Topy wrote:
The centrespline pointer as you called it, is that the 'technical term' any idea for the correct name of the mechanism that it interacts with?
Cheers!!
God I love these locks, the 8400 / 8500 / Manifoil IV / Manifoil VIII are endlessly fascinating things.
I've only ever heard the cam mechanism on these (and the Manifoil, which is a broadly similar idea) referred to as a "split cam".
S&G's own installation instructions refer to the "inner spindle" and the "tip of the inner spindle" on the 8400 series - see step 9 on p 3 of the PDF below.
https://cdn2.hubspot.net/hubfs/5825267/ ... nstall.pdfThe original patent for the 8400 series (from 1949, wow)...
https://patents.google.com/patent/US2575674A/en...may show some more and better nomenclature but as a result of the hilariously bad OCR applied when this thing was digitized and me not really giving two shits, I decided I had better things to do and gave up. More interested parties with less demands on their time may wish to decode the following small sample, believe me there is an awful lot more where this came from:
-snip-
The construction described so far is conventional. The present inventional resides in the modification of the driver wheel I2 and certain other parts and the provision of a slide 43 Vwhich can be selectively controlled for closing the gate I2a in the driver wheel I2 so that a person not familiarwth the combination cannot manipuisqto'fthefcombination l ofthe lock. ":Io this end,
theoutside of .the 'driver'wheel--has Jaiiiired` thereto spaced Aguides I411 and 42. These :guides are undercut fas fait I'a and 42o-to Aprovide .mar- .inal edges Which-overlapfaslide M3. lThe-slide 43 comprises Jan-'arcuate portion 33a which has exactlythefsame radius as the 'remaining Lperipheral 'surface of fthe Ydriver 'wheel t2, 'itwo legs b and #13e Eand-asecon'd transverse portion 43d Jlziihg'ithe opposite vrends -of the legs. The inner Side if rleg 45431) provided Iv'ritlri :gear teeth M which are adapted to :mesh with 4`a -sxnall pinion 16 itc lconstitute a rackand -pini'on movement, -the rotation fof the pim'on 146 icontrollin'g the 'radial movement of the slide 4-3. The pinion 66 is xed tofa #shaft i41 "which -ex'tends through -a bore in tionalrconStruction-rotatablyimounted inthe hub 6T 'the fdial |33-, is -i'xed :to fthe outer end of xthe lraftlu. As -clearly shown in Figure Tl, thebarrel d! the Llock I8 -is provided with a series l"of pins 5I of dfEerent lengths 'which are adapted to be aligned with a Isecond -pluralitylof pins S2-which are mounted in the radial recesses o'fthe hub of the jdial 13. The pins 52 -arespring loaded so that `they fare normally 'urged Ytoward the 'barrel o'fithe lock-'inthe usual fmanner. When the key 53 "is 'Jncitdnfthelbarrelpsomefof the pins152'will extend A#across -the -dividing line between the barrel and the inside of the v-hub 'to provide 'an nterlockbetweenthe 'barreland the hub-whereby th'eshaft 41 wllfbelccke'd with thevdial I3. -Ac cordingly, 1rotation fof the vldial vIl3 'will rotate the driver Wheel I 2 vvhlhih `turndrives' the 'tumbler's in the Pm'anner already described. Asfin rconventiona'l `cylimirical pin "tumbler 'ltype locks, 'the key2canfonly'he removed and inserted when the tunibler in-one position. lIn the immediate instance'lthe zero -positionfefithe -lock'is such that the pinion 416 will 4have unoved 'the slide 43 to rits radially outermost 'position where l`its outer arcuate -surface '43a -coincides 'with the outer periphery fof the driver'vvheel I2.
-snip-
As an aside, I'd never heard about the brass ballbearing thing either and since mine is a factory mounted demo sample, I've never taken it off the plastic stand to find out if it's got this addition and am unlikely to ever do so. The wheels are conventional metal though sadly.
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