I've mentionned this project a few times in other threads. It's getting there!
I managed two full days in the shop this weekend which has been therapeutic. It currently looks like:
The arbor is MT3 with a drawbar to use my ER32 collets on it. I have a plate of steel to turn into an adapter plate for my lathe chucks, and I'll mess around with that once I have this done, making a second arbor just for the chucks.
There's a few bits and bobs to get finished, like the actual indexing pin and the locking handle, and the key to hold the gear to the shaft.
Morning was pretty boring (no, I won't stop):
My first base plate fit across just one land of my table keyways, but of course wound up without enough clearance for the nuts to hold it down. So now it spans the table. I might trim the end tabs down some once I get more experience with it.
Today's learnings were mostly slitting-saw related. My first arbor colapsed on me part way through a cut:
I didn't get a good shot, but though the eventual cause was a sheared bolt, the proximal cause is that the wall of the socket the insert sits in was too thin (1mm) in material too weak. It mushroomed and deformed to one side - probably .25-.5mm bulged out. So I swore a bit, grabbed some lunch, then made a new arbor:
This one has a 2mm flange around, a 1/2-13 thread, and fits in my 3/4" ER-32 collet. The previous one needed a 7/8", which only worked on my nasty SYOZ collets which don't fit the lathe. I wasn't able to machine any flats for tightening wihout breaking down the setup in the mill, so gripped it in the collet on the lathe and in a (gasp) vise-grip over some 150 emery on the end to get it snug. I've now broken down the setup (obvs, see first photo) so I can get some flats on there next time I'm in the shop.
The other bit of learning is just visible in the photo. I had set up the horizontal cut through the Y axis, which put the crank in a handy spot to keep an eye on it. Wrong axis. The thrust from the saw started pivoting the piece out - it had too much stickout in my setup. I caught it before disaster struck and rotated it 90 degrees so the force would push into the jaws of the vise. But that little gap in the deburring chamfer remains as as reminder.
Overall a great productive weekend. Heck, I even tidied a bit. It needs more than a bit, but it's getting there. Insulation has to happen in the next two weeks so I need everything off the walls.
I managed two full days in the shop this weekend which has been therapeutic. It currently looks like:
The arbor is MT3 with a drawbar to use my ER32 collets on it. I have a plate of steel to turn into an adapter plate for my lathe chucks, and I'll mess around with that once I have this done, making a second arbor just for the chucks.
There's a few bits and bobs to get finished, like the actual indexing pin and the locking handle, and the key to hold the gear to the shaft.
Morning was pretty boring (no, I won't stop):
My first base plate fit across just one land of my table keyways, but of course wound up without enough clearance for the nuts to hold it down. So now it spans the table. I might trim the end tabs down some once I get more experience with it.
Today's learnings were mostly slitting-saw related. My first arbor colapsed on me part way through a cut:
I didn't get a good shot, but though the eventual cause was a sheared bolt, the proximal cause is that the wall of the socket the insert sits in was too thin (1mm) in material too weak. It mushroomed and deformed to one side - probably .25-.5mm bulged out. So I swore a bit, grabbed some lunch, then made a new arbor:
This one has a 2mm flange around, a 1/2-13 thread, and fits in my 3/4" ER-32 collet. The previous one needed a 7/8", which only worked on my nasty SYOZ collets which don't fit the lathe. I wasn't able to machine any flats for tightening wihout breaking down the setup in the mill, so gripped it in the collet on the lathe and in a (gasp) vise-grip over some 150 emery on the end to get it snug. I've now broken down the setup (obvs, see first photo) so I can get some flats on there next time I'm in the shop.
The other bit of learning is just visible in the photo. I had set up the horizontal cut through the Y axis, which put the crank in a handy spot to keep an eye on it. Wrong axis. The thrust from the saw started pivoting the piece out - it had too much stickout in my setup. I caught it before disaster struck and rotated it 90 degrees so the force would push into the jaws of the vise. But that little gap in the deburring chamfer remains as as reminder.
Overall a great productive weekend. Heck, I even tidied a bit. It needs more than a bit, but it's getting there. Insulation has to happen in the next two weeks so I need everything off the walls.