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Re: Tapered threads?
On Mon, Apr 09, 2007 at 10:02:50PM -0000, Ian Foster wrote:
G'day Chris,How do you firmly hold the work in the chuck when you've got the tailstock centre offset? A taper attachment controlling the cross slide, but I don't think manyManaged to buy an imperial tap/die set with a 1/8" NPT die in it this afternoon. Try Googling Tool Timez; they export to Oz from the UK. You could mailThanks. Just got a lead locally so I'll chase that one first. Chris -- Chris Eilbeck MARS Flight Crew UKRA #1108 Level 2 UYB Tripoli UK Member #9527 LSMR |
Re: Soluble Oil - availability
--- In 7x12minilathe@..., "born4something" <ajs@...> wrote:
It's not the one I used years back which went milky-white withIt certainly started off a translucent blue when mixed. The stuff that was in the machine tanks looked like cyan coloured milk (ugh!), but just how long some of that stuff in those tanks had been there would be anyone's guess... Cheers, Andrew. |
Re: Taper - I think I have a problem?!
G'day all
Mike said: "..learn how to use the lathe making projects that don't require extreme accuracy. Your skills will keep improving.. ...by the time the lathe's misalignments start to really cramp the way you use it, you'll be skilled enough that tweaking it will be fairly easy" PEARLS OF WISDOM. IMHO the least accurate part of the lathe, even out of the box, is just in front of the cross slide feed handle. Also ,as your skill increases you will learn to work around the idiosyncrsies. Finally they will bug you too much and then you'll tackle the problem. The old adage; measure twice, cut once applies; assume nothing. One good turn deserves another. Regards, Ian |
Using Locknut to mount spindle crank (was "Re: Threading and using the Dial")
Michael Taglieri
That's the way I did it, fixing the inner locknut with Loctite so the
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outer one can be used for mounting my handcrank (and several other accessories). I wrote something on how to make it some time ago, and put a picture in the photo section under "Mike T's Stuff," but it was a reply to someone's question on doing heavy cuts, so the title isn't helpful to retrieve it. Here it is again with an appropriate title. Mike Taglieri miket--nyc@... Everyone has his reasons. - Jean Renoir "The Rules of the Game" ------------- Another way to do heavy work is by dispensing with the motor and putting a crank on the spindle. Most of these designs connect to the spindle by some kind of expanding plug in the bore, but I made one that would leave the bore open for work so I made one that fastens to the outside of the spindle using one of the spindle lock nuts What I did was to lock the inside nut with Loctite so the outside one is no longer needed and I can use it to hold items on the crank by pinching them between the two nuts. Here's a photo of my crank. It's made of two pieces of 2" angle iron, one bored to fit on the spindle and the other drilled for the arm of the crank. I epoxied these together with JB Weld to move the arm out enough out to clear the gears. (A crank on the outside has to be designed to clear gears in the "A" position, so you can cut threads with the crank. I made this crank so it would clear a 60-tooth gear, which I doubt I'll ever need to exceed. The arm itself is made of wood and held on with 4 bolts, and the handle is a steel tube that's a loose running fit over a lag screw (with the hex-head filed round) that's screwed and epoxied into the end of the arm. I made the arm of wood to save metal and also so I could reuse this handle, which I made for my original crank (which was entirely made of wood and would be satisfactory for light duty). You can get different lengths of crank for leverage by drilling multiple holes in the wooden part. The black thing on the left is an old footpeg rubber from my motorcycle, which I put on the handle of the crank when I'm doing REALLY heavy cuts to save wear & tear on my hand. With this crank, I can turn iron and steel up to the full 7" swing of the lathe. When using any crank, you should move the high/low lever to the middle position. That way, if you accidentally turn the motor on without removing the crank, it will spin harmlessly. Also, the crank turns easier with the motor and its gears out of the system. Mike Taglieri miket--nyc@... Everyone has his reasons. - Jean Renoir "The Rules of the Game" On Tue, 27 Mar 2007 01:42:16 -0000 "born4something" <ajs@...> writes: Hi Roy, |
Re: Taper - I think I have a problem?!
Michael Taglieri
Unless this 5.5" rod is something critical for a project you're doing, I
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would forget about theoretical misalignments of things at this point (except the tailstock, which is always wrong horizontally and often wrong vertically by huge amounts). Instead, learn how to use the lathe making projects that don't require extreme accuracy. Your skills will keep improving, and by the time the lathe's misalignments start to really cramp the way you use it, you'll be skilled enough that tweaking it will be fairly easy. Mike Taglieri miket--nyc@... Everyone has his reasons. - Jean Renoir "The Rules of the Game" On Sat, 24 Mar 2007 22:49:09 -0000 "wrlabs" <wrlabs@...> writes: Thanks to all that responded to this query. |
Re: Tapered threads?
