Great Tip! Thank you! I managed to successfully remove a unique key from a 72 year old outboard crankshaft. I'm sure it has been there since it was manufactured. I won't forget this trick
Thank you very much for sharing what kind of tool you use to remove shaft keys. Everything is perfectly explained. The video deserves therefore the maximum rating: five stars *****.
Appreciate the tip, and I like the tool you modified to make a specific woodruff key removal tool. But without access to a lathe, couldn't I do the same using a bench grinder? Certainly wouldn't be as precision.
I would think it should be fine, it is still a blunt instrument. I am figuring on hitting a pair up on a belt sander to try out. Main thing is to get the pinching surface as close to the shaft as you can.
Thank you sir , saved me so much trouble right now
Great Tip! Thank you! I managed to successfully remove a unique key from a 72 year old outboard crankshaft. I'm sure it has been there since it was manufactured. I won't forget this trick
Glad it worked well for you.
Thank you very much for sharing what kind of tool you use to remove shaft keys. Everything is perfectly explained. The video deserves therefore the maximum rating: five stars *****.
What a fantastic tip. Thanks.
Thanks, Have a great day!
Great tips! Thank you!
Thanks
Very good. Thank you!
Hope it helps you remove a stuck key some day.
Appreciate the tip, and I like the tool you modified to make a specific woodruff key removal tool. But without access to a lathe, couldn't I do the same using a bench grinder? Certainly wouldn't be as precision.
I would think it should be fine, it is still a blunt instrument. I am figuring on hitting a pair up on a belt sander to try out. Main thing is to get the pinching surface as close to the shaft as you can.