Tom Kitta
Ultra Member
So I am loosing some hope of finding small CNC machines (say under 6000 lbs and under 15hp) and I am looking for small machines to convert to CNC. Parts seem available from China for reasonable price. Results are not "professional" - you cannot turn a 1500 lbs machine into 10000 lbs one but they seem good for hobby use.
I currently have two old 13x40 SB lathes - I am thiking of swapping them for say:
Colchester 10x20 (which I have and missed one on sale)
Hardinge lathe - these are converted professionally as well
Monarch EE
All three and possibly more have high speed spindles at 3000 rpm+ They are small but very heavy build - sturdy. They have no gearing (other then back gear) I think these would be ideal. BUT can I use some "less then ideal" donors? Would a regular engine lathe with gearing with top speed of say 1800 rpm (I know I can push these a bit higher or change bearings) be good enough? Does anyone have a link where some people discuss this topic?
My current 13x40 seem to be bad candidates for conversion to CNC (but I am sure it would look interesting if one did it - controversial for some) because for some reason (supposedly smoothness of operation) SB chose plain bearings not angular or ball. These normally operate at 940 rpm and speed is limited by size of spindle - the larger a plain bearing is the slower it can operate. So it is doubtful I could push them more then say 1200 rpm. Also its threaded spindle. I think bed wear is not that of a big deal as software can compensate for this, can it? There was some talk about changing bearings in SB lathes to quality set that is based on angular contact bearings but there seems to be little info on anyone actually doing this - most people just re-build old bearings and keep lathe original but rebuild. Plus threaded spindle on a CNC would kind of kill any "rapid" reverse or slow down.
I know I should first get a CNC mill but that has same issues as CNC lathe - very hard to find - last time I had a chance was like 3 years ago+.
I currently have two old 13x40 SB lathes - I am thiking of swapping them for say:
Colchester 10x20 (which I have and missed one on sale)
Hardinge lathe - these are converted professionally as well
Monarch EE
All three and possibly more have high speed spindles at 3000 rpm+ They are small but very heavy build - sturdy. They have no gearing (other then back gear) I think these would be ideal. BUT can I use some "less then ideal" donors? Would a regular engine lathe with gearing with top speed of say 1800 rpm (I know I can push these a bit higher or change bearings) be good enough? Does anyone have a link where some people discuss this topic?
My current 13x40 seem to be bad candidates for conversion to CNC (but I am sure it would look interesting if one did it - controversial for some) because for some reason (supposedly smoothness of operation) SB chose plain bearings not angular or ball. These normally operate at 940 rpm and speed is limited by size of spindle - the larger a plain bearing is the slower it can operate. So it is doubtful I could push them more then say 1200 rpm. Also its threaded spindle. I think bed wear is not that of a big deal as software can compensate for this, can it? There was some talk about changing bearings in SB lathes to quality set that is based on angular contact bearings but there seems to be little info on anyone actually doing this - most people just re-build old bearings and keep lathe original but rebuild. Plus threaded spindle on a CNC would kind of kill any "rapid" reverse or slow down.
I know I should first get a CNC mill but that has same issues as CNC lathe - very hard to find - last time I had a chance was like 3 years ago+.