DPittman
Ultra Member
My lathe came with a bit of a mickey mouse method of holding the compound slide down. Originally it came with only two 6mm bolts that held it into the top slide base. I quickly drilled in two more bolt holes and think that was an improvement. I ran that until now.
The top slide base has a t nut channel and 6mm bolt heads work as the t nuts and there is only a very small contact area with the bolt heads and the channel surface. I noticed there was a little bit of the channel chipping out where the bolt head was catching. Of course I may have been gronking down on the hold down nuts a bit too much to ensure rigidity, but I think the very small contact area is
of concern.
I decided to make some t nuts as I could not find anything commercially of the right size. Because I had T nuts in my head, that is what I made but realized that just a flat bar head would have been sufficient. The t nut channel is not wide enough for the size of a typical t nut required that would accept a 6mm bolt. By that I mean there would not be enough material to thread in the narrow part of the tnut for the 6mm nut. The channel is just over 6mm wide at the top and 10mm at the bottom.
I made new studs and turned the bottom of them down to 5mm and silver soldered them into the tnut. The material I used to make the tnuts was hard stuff and I was afraid it would not tap very well is why I silver soldered them.
I think it is an improvement and I am now less worried about busting out a chunk of the tnut channel when tightening down the compound.
When milling the tear I started with hss end mill and noticed that the material was very hard and my finish was poor and then the end mill went to hell. I put in a chinese 12mm carbide end mill and I was amazed how well it cut and the great finish it provided.
The top slide base has a t nut channel and 6mm bolt heads work as the t nuts and there is only a very small contact area with the bolt heads and the channel surface. I noticed there was a little bit of the channel chipping out where the bolt head was catching. Of course I may have been gronking down on the hold down nuts a bit too much to ensure rigidity, but I think the very small contact area is
I decided to make some t nuts as I could not find anything commercially of the right size. Because I had T nuts in my head, that is what I made but realized that just a flat bar head would have been sufficient. The t nut channel is not wide enough for the size of a typical t nut required that would accept a 6mm bolt. By that I mean there would not be enough material to thread in the narrow part of the tnut for the 6mm nut. The channel is just over 6mm wide at the top and 10mm at the bottom.
I made new studs and turned the bottom of them down to 5mm and silver soldered them into the tnut. The material I used to make the tnuts was hard stuff and I was afraid it would not tap very well is why I silver soldered them.
I think it is an improvement and I am now less worried about busting out a chunk of the tnut channel when tightening down the compound.
When milling the tear I started with hss end mill and noticed that the material was very hard and my finish was poor and then the end mill went to hell. I put in a chinese 12mm carbide end mill and I was amazed how well it cut and the great finish it provided.