John <[email protected]>
Hi Clay,
I'm a newbie too and have been experimenting with milling in my lathe with mixed results. I added a QC toolpost and found that this allows a crude vertical adjustment via the tool height; of course, you have to stop, change vertical height, then make another pass so it is very slow but it does allow you to try milling. I hold work by bolting a 1/2" bar to the bottom of a small vise then mount this bar in the toolpost. A picture is available to help make the setup clear: You could do something similar using the regular toolpost by packing to move things vertically, although the vertical movement would be very small unless you packed the toolpost itself. In addition to milling, I've found that a fly cutter provides a simple and inexpensive way to make flat surfaces using the same method of holding the work. Small items can be mounted in the toolpost directly (or bolted to a piece of 1/2" stock) for milling or flycutting. I've had good luck with the flycutter once I got it sharpened properly -- I broke the tips off of my carbide miller bit by accidentally approaching the work too quickly which discouraged me somewhat -- the flycutter seems relatively bulletproof and is inexpensive. The sphere cutter shown on the above page had the slot for the tool holder milled into the aluminum on my lathe by bolting the 2.5" aluminum round to a 1/2" steel piece which was mounted in the toolpost. The steel tool holder for the sphere fixture was shaped mostly with a fly cutter plus some enthusiastic filing. None of the above allows speedy results but it does allow trying things out at little expense in $ or time. John --- In 7x12minilathe@..., "ccarlile1 <ccarlile1@y...>" <ccarlile1@y...> wrote: I'm finally up and running with my new 7 X 12 and I am havinggotten from their web sites and from the user groups on the Internet.and the attachment he designed for a lathe and also found the $129 |