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A Hand Steady Rest for the New Lathe
vtsteam:
Not sure on that one efrench because I've seen a couple of opposite mentions by older authorities. Tubal Caine (the older Model Engineer one, not the new YouTuber) said flat topped, but no illustration except a grainy photo found so far. Frank Mclean shows a version with a thick 10 degree angled vertical plate but flat (horizontal) top surface. I have an old pamphlet from Lindsay Books on that subject, which I haven't checked yet. They are all so easy to make, and the socket makes it easy to change, that I bet I'll figure my own preference after I make one of the others and use it a bit.
Maybe I'll try the Mclean version first.
vtsteam:
This was the final piece needed for the Mclean steady rest -- a retainer nut. It wasn't difficult to make but the drawing for it was confusing. Unfortunately no mention of it at all in the text, the dwg seemed included as an afterthought. This rest in general was mentioned as suitable for South Bend. Logan and Atlas lathes. My DIY lathe has the same bed dimensions as a Craftsman 12" (Atlas).
Anyway, I pretty much understood why it was that shape -- figured it rotated into place beneath the ways, but for the life of me, I couldn't come up with the missing dimension "to suit".
I finally just scaled the drawing, which was half scale, and made the part. It didn't fit between the two strip ways on my lathe, so I had to trim it down on the mill. Afterwards, seeing it in use, the real life dimensioning seemed simple and obvious, but the plan dimensions were just wacky.
I'm including the drawing below, and my finished part. I'll draw what should have been included in a bit and add that, because it's really quite useful as an accessory hold down for any lathe with similarly divided ways.
vtsteam:
Here's my explanation for what is needed to make one of these with corrected dwg. below.
1.) On your lathe, measure the inside distance between ways (the top surface of the bed).
2.) Measure the distance between the shears (the vertical supporting surfaces of the bed)
3.) If a bandsaw is available, set the miter gauge over to 75 deg.
4.) Cut one end of a piece of 2" X 1/2" (50 x 12mm) bar stock to that angle.
5.) Mark on the stock, square to the cut edge, the distance between the shears you got earlier, minus a small amount for clearance.
6.) Make your second angled cut. This yields the rough piece. A parallelogram faced prism.
7.) Measure across the closer corners on your piece.
8.) Subtract from that the distance between the ways you got earlier, plus a little more for clearance..
9.) That gives you the amount you need to mill off of the two corners. Divide that by 2 to get the amount you need to mill off each corner.
10.) Set the part up in your mill vise, adjusting the long edge of your part against a combination square's 45 degree edge to clamp it at that angle.
11.) Mill down to your depth figure (in step 9).
12.) Flip the part and mill down the other corner to your figure. Done.
vtsteam:
The steady in position with the clamp piece securing under the ways. Quite convenient to put the steady in place. The clamp turns sideways to pass through the slot in the ways, then rotates to lock against the shears as you tighten the bolt.
In fact I'm considering replacing the clamp on both my other steady rest and the tailstock, which use a cast Craftsman/Atlas style slotted piece and bolt under, also shown below. That type requires sliding the loosened assembly on from the end of the bed, or assembling it on the bed from separated parts -- inconvenient and messy. When sliding on from the end, it often rocks and catches, or slips wrong way around, and you can't turn it to the correct orientation without removing the whole unit and starting again.
vtsteam:
I just finished the second Tee rest for the new steady. This one is substantial, made of 3/8" bar brazed to a 3/4" post. It's angled in toward the lathe center 10 degrees. I hope it will work well for metal turning with a graver. We'll soon find out. It may need some beveling on the top edge..... or not. Don't know yet
And a photo of the metal turning rest and wood turning rest, ready to try out.
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