boxplayer4000
Prolific poster
This is not an accordion related request for information but I have noticed, over the years, that there are many informed inputs to our sites with technical knowledge over a wide range of issues so I hope all will be patient with my request.
I grew up in a farming environment and have always felt privileged to have done so and was exposed early to ‘nature’ and technical matters as well as farming was going from labour intensive to more modern methods. Repairs and maintenance was largely done ‘in-house’ where possible. (By ‘nature’ I mean that by an early age we had worked out how the ‘birds and bees’ worked and were ahead of the game when the subject was tackled in school).
The point I’m getting towards is canvas drive belts. Many machines, such as threshing machines, bruisers, circular saws etc. were driven by a power take-off (PTO) on a tractor. The belt pulley surfaces were not flat, as I remember, but convex and this assisted in keeping the belt from jumping off. The belt ends were held together by two steel ‘combs’ which were hammered into the canvas and the two halves of the comb were joined together with a steel pin.
At last my point:- There was some skill in positioning the tractor so that best alignment and belt tension was achieved. To minimise or eliminate slippage a substance was ‘painted’ onto the belts inner surface and was tacky and stiff as I remember.
So the question is: What was that substance?
There is guidance online but no mention of a specific substance and most of the sites veer towards a sale of their product.
I have no access to tractors or associated machinery those days but I have a record deck which handles 33/45/78 rpm discs which sometimes misbehaves, I suspect. I have renewed the drive belt but felt that a means of reducing slippage might be helpful.
I am aware that the drive belt is not canvas; probably a plastic or polymer which might not re-act well to some anti-slip substances.
I have a paper disc which lies on the record deck, with a printed pattern, which re-acts to our power supply frequency of 50 hz. When the speed is correct the pattern is ’stationary’. I use a microscope attached to the computer to get a good picture of the record needle.
I grew up in a farming environment and have always felt privileged to have done so and was exposed early to ‘nature’ and technical matters as well as farming was going from labour intensive to more modern methods. Repairs and maintenance was largely done ‘in-house’ where possible. (By ‘nature’ I mean that by an early age we had worked out how the ‘birds and bees’ worked and were ahead of the game when the subject was tackled in school).
The point I’m getting towards is canvas drive belts. Many machines, such as threshing machines, bruisers, circular saws etc. were driven by a power take-off (PTO) on a tractor. The belt pulley surfaces were not flat, as I remember, but convex and this assisted in keeping the belt from jumping off. The belt ends were held together by two steel ‘combs’ which were hammered into the canvas and the two halves of the comb were joined together with a steel pin.
At last my point:- There was some skill in positioning the tractor so that best alignment and belt tension was achieved. To minimise or eliminate slippage a substance was ‘painted’ onto the belts inner surface and was tacky and stiff as I remember.
So the question is: What was that substance?
There is guidance online but no mention of a specific substance and most of the sites veer towards a sale of their product.
I have no access to tractors or associated machinery those days but I have a record deck which handles 33/45/78 rpm discs which sometimes misbehaves, I suspect. I have renewed the drive belt but felt that a means of reducing slippage might be helpful.
I am aware that the drive belt is not canvas; probably a plastic or polymer which might not re-act well to some anti-slip substances.
I have a paper disc which lies on the record deck, with a printed pattern, which re-acts to our power supply frequency of 50 hz. When the speed is correct the pattern is ’stationary’. I use a microscope attached to the computer to get a good picture of the record needle.