TUBE BENDER - PARTS.JPG
I built my own bender out of scrap mat'l around my shop----it only does 3/4" but very well. I filled the .065" tube with fine sand & tamped it in 4''--6" increments, then plugged with a wooden plug.
The white pulley was an accessory drive pulley from an old Cummins 250 diesel engine. I contoured the groove to a 3/8" radius and mounted it on a heavy steel shaft with 2 flats to grip in a heavy vise--it is a slip fit in the pulley--you drop a bolt thru a hole near the rim of the pulley down between the jaws of the vise to keep it from rotating..you may have to drill several holes if you don't have much walking room around the vise.--bend a little, rotate pulley a little, bend a little more.
Oh, there is /was a drilled hole in the top of the heavy shaft to pivot the angle iron bar on.
The small red wheel is the INNER race of a large (worn) ball bearing that used 3/4" balls--(making the groove a perfect fit
around the tube.) A smaller ball bearing with an OD the same as the ID of the inner race is then bolted to a 6 ft± 2X2X1/4" angle iron..Unless you have a very stout vise & bench, you'll need a helper with a bar or pipe stuck thru the opening between the jaws of the vise to balance the PULL you exert on the angle Iron.
And this is the secret to success--the tube is supported inside & out by closely fitting wheels--the only gap is ~~3/16" wide , and it falls near the neutral axis of the bend.--this thing makes beautiful bends-COLD with a nice constant radius. Jerry†
Old heavy truck transmissions-(manual) use bearings with large balls.
There is a short pc of 7/8" tube cut on an angle to slip over the tubing to protect the outer side from being dented by the
heavy bolt that holds the tube in the starting position
[attachment=2]TUBE BENDER - PARTS.JPG[/attachment]I built my own bender out of scrap mat'l around my shop----it only does 3/4" but very well. I filled the .065" tube with fine sand & tamped it in 4''--6" increments, then plugged with a wooden plug.
The white pulley was an accessory drive pulley from an old Cummins 250 diesel engine. I contoured the groove to a 3/8" radius and mounted it on a heavy steel shaft with 2 flats to grip in a heavy vise--it is a slip fit in the pulley--you drop a bolt thru a hole near the rim of the pulley down between the jaws of the vise to keep it from rotating..you may have to drill several holes if you don't have much walking room around the vise.--bend a little, rotate pulley a little, bend a little more.
Oh, there is /was a drilled hole in the top of the heavy shaft to pivot the angle iron bar on.
The small red wheel is the INNER race of a large (worn) ball bearing that used 3/4" balls--(making the groove a perfect fit
around the tube.) A smaller ball bearing with an OD the same as the ID of the inner race is then bolted to a 6 ft± 2X2X1/4" angle iron..Unless you have a very stout vise & bench, you'll need a helper with a bar or pipe stuck thru the opening between the jaws of the vise to balance the PULL you exert on the angle Iron.
And this is the secret to success--the tube is supported inside & out by closely fitting wheels--the only gap is ~~3/16" wide , and it falls near the neutral axis of the bend.--this thing makes beautiful bends-COLD with a nice constant radius. Jerry†
Old heavy truck transmissions-(manual) use bearings with large balls.
There is a short pc of 7/8" tube cut on an angle to slip over the tubing to protect the outer side from being dented by the
heavy bolt that holds the tube in the starting position