After reading
@PeterT's post on bars for his boring head, I found myself curious about proper setup of my heads. What boring I have done has mostly worked out for me by virtue of translating my lathe boring experience into the equivalent milling operation.
But let's be serious, all my milling experience rolled up together amounts to squatt. An old drill press with an x/y table is just painful torture with no real skill development, and my mill/drill worked much better but it spent so long with no practical Z-axis that it never did get used for boring.
Recognizing that, I decided to see if I've been doing anything wrong. My very first search bagged one error,...... I think..... Here is a quote:
"
The gib tension has been preset at the factory. The two gib screws should not be loosened to make size adjustments. These screws are for adjusting the gib pressure only and are filled with red wax to prevent accidental adjustment. The locking screw is the only screw used for making size changes to the boring head."
Really? I have always tightened them in use. Maybe that's what
@Dabbler was referring to when he mentioned backlash. When I read that, I did a " huh? What backlash? " and then immediately dismissed it because "my heads all have locks" ..... Or do they?
Have I been doing this wrong? And if so, how do I correctly adjust the Gibb tension on my boring heads?
One more question for now. (I'm sure I'll have more as I learn more.) My bar sets all have 12 bits. Is that really necessary? Can't I get say half that number of indexable bits for the head and call it done? In fact, why not just three each. Three big ones for the big head and three little ones for the small head?