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  #1  
Old 20-01-14, 13:52
lynx42 lynx42 is offline
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Originally Posted by Tony Wheeler View Post
I believe this is the same part Rick, let me know and I'll stick it in the post tomorrow.
Tony, Tony, Tony you are beyond words. Thanks Mate, it looks to be the right one. You have my address.

MLU works once again.

Thanks everyone.
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1942 White Scoutcar
1940 Chev Staff Car
1940 F30S Cab11
1940 Chev WA LRDG "Te Hai"
1941 F60L Cab12
1943 Ford Lynx
1942 Bren Gun Carrier VR no.2250
Humber FV1601A
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  #2  
Old 20-01-14, 15:57
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No worries Rick, I've accumulated quite a variety of generator pulleys off my Ford CMP wrecks! The only real scarcity amongst them is an original CMP pulley! Or at least one without large chunks missing or several vanes busted off. I discovered this when trying to rebuild my own genny recently - the only spare twin belt pulley I could find was much smaller than the standard CMP pulley. This led me to consult the parts list, whereupon I discovered there were in fact two different diameter pulleys fitted, nominally 3 1/2" and 4 1/2", the explanation for the smaller one being: "Use where low cut in speed is desired." What this means off course is heaps more fan noise at cruising speed, so these are to be avoided I'd suggest - although perhaps it may offer a solution for overheating problems. Anyway it's worth knowing about so I thought I'd mention it.

BTW Rick I only have your PO Box address, I assume that's where you want it sent....? I've given it a quick scrub for better ID, which I probably should have done before posting pics! As you can see the vanes have been rubbing on the mounting bracket, the front bearing in this genny was completely shot.
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Last edited by Tony Wheeler; 20-01-14 at 16:05.
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  #3  
Old 20-01-14, 22:52
lynx42 lynx42 is offline
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Thanks Tony, The PO Box will do. I am off to town to get a pair of bearings for this genny, hopefully they will be off the shelf.

Regards Rick.
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1916 Albion A10
1942 White Scoutcar
1940 Chev Staff Car
1940 F30S Cab11
1940 Chev WA LRDG "Te Hai"
1941 F60L Cab12
1943 Ford Lynx
1942 Bren Gun Carrier VR no.2250
Humber FV1601A
Saracen Mk1(?)
25pdr. 1940 Weir No.266
25pdr. Australian Short No.185 (?)
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  #4  
Old 21-01-14, 23:56
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Hanno Spoelstra Hanno Spoelstra is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by lynx42 View Post
MLU works once again.
That was quick. Maybe even quickr than having to go down to the Friendly Local Auto Parts Store!

MLU is here to serve

PS: Thread prefix changed to "Found".

Hanno
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  #5  
Old 22-01-14, 11:09
Lynn Eades Lynn Eades is offline
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Rick, just to go back to the start, I would like to see the rest of the part number.
The #10130 is Fords root number, for a pulley, but the prefix will either identify it as from a standard vehicle or as a special lynx part.
Can you supply the whole number for interests sake?
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  #6  
Old 22-01-14, 12:30
lynx42 lynx42 is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Lynn Eades View Post
Rick, just to go back to the start, I would like to see the rest of the part number.
The #10130 is Fords root number, for a pulley, but the prefix will either identify it as from a standard vehicle or as a special lynx part.
Can you supply the whole number for interests sake?
Hi Lynn, there is a number on the back of the pulley but I am not sure if I can see it now as it is all back together. I'll check tomorrow.

Meanwhile, the parts book has the following. Part Number 10130 on the diagram page and 01AS-10130D-Pulley Generator on the parts listing page.

Hope that this helps.

