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Thread gear chart missing line items! Help!

Jwest7788

Joshua West
Administrator
Hey all, working on threading a part at the moment. My lathe has four "spots" for change gears, and a nice chart showing all the combinations required.

For the required thread though, it calls for gears in positions #1 and #4.

Using be required gears, they don't actually engage at all (way off)


I'm pretty sure the solution is to put two matching gears in the missing positions. Is that correct?


I'm a couple hours into the project and really don't want to kill it on the last step!

Let me know!
 
Got this figured out. I had two matching gears, but even with them it didn't actually connect properly.

Had to dig through elementary school memories on how gears work, but peiced it all together with some common sense and a little guess work.

Ended up doubling up the drive and working gears both, keeping the ratio 2:1, which allowed me to use the matching gears as a 1:1.

Oh, I was aiming for metric 1.5 threads, I should have mentioned. Haha
 
Good! I ran into a whole other set of issues, but got it all mostly figured out at this point!


Sent from my iPhone.
 
Fruit of my labours:
(Flywheel puller)

image.jpg
 
I've never tryed threading using change gears yet my grandad's southbend in the garage uses them I have been threading in the basement on my dad's clausing!
 
Yeah, change gears are a bit of a hassle, but I think I have the hang of it now. It's funny as they did teach gears as part of the curriculum, but it took my far to long to figure out how to get the right gears in there. haha

Next lathe will definitely have inbuilt change gears.
 
Haha, I think anyone who has used a machine with change gears makes it a priority to get a quick change gearbox before anything else.. I know I did.
 
Haha, I think anyone who has used a machine with change gears makes it a priority to get a quick change gearbox before anything else.. I know I did.
I figure it's good experience to have, but yeah, will get it right next time. haha
 
I've always wondered but after my son and I rearanged crap in the garage (read as packed into corner lol) I may have to give it a try opening the box that thou shall not open containing the gears!
 
I would recommend. Don't expect to get much done in the first hour, but the process gets easier as you wrap your head around it.
 
I'm sorry jwest, but I'm LMFAO. I'm a semi retired journeyman, and I would toss that piece in the scrap bucket. But you are doing awesome, and I love what you young machining hobbiests are doing here. Amazed you got threading figured out. Keep it up, and get the rpm's up on your lathe if you're using carbide,, it leaves a nice shiny finish if it's turning fast enough.
 
Haha yeah, one of those things.

Function over form in this case I suppose.

I often think about getting an apprenticeship, maybe I will at some point. For now it's baby steps though. Working on my finishes is definitely one of those steps!
 
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