1- Thanks Susq, that tool answer one of my questions “how to hold a parting tool is my small qctp with max height capacity of 1/2?” (Myford has a big heart but it is pretty small).
You can get a larger tool and mill the top or bottom of the tool bar a bit to fit. The one I have in the photo was originally 1" and I milled it to 3/4 to fit a tall tool holder. It was originally purchased by another member for a smaller lathe but even 3/4 would have been way too big. He gave it to me cuz he figured I could make it work. And I did.
2 - I noticed that Clough42 has removed his compound. That’s an idea that
@gerritv suggested is pretty helpful for a smaller lathe. Gonna try that!
The whole point of a plinth is to improve rigidity for tough jobs - like parting. They say that there are three secrets to good successful parting - rigidity, rigidity, and rigidity. Parting is all about rigidity. So ya, your thinking about making a plinth for your lathe to improve its parting performance is in the right direction.
But I suspect that you will have to either make a custom plinth (like the subject of this thread) or at least a custom tool holder. Provided that the tool stick out isn't too great, rigidity can be significantly improved just by making the tool holder the perfect height so its bottom rests on your compound. The only thing better would be such that it sits directly on the cross slide. Your cross-slide has T-Slots. So you have lots of opportunities to have the best of both worlds. A true quick change tool post AND a removable Plinth that fits the appropriate T-slot.
Of course, none of this is really required if you part upside down. In this case, rigidity can actually work against you cuz you actually want the tool to let go. Your threaded spindle is the problem there.
Even so, with T-Slots you have the option to part upside down on the backside! A perfect solution provided your cross-slide slots will reach.
3 - I thought using cutting oil with carbide was not recommended?
Who told you that? I use it all the time and it helps significantly. You might have heard that about aluminium or brass. I do cut brass dry but I seldom use brass anyway - it's too expensive. For aluminium, I sometimes cut dry just because I can but a little WD40 will reduce build up on the tool and improved cutting surface finish too.
Edit - I see
@trlvn beat me to the punch. Nothing he said conflicts with my advice.