G'day Chris,
You need to taper the work piece to start with so do this by the offset tail stock method. Follow by cutting your thread with the same lathe settings. A taper attachment controlling the cross slide, but I don't think many people have them. CHEAT! Use pipe threading dies; traditional water pipe threads were tapered. Go to your local plumber. Try Googling Tool Timez; they export to Oz from the UK. You could mail order from Ozmestore in Oz, try them on eBay; I get good stuff from them. One good turn deserves another, Regards Ian --- In 7x12minilathe@..., Chris Eilbeck <chris@...> wrote: thinking something like a 1/8" NPT external thread.would be useful too. |
Re: Ammeter
G'day Ed.
THe meter looks nice, but whenever you are doing any heavy work it will be reading in the uncalibrated over range area. Does MPJA have a 0-6 amp meter with over range? Minimum meter must be 0-5 amps with over range scale. You really want to know the stall current which can be up to two times the nameplate current. loading the drive to just under this gets best use fo the lathe. To be of more than pose value the meter needs to be where you can see it as you operate the feed screws. Meters are designed to be left in circuit. (multimeters are not) A switch is NOT RECOMMENDED unless it simply shorts out the meter. The motor cicuit must not be interrupted during operation and the spdt switch you propose would open the circuit mometarilly, enough to harm the drive. One good turn deserves another. Regards, Ian - In 7x12minilathe@..., "Ed" <edo@...> wrote: (I"Does it matter if the meter is on the + or - side?"The reason I asked was to determine whether or not I could put the assume) reverses polarity, I now know it'll only work there in oneten, but now that I see my motor is rated at 3A (regardless of voltage),when I'm not using it just in case it doesn't like being on for longperiods.
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Tapered threads?
Is it possible to turn a tapered thread on the mini-lathe? I'm thinking
something like a 1/8" NPT external thread. Cheers Chris PS Clues about where to buy an internal threading tool in the UK would be useful too. -- Chris Eilbeck MARS Flight Crew UKRA #1108 Level 2 UYB Tripoli UK Member #9527 LSMR |
Re: Ammeter
"Does it matter if the meter is on the + or - side?"The reason I asked was to determine whether or not I could put the meter between the Direction Switch and the Motor. Since the switch (I assume) reverses polarity, I now know it'll only work there in one direction. I convinced myself that I can get away with a 5A meter instead of ten, but now that I see my motor is rated at 3A (regardless of voltage), I'm looking at a 3A one with a red over-range scale. Do you think this one would work? I think it would look pretty good mounted in the side of the electronics box (and we all know it's all about aesthetics.) I'd mount a SPDT switch with it to turn it off when I'm not using it just in case it doesn't like being on for long periods. Ed |
Re: Deep Hole .218 x 8"
The tool used to drill a deep straight hole is a D bit. You can see
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what a D bit looks like at this site: There used to be info on making D bits on some of the yahoo groups dedicated to metal working. Charlie --- In 7x12minilathe@..., "taurokm3" <grimjack@...> wrote:
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Re: through bore
FYI, the waiting list appears to be at
, however, it seems to be of 0 length. So it looks like there's no waiting. :) --- In 7x12minilathe@..., "roylowenthal" <roylowenthal@...> wrote: group there's something for "Al's Reamer", since it was Varmint Al whoHEADSTOCK beDoes any one know where the information is and/or how much can it opened to? |
Re: Deep Hole .218 x 8"
Are you drilling this hole into material that can be held in the lathe
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chuck? Material dimensions and the material type would be helpful info. The technique is straight forward (but tedious) if the material fits in the chuck. Best situation is if the material fits through the spindle, of course. John --- In 7x12minilathe@..., "taurokm3" <grimjack@...> wrote:
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Re: through bore
andrew franks
Hi John,
It would probably cause a bit of a furore at airport security, too. Anyway, I've got a Warco-badged Wiess lathe, which according to the Warco specs has a 0.75" spindle bore. Out of curiosity, I have just measured it - 20.8mm, which is 13/16" plus a whisker. Back now to making a crude leadscrew reverse for it. I've been taking a break from hand-hacksawing cuts of about 300mm total length in 12mm steel plate, to make a swinging arm to bring an extra gearwheel into play when needed. Only another 30mm to go, now. I know what I shall be giving myself for my 60th later this month! Andy born4something <ajs@...> wrote: --- In 7x12minilathe@..., andrew franks <andyf1108@...> wrote: them travel to the UK all on its own! Hi Andy, I guess that rules out a trip to Oz? Well, it's not been on my must-do list. But if I can't have it, suddenly I want it! John --------------------------------- What kind of emailer are you? Find out today - get a free analysis of your email personality. Take the quiz at the Yahoo! Mail Championship. |
Re: Ammeter
G'day Tony & Ed.