Regards Rick.
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1916 Albion A10
1942 White Scoutcar
1940 Chev Staff Car
1940 F30S Cab11
1940 Chev WA LRDG "Te Hai"
1941 F60L Cab12
1943 Ford Lynx
1942 Bren Gun Carrier VR no.2250
Humber FV1601A
Saracen Mk1(?)
25pdr. 1940 Weir No.266
25pdr. Australian Short No.185 (?)
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  #7  
Old 22-01-14, 13:23
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Default Generator bearings

Sounds like the bearings may have been 6203 Rick. These were/are used in a lot of generators and alternators and so are worth keeping a few around the place. I carried one as a spare after having a generator lock up on my Chev years ago. They even fit the cutting deck on my ride on mower.
A fellow was selling them for $2 each at the Bendigo Swap a couple of years back and I bought a number of them.

Dave
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  #8  
Old 24-01-14, 11:43
lynx42 lynx42 is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by motto View Post
Sounds like the bearings may have been 6203 Rick. These were/are used in a lot of generators and alternators and so are worth keeping a few around the place. I carried one as a spare after having a generator lock up on my Chev years ago. They even fit the cutting deck on my ride on mower.
A fellow was selling them for $2 each at the Bendigo Swap a couple of years back and I bought a number of them.

Dave
Yes, David, 6203 is the sealed bearing which I chose to put in. Won't have to oil the genny now.

Regards Rick.
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1916 Albion A10
1942 White Scoutcar
1940 Chev Staff Car
1940 F30S Cab11
1940 Chev WA LRDG "Te Hai"
1941 F60L Cab12
1943 Ford Lynx
1942 Bren Gun Carrier VR no.2250
Humber FV1601A
Saracen Mk1(?)
25pdr. 1940 Weir No.266
25pdr. Australian Short No.185 (?)
KVE Member.
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  #9  
Old 24-01-14, 12:57
Lynn Eades Lynn Eades is offline
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Tony, Rick etc. Not sure about Ford, but here's a little on Lucas.
A Lucas 6 volt generator will produce 12 volts. It will in fact produce 50 volts, (unregulated) but not for long.
a 6 volt genny can be converted to 12 volt by changing the field coils in from a 12 volt genny. This however does not work in reverse as the 12 volt armature cannot handle the current. The wiring needs to be heavier for the 6 volt.
This works because Lucas have built 6 and 12 volt generators using the same basic design. In particular I have been able to build a 12 volt genny for my carrier using the end plates and armature that came from a model of generator that was only ever built as 6 volt (original carrier)

On the Ford pulley numbers. Those numbers are probably just casting numbers.
A Ford part number is usually made up of three parts:
Here is a basic run down.
The root number (eg 10130) refers to a generator pulley.
The prefix (eg 01AS) which denotes country and year of origin and particular vehicle application. (I have no reference material to decode the 01AS. This may mean the part is specific to the Lynx armoured car)
The last part is the suffix (in this case a "D")
The "D" denotes changes or improvements in that item and so you might have a pulley that to all intents is the same. however they may have added material to strengthen the design, improve the air flow from the fan, or maybe even dynamically balanced as opposed to a static balanced original (just trying to come up with examples) Each time a design improvement is introduced, the suffix changes.
Someone like Tony Smith will be able to explain this in more detail.

I think Henry came up with a great system. If you have a war time Jeep or a CMP or a 1972 Ford Escort, the root number for an engine block is 6xxx It is the prefix and suffix that change.
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Carrier Armoured O.P. No1 Mk3 W. T84991
Carrier Bren No2.Mk.I. NewZealand Railways. NZR.6.
Dodge WC55. 37mm Gun Motor Carriage M6
Jeep Mb #135668
So many questions....
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  #10  
Old 23-01-14, 03:16
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Quote:
Originally Posted by lynx42 View Post
there is a number on the back of the pulley but I am not sure if I can see it now as it is all back together.
It's FG 154 which doesn't help much! In fact I doubt we'll learn anything from part numbers, some of my pulleys have no part numbers at all. Some of my twin belt CMP pulleys have Ford part numbers that aren't even listed. And yet they're all identical, so why the different part number? There's a variety of cosmetic differences from different castings, but they're functionally identical and completely interchangeable.

