VicHobbyGuy
Ultra Member
They sell different sizes, so yes.Is this sized for your mini-lathe?
They sell different sizes, so yes.Is this sized for your mini-lathe?
No.Can you squeeze in a bigger pulley on the other end?
On @Chris Cramer's 7x lathe, the belt connects the motor pulley with a pulley on the spindle. Cogged pulleys and non-standard cogged belt.And are there any other intermediate gears that can be revised.
Yes, I agree.It would be interesting for me to be able to use one like that for a while.
Some skilled 7x lathe users have fitted hand cranks to use for threading coarse pitches.
It's very strange to me. Look at the price for a 'name brand' cordless electric drill. Then look at the complexity of a 7x lathe, with a startng price of about $700CAD. There would be something 'askew in the universe' if the lathe quality was extremely high. It's amazing to me that they work as well as they do.
Well, exactly. If Schaublin made a similar lathe it would cost $5-10k, I suppose. Even the much, much smaller Proxxon 250 is $2350.This is a telling observation. If I read it with a blunt attitude, it suggests you think it's not the small size, it's the low quality.
And it's a nasty surprise for those who expect a tool - like the cordless drill or chop saw - to 'work right out of the box'. If a person doesn't enjoy 'fettle and fix up' projects, the 7x isn't for them. On the 7x forums people joke all the time that the majority of projects they make are parts and mods for their 7x lathes!For those that can't afford more quality, it becomes a test of will and patience to satisfy their needs.
Yes, those recommendations make sense. The stock .004"/rev feed on Chris' lathe is in the range you suggest.If I accept the view you seem to be expressing, then I would prolly revise my recommendations to @Chris Cramer and tell him to go as slow as he can and go with a shallower depth of cut (say 10 thou) and a finer feed rate of say 5 thou per rev) and then adjust faster or slower based on how it cuts.
The tool I ground for him should work at those speeds N feeds. But if I had it to do over, I might have ground a smaller tip radius onto it to go with the lower feeds and I'd have left it full height.
Not in the reference I made. @VicHobbyGuy has provided a link in his post #155 to what I was referring to.Do you mean shear tools?
On the 7x forums people joke all the time that the majority of projects they make are parts and mods for their 7x lathes!
I'm not communicating well today, it seems!I am surprised that you could not make it work, @VicHobbyGuy.
You are communicating just fine.It worked, but it was just 'meh' for me. Not really any better performance than alternatives I was using, and it is sort of bulky and awkward.
Steve Summers just released a video where he uses his Mini Lathe to make a part in 6061 aluminum.
He also grinds a custom tool on the bench grinder.
Yeah, the lathe is useful for fabricating custom hardware/ components. My dewalt die grinder was manufactured with the wrong collet body so it couldn't fit the collets that you buy for this model. The threads on the shaft that hold the collet body are not the same as the correct collet body, so I had to purchase the correct shaft and collet body. However the key that screws onto the bottom of the shaft to link with the motor has a male end as well as the new shaft. In return I had to make a new key with an extended threaded tube to screw to the shaft and link to the motor.Steve Summers just released a video where he uses his Mini Lathe to make a part in 6061 aluminum.
Sounds like he's been hanging around here. lolSteve can get a bit wordy and veers off topic