I was out of pocket for a bit over the last couple weeks. Before I left I was having some issues pressing apart the 372 crank. I had ordered a cheap carbide set to turning down a wrist pinprior to
@Rich Fife offering the set he's got to me. Now that I'm back, we'll have to sync up!
Pondering my options I had also ordered some SKF 6003 Bearingswhich are the right inner diameter (17) for the 385/390 crank I have& right outer diameter of the 6202 bearing (35mm) to fit in thecase. The 6003 bearing is just 1mm thinner than 6202.
I found a 1mm shim which has a 20mm inner hole, 35mm outerdiameter. So it'll need to be machined a little to clear the innerbearing race, but I think I could use these to get the 385/390 crankin the 372 case.
With bearings kind of figured out, fitting the 385/390 crank inthe case was next. I thought options might be
- machine the case (which would make it thinner than I'd like)
- machine the crank. (I now had the carbides)
Because I was having issues pressing the 372 crank apart & I thought the case would get pretty thin if i clearanced it for the 385/390 crank I gave machining the 385/390 crank a try. It was a learning experience, I did a bit of youtube watching to see how others may have approached doing it. So, what I did is probably not recommended. While I was successful on one side of the crank, I hit the crankrod on the second side (lesson learned, move and secure away next time) …
With the crank mostly machined and nothing to lose I revisited my press idea. I picked up a bearing splitter & some steel plates to better hold things, then successfully split the crank.
Finished machining of the counter weights. Then split the 395 crank, swapped over the longer 395 rod & pressed things back together

I need to look at balancing the crank now, but this is the current state on a stroker crankshaft with the larger crank rod wrist pin that can use a piston from a 390 & fit in the 372 case (hopefully)