• Scam Alert. Members are reminded to NOT send money to buy anything. Don't buy things remote and have it shipped - go get it yourself, pay in person, and take your equipment with you. Scammers have burned people on this forum. Urgency, secrecy, excuses, selling for friend, newish members, FUD, are RED FLAGS. A video conference call is not adequate assurance. Face to face interactions are required. Please report suspicions to the forum admins. Stay Safe - anyone can get scammed.

Tail Stock lock

Well, I did it, I got rid of that damn bolt for tightening the tail stock, I got it working but it's not quit tight enough ? Where did I go wrong ?
What could i do to make it tighter ?
I tried turning in 1 more turn on the bolt, but then i can't get the tail stock back on the bed.
tail stock.jpg
 
Well with the Mini Lathe you have to tighten the bolt on the tail stock in order to lock it in place, so you need a wrench all the time, so to get rid of hunting down a wrench all the time, i made a sleeve of 3/4" and on the inside of that I have made a threaded 5/8" piston, made a short shaft 1/2" diameter with an offset so when you turn the handle in the back it tightens the tail stock.
 
bolt, washer, two hex nuts, cheap CT ratchet wrench. The genius part (if I may say so myself) is a small coil spring between the lock plate and the tail stock housing. never hangs up or drags
 

Attachments

  • EC762283-49DF-4CFA-9C64-8172769459B7.jpeg
    EC762283-49DF-4CFA-9C64-8172769459B7.jpeg
    273.5 KB · Views: 15
  • 44F560AE-0A38-4BAE-9D6F-1465F8553020.jpeg
    44F560AE-0A38-4BAE-9D6F-1465F8553020.jpeg
    283.4 KB · Views: 15
  • 9368F07C-251D-4B98-A477-9EBA98C725EA.webp
    9368F07C-251D-4B98-A477-9EBA98C725EA.webp
    61 KB · Views: 14
The only issue I have on my TS clamp assembly is the main nut slowly unscrews from the threaded post over time, so it drifts lower & that affects the cam action on the TS tightening handle. I might have enough thread for a second jamb nut principle (green). I also thought about cross drilling a few holes in the nut (red) & using a brass or nylon set screw against the threads. Enough light force to retain, but not enough to bugger. There is probably a M10 or whatever it is nyloc nut out there in the universe for me, but I'd probably have to buy a bag of 25

@whydontu is that the principle of the what looks like a cap screw head in your pic?
 

Attachments

  • EDT-2021-12-29 7.20.31 PM.webp
    EDT-2021-12-29 7.20.31 PM.webp
    10.2 KB · Views: 2
My drawing skills are not able to keep up with my brain. My tailstock lock plate is u-shaped and slotted, item #26. I found a carriage bolt that had a square shank that matched the slot so it slips into the channel and doesn’t rotate. A few minutes with a file was all it took to make the round head of the carriage bolt into a double-d that can slide a bit when I offset the tailstock for tapers. The bolt comes up through #26, #25, and #17. The spring is between #26 & #25. The threaded end of the bolt has two nuts - the lower one is turned by the ratchet wrench, the upper one is cross-drilled and tapped for a lock screw. This means the wrench is captive, nothing turns except the wrench and lower nut.
 

Attachments

  • 5C01972C-74FC-4879-B217-FDAD762C03E8.jpeg
    5C01972C-74FC-4879-B217-FDAD762C03E8.jpeg
    220.3 KB · Views: 10
There is probably a M10 or whatever it is nyloc nut out there in the universe for me, but I'd probably have to buy a bag of 25
I most probably have one for you. Just confirm the size and I’ll have a look in my stash of metric fasteners.
 
The genius part (if I may say so myself) is a small coil spring between the lock plate and the tail stock housing. never hangs up or drags

Just installed springs on mine. Works great! Like the ratchet wrench idea to....
 
Last edited:
I most probably have one for you. Just confirm the size and I’ll have a look in my stash of metric fasteners.

Thank you. Knowing this lathe it could well be IMP so I better check.
I've been meaning to make a new shoe. The stock one doesn't fit the ways properly & the partial rotation movement is probably contributing to the nut problem.
 
The only issue I have on my TS clamp assembly is the main nut slowly unscrews from the threaded post over time, so it drifts lower & that affects the cam action on the TS tightening handle. I might have enough thread for a second jamb nut principle (green). I also thought about cross drilling a few holes in the nut (red) & using a brass or nylon set screw against the threads. Enough light force to retain, but not enough to bugger. There is probably a M10 or whatever it is nyloc nut out there in the universe for me, but I'd probably have to buy a bag of 25

@whydontu is that the principle of the what looks like a cap screw head in your pic?

I have this problem on my tailstock too. The nut slowly backs off with use and sooner or later the lock handle won't lock anymore. Sometimes I don't notice it until the tailstock starts moving backward on me. It's never bothered me enough to fix it permanently. I just pull the tailstock off and give the nut a turn or two. It would be nice to be done with that forever with a mod like this.

Thank you!
 
Back
Top