"Does it matter if the meter is on the + or - side?" My preference is for the meter to go in the + side of the circuit so as not to risk bypassing the current limit resistor (Horse Power Resistor on my card) if you connect back to the wrong terminal. NOTE: BOTH + & - CONNECTIONS ARE LIVE WITH RESPECT TO GROUND AND THE LATHE FRAME. Treat the meter its wiring and connections as LIVE and effectively at mains potential. Regarding digital meters, not DVMs, I would be careful regarding the effect of the current wave form. The lower cost units will only measure the peak current each sampling cycle. The peak will be more than either the average or the RMS current so the reading could be high and so be meaningless. A digital meter needs a power supply while an analogue meter does not. If you connect the analogue meter the wrong polarity you will simply reverse the needle against the stop, no harm will be done but you will have to reverse the connections. Hope this helps. One good turn deserves another. Regards, Ian |
Re: through bore
--- In 7x12minilathe@..., andrew franks <andyf1108@...>
wrote: them travel to the UK all on its own! Hi Andy, I guess that rules out a trip to Oz? Well, it's not been on my must-do list. But if I can't have it, suddenly I want it! John |
Re: through bore
andrew franks
Yes, that's got to be right, Roy. I was just thinking aloud. Enlarging the calibre of my spindle isn't on my project list, though if it was, I doubt if the official Guardian of the Reamers would let one of them travel to the UK all on its own!
Andy roylowenthal <roylowenthal@...> wrote: You'd actually be better off with a suitably large conventional boring bar. A regular boring bar will ensure that the spindle bore is concentric with the axis of rotation. As a generality, the carriage is preferable to the TS for accurate, controllable tool holding. The virtue of the reamer is that it's quick & available for the cost of postage! Since the bore can be reamed, it's not a big enough cut to justify (to me) the nuisance of setting up a boring bar. Then again, I did mine a few years ago, when the community was smaller. Roy --- In 7x12minilathe@..., "andyf1108" <andyf1108@...> wrote: inside the spindle, then a length "B" of smaller diameter carrying thethe tailstock centre? --------------------------------- What kind of emailer are you? Find out today - get a free analysis of your email personality. Take the quiz at the Yahoo! Mail Championship. |
Re: Soluble Oil - availability
Thanks for that Andrew,
It's not the one I used years back which went milky-white with water. The EP690 apparently goes translucent blue. Is that your recollection? But if it works and is available... Blackwoods list it in 4 and 20 litre containers. John --- In 7x12minilathe@..., "Andrew MacIntyre" <andymac_org@...> wrote: wrote: backSome time back there was discussion of soluble oil and its mineralto looking and found some info at www.azom.com/details.asp? atoil cutting fluids. All but the last three show up in a search Blackwoods'Blackwoods. I'm not familiar with the product names and thinkweb site isn't abundantly full of it. But is that useful?Going to the Castrol site and looking through the descriptions, I that Clearedge EP690 is the brew I encountered at the TAFE college. |
Re: Ammeter
Tony Smith
Thanks, Ian, for the explanation. I get a catalog from The meter can go anywhere in the circuit, if you hook the + - up backwards, you'll just get a negative reading. If someone is planning on using digital meters, check the specs. Most of them don't like you using the 10A range for too long, usually under 10 seconds. They're not designed to be left in permanently. YMMV, of course. They may be happy with a couple of amps indefinitely, but become a blob of yellow plastic on 10 amps. Same deal for the analog ones too, the shunt can get a bit warm, but they tend to be designed for it. Tony |
Re: Soluble Oil - availability
--- In 7x12minilathe@..., "born4something" <ajs@...> wrote:
Some time back there was discussion of soluble oil and itsGoing to the Castrol site and looking through the descriptions, I think that Clearedge EP690 is the brew I encountered at the TAFE college. Cheers, Andrew. |
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