Dan Thomas
Touchdown! Greaser!
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Dan Thomas
Doesn't the silicon carbide end up charging the soft (bronze?) guide with abrasive particles? A reamer has the advantage that it doesn't leave any non-metallic stuff behind.
Bronze isn't particularly soft. Engine manufacturers can't use soft metals for valve guides. Bronze is used because it resists wear better than steel or cast iron and can take the heat away from the valve better. In 1999 Lycoming finally got tired of valve guide wear (bronze) and went to a high-chromium-content bronze, which lasts well past TBO. I don't know if Continental has adopted the same stuff.
The silicon carbide hones are commonly used to finish dressing resized engine cylinders of cast iron or steel. The carbide doesn't embed in the metal. Like any grinding stone, the grit is held together by a fired clay, and the firing time and temperature determine how hard the clay gets and how securely the grit is held. The hones are made of soft-fired stuff so that the grit easily breaks away once it gets a little dull, and new, sharp grit is exposed. The balls of abrasive are mounted on flexible plastic stems that put very little pressure on the cylinder or guide, certainly far too little to embed anything. In any case, even rigid hones, using large pressures, don't embed grit in the metal.
Aluminum is so soft that it WILL pick up grit. That's why we never use emery cloth on it, since emery uses iron oxide in its makeup, and the iron causes corrosion.
Dan (thousands of hours in the 1980s and early '90s on various machine shop tools, including the big Sunnen CK-10 hone and many other grinding and cutting machines)