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Oddball Rotary Table

whydontu

I Tried, It Broke
Premium Member
Might have to make one of these. Looks pretty solid.

Sorry to the Facebook haters:


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That doesn’t look bad although it could be more accurate if it had a rotary encoder in it like we were talking about a few months ago.
 
I dunno. Cool little project, but....

For my shop, I'd rather buy this small chuck for $187 that comes with a free rotary table with the screw indexer @Tom O suggested that can even be flipped horizontally. (heavy sarcasm intended)

By the time you buy materials, tools, and a 3-jaw chuck, you might break even.

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Of course, there are always drawbacks. The screw indexer is 100 degrees. So it isn't well coordinated with the chuck. Still better than without it.
 
This device is configured as a cheaper version of a dividing head. If the dividing you want is all in even degrees, and only in the horizontal or vertical positions, it is an economical solution for a small mill. For a larger mill I think a better option is to spend double and get a dividing head with indexing plates.
 
This device is configured as a cheaper version of a dividing head. If the dividing you want is all in even degrees, and only in the horizontal or vertical positions, it is an economical solution for a small mill. For a larger mill I think a better option is to spend double and get a dividing head with indexing plates.

Good point @Dabbler!

It's important to look beyond the details and remember to look at the big picture.
 
I don’t hate Facebook, but I was able to watch the video without having to have an account.
I already have a RT with plates etc, etc, but I still really enjoyed the video.
I get lotsa ideas from clips like these, although sometimes, at 76, they seem to slip through the cracks.
Again thanks for this.
 
I have one of these < https://www.busybeetools.com/products/rotary-table-4in-hor-ver.html >, but it has some drawbacks that the one in the video likely avoids.
> The BB table is high and removes a bunch of headroom on my mill.
> The BB hand wheel is actually lower than the base of the unit, so I have to block it up on spacers to be able to use it horizontally, removing even more headroom. Overall height is about 3-1/2" not including a chuck.
> The BB table has only one lock screw, so heavy cuts overwhelm it and it twists.
> Lots of backlash in the worm gear, BB workmanship is not quite ready for prime time.
> Centering a chuck on the table is a pain. Takes 10 minutes of fiddling to get the chuck true to the table.

The design in the video looks like it solves a bunch of these issues, and would be relatively easy to make. I have a slew of chucks that don't fit my lathe but would be perfect for this application. I don't have room or need for a larger rotary table, most often I make do with 5C collets in a spin index. A small rotary table without the BB faults would do well for the stuff I machine.

And a stroke of genius (or maybe just a stroke), if I make an adapter plate for a three-jaw chuck to fit the swivel base for my milling vise I could swap vise for chuck and have a ready-made rotating base. And I could use my engraving machine to make the degree plate!

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