Irrespective of part numbers and cosmetic differences though I'm certain the Lnyx pulley is just a standard 4" single belt Ford pulley, of which I have several. I'm certain the whole generator is standard Ford, the only question in my mind is voltage - did they rewind the armature or simply reset the voltage regulator? I wouldn't mind betting they used a standard 6V generator and simply reset the regulator. I'm pretty sure these gennys will pump out 12 volts at sufficiently low revs to make rewinding the armature unnecessary, particularly with the small pulley. I'd be interested to know the Lynx part number for the genny itself.
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  #11  
Old 23-01-14, 09:20
lynx42 lynx42 is offline
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Tony, the body and field windings are the same as the 6 volt genys. The difference is the commutator.

Lynx bits 062.jpg.

It has twice as many windings and segments. I took some photos to show the difference.

OOPs!! that's is the starter not the Genny. Anyway you can see the 12volt at the top and the 6volt below.

Looks like I forgot to photograph the Genny, so I don't know.

Regards Rick.
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1916 Albion A10
1942 White Scoutcar
1940 Chev Staff Car
1940 F30S Cab11
1940 Chev WA LRDG "Te Hai"
1941 F60L Cab12
1943 Ford Lynx
1942 Bren Gun Carrier VR no.2250
Humber FV1601A
Saracen Mk1(?)
25pdr. 1940 Weir No.266
25pdr. Australian Short No.185 (?)
KVE Member.
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  #12  
Old 24-01-14, 10:57
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Quote:
Originally Posted by lynx42 View Post
It has twice as many windings and segments. I took some photos to show the difference.
Excellent comparison photo Rick, very interesting to see the difference. I don't think there are twice as many windings but there are certainly a lot more, presumably to produce the same torque at reduced current. I notice they're much heavier gauge on the 6V starter, presumably to operate at higher current. I'd be interested to hear the cranking speed with your 12V system, should be much the same the 6V system I imagine, which is good.

I had a quick look on a couple of hot rod sites and it turns out the 6V genny will definitely produce 12V satisfactorily, and some rodders only change the regulator. Others change the field coils in the genny as well, using 12V field coils out of later model cars. However I suspect that's more to protect them from higher voltage than anything else. Anyway it sounds like the armature is identical as I suspected, so the Lynx may simply use the standard 6V genny. Unless it has 12V stamped on it somewhere I think we can assume it's identical.

What all this means off course is there's no need to touch the genny when converting from 6V to 12V. Most people don't realize this and go to a lot of unnecessary trouble and expense.
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  #13  
Old 22-01-14, 11:11
lynx42 lynx42 is offline
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Pulley arrived in todays mail. Only posted yesterday and we live 300km from Melbourne.

Thank you Tony, thank you Australia Post.(Posted at 9.00 in Paynesville 6.30am next day.)

More Lynx geny etc 064.jpg


More Lynx geny etc 073.jpg

12Volt Ford Generator is now fully rebuilt with new bearings ($6.00 each) and brushes.

Pulley was perfect and cleaned up well. but I had to refer to the parts book to get the bits in the right order. Must be getting old.

Regards Rick
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1916 Albion A10
1942 White Scoutcar
1940 Chev Staff Car
1940 F30S Cab11
1940 Chev WA LRDG "Te Hai"
1941 F60L Cab12
1943 Ford Lynx
1942 Bren Gun Carrier VR no.2250
Humber FV1601A
Saracen Mk1(?)
25pdr. 1940 Weir No.266
25pdr. Australian Short No.185 (?)
KVE Member.
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  #14  
Old 22-01-14, 21:54
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Quote:
Originally Posted by lynx42 View Post
Pulley arrived in todays mail. Only posted yesterday and we live 300km from Melbourne. Posted at 9.00 in Paynesville 6.30am next day.
It's a pretty efficient global parts supply we run here on MLU - where else could you order an automotive part, let alone a 1943 Ford Lynx generator pulley, at 6.14 PM and have it within 36 hours? I reckon we can say we met the WANTED URGENTLY customer service target for this order. Of course that's for country customers, our metro customers can expect same day service!
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