a 1999 Bridgeport Torq-Cut 3G both X axis and Y. The Way covers are made by Protec-Hema
Thanks