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TR2/3/3A TR3A Steering Worm - Can this be Restored?

angelfj1

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I wouldn't ask if these weren't so expensive $300.

Can this be restored? :frown:

worm2.jpg


worm1.jpg
 

Tinkerman

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Frank I bought a NOS on ebay when I was doing mine. I still see them on ebay. I'm not a machinest but my guess would be no. I'm sure some one out there can tell you. Ken Galender might be able to help you out.

Good luck, Dick
 

TR3driver

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Frank, I can't quite see enough of the critical surfaces. The important parts are the tapered sides of the groove, which is where the peg rides; and the bearing races on the ends. The damage to the outside diameter, and the bottom of the grooves, is irrelevant.

But from what I can see, mine looks worse than yours does, where it counts. I've got some other used ones, but they have bad shafts, and I decided to try the one I had rather than experiment with how to move the worm from shaft to shaft. Seemed to work out very well, except I had some residual looseness on-center. The tight spot that you are supposed to look for when adjusting the top cover has turned into two tight spots on my worm, due to wear in the center.

I don't know of any effective way to repair an existing worm. Maybe, with enough tools and setup, you could manage to regrind the groove after building it up with weld, and then harden it again, but it sure wouldn't be easy to duplicate the shape of the original groove (which is kind of important).
 

AweMan

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No doubt in my mind I could build up that worm gear with weld. I may even be able to hand grind it CLOSE to its original shape, the question is, is CLOSE good enough? I doubt it!
Machining would be the probelm. Tooling and setup time is what makes it expensive to have machine work done.
It may be time for rack and pinion for you. Unless you want Concourse look at the options.
 

TR3driver

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TR3driver said:
The important parts are the tapered sides of the groove, which is where the peg rides; and the bearing races on the ends.
I'm not sure what else to say, Frank.
 

TexasKnucklehead

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This has come up before. I have several boxes and have been able to remove the worms with a normal 3 jaw puller and the right sized shoulder bolt and pulling collar. It seems new worms can be 'pressed' back on if heated in an oven for a bit, then 'punched' to stay on. I did have to file the end of one of the shafts a little to get the worm to pull off. -I haven't tried replacing a worm yet.

https://www.british-cars.co.uk/cgi-bin/ge...040718222414282

Don't know if this helps, but it's where I'm headed...
 

TR3driver

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Thanks for the explanation and photo, Jerry. I'll save that for moral support when the topic comes up again for me. But so far I've not felt the need to dig that deep into TS13571L.

Went to the DMV to try to get some papers for it today, they were surprisingly agreeable. Apparently I'm even going to get to keep the black plates!
 

sp53

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Hi Anglefi I fixed one like that once by putting it on a Crankshaft grinding lath and using different emery paper. It came out good but it always made me nerves. The material was so hard that some of it came off in chips and flakes, but mostly just grinding sparks. My mechanistic friend who owned the lath felt the same as Randle that the critical places are actually in V groove and told me not to worry. However, I had to really work on him to even try and do the repair. The idea was kinda abstract, but he was able to chuck it up, and he commented on how hard the metal was. My concern is that the adjusting screw rides on the top of the groove, but I can get over concerned sometime. I used it just the same for now because I figured a beat up old one was better than a cheap third world one. I have had too many experiences with inferior quality. Now that I have seen the picture form TexasN, I will have to try that and perhaps rebuild mine. How difficult was it to get lose TexN?
 

TR3driver

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sp53 said:
My concern is that the adjusting screw rides on the top of the groove,
Actually, the adjusting screw rides on the top of the rocker shaft, which in turn pushes the tapered peg into the tapered groove. There should be no contact at all to the top or bottom of the worm 'threads', which is how they get so cruddy looking. The wear marks visible in the bottom of Frank's groove are from a badly worn peg, or worm, or both. If it still touches bottom after rebuilding, you should probably grind a bit off the tip of the peg.

The groove is actually a rather complex shape, although not obvious to the naked eye, neither the width nor the pitch is constant. And as noted, it's very hard. I wouldn't be surprised if it's case-hardened, on top of being a high tensile alloy.

Only way I can see to machine the groove would be a toolpost grinder, combined with a second worm to use as a pattern. You'd need a shaft to mount both worms concentrically, and a dial indicator to ride on one worm while the grinder cuts the other one, a few degrees at a time. Even then, it's going to be tough to get the shape just right, and any mistake will show up as a hard spot when turning.
 

sp53

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My stupid Randle. I cannot believe I thought that. I know better than that. I must be having one of those moments. Help
 

sp53

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I know how I thought that now. When I looked at the picture I imagined a loose adjusting shaft letting the peg pop out of the grove and chip the worm. Just kind of a small moment.
 

martx-5

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TR3driver said:
... And as noted, it's very hard. I wouldn't be surprised if it's case-hardened, on top of being a high tensile alloy.

Case hardening is just a surface hardending. The way that worm has pieces broken from it, it looks to be a tool steel (carbon, alloy) that was hardened and then tempered to a Rockwell C of 55-60. I do some hardening of parts at work (non-critical stuff), and that is the result I see when an item breaks that has a Rockwell C of 55+. Incredible wear resistance, but brittle...sorta like glass.

We have some machines at work that have wearing parts in them that were made <span style="font-weight: bold">too hard</span> and they break too easily. They all had high Rockwells. I now have them made to a Rockwell C 45-47. It stops the breakage but wear resistance is less. However, I get better longevity at the lower hardness.

This is not to say that the worm should be of a lower hardness, as in this application, it should be very hard, but that is how very hard steel acts...it breaks and chips like glass.
 
OP
angelfj1

angelfj1

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I want to thank all of you because this has been an
education for me. Also, within only hours of my original
posting I got offers from three forum members for good
used worms for a very reasonable price.

The success I have made with my project would
not have been possible without this forum. :yesnod:

fja
 

TR3driver

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You're probably right about the worm, Art, I was just guessing. But that is supposedly the advantage of case-hardening; it leaves a very hard (but brittle as you say) layer on the tougher (but softer) base.
 

TexasKnucklehead

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I worked in a steel working plant in Pa for a while to put myself through school. We had several over 1,000 ton presses with die blades to cut and punch through 1/4" cold rolled steel. These blades, though small, were very heavy, and hard. But if you dropped one, it would shatter like glass. I thought there was some "grain" to the way they were hardned. The worm gears reminded me of that hardness and weight/size. If you notice, the damage is always at the bottom of the worm. My guess is that rust and debris ends up at the bottom of a dry box and the worm/peg is forced to cut it when the wheel is turned. The top of the worm takes the abuse and chips off.

I think I ruined mine when we pushed the car onto the trailer. Since the car had been under 20' of salt water a year earlier, the inside of the steering shaft filled with rust that ended up in the bottom of the box to be ground up.


Also if you look at the picture Frank posted, you can barely make out the begining of the date code stamped onto the worm. That should be the week and year it was made. It doesn't matter, but I think it's cool to see if it matches everything else on the car.

I'm going to echo here, but I learned most of what I know about these cars through this forum. I want to thank everyone as well. Someday my 58,59,?? TR3 will run again because of you all.

Jerry
